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Factor Abundance and Trade: Heckscher-Ohlin Model Numerical Example

This document provides a numerical example to illustrate the Hecksher-Ohlin model of international trade. It summarizes that: 1) Denmark has relatively more capital than Holland and will have a comparative advantage in producing the capital-intensive good, beer. 2) When trade opens up, the price of beer increases in Denmark, raising returns to capital and lowering returns to labor. 3) The model assumes two goods, two factors of production, and two countries, and that factors of production are mobile between sectors but not between countries. It shows how differences in factor endowments can lead to comparative advantages and trade.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
174 views14 pages

Factor Abundance and Trade: Heckscher-Ohlin Model Numerical Example

This document provides a numerical example to illustrate the Hecksher-Ohlin model of international trade. It summarizes that: 1) Denmark has relatively more capital than Holland and will have a comparative advantage in producing the capital-intensive good, beer. 2) When trade opens up, the price of beer increases in Denmark, raising returns to capital and lowering returns to labor. 3) The model assumes two goods, two factors of production, and two countries, and that factors of production are mobile between sectors but not between countries. It shows how differences in factor endowments can lead to comparative advantages and trade.

Uploaded by

Ed Z
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ECO 352 – Spring 2010

No. 8 – Feb. 25

FACTOR ABUNDANCE AND TRADE: HECKSCHER-OHLIN MODEL

NUMERICAL EXAMPLE

Two goods, Beer and Cheese. Two factors, Capital and Labor.
Both factors mobile across sectors.
Fixed input coefficients per unit of output:

Beer Cheese
Capital 4 5
Labor 1 2

Note: Ratio of Capital to Labor in Beer (4/1) is > that in Cheese (5/2)
Beer is relatively more capital-intensive than Cheese
This is the key that will drive comparative advantage and trade
Ratios are what matters: absolute input coefficients irrelevant

1
Consider two countries. Denmark has 100 Labor, 310 Capital
Holland has 100 Labor, 280 Capital

Find output quantities, assuming full employment of both factors in both countries:

Denmark: 4 B + 5 C = 310, 1 B + 2 C = 100 B = 40, C = 30


Holland: 4 B + 5 C = 280, 1 B + 2 C = 100 B = 20, C = 40

More capital ï
disproportionately more output of capital-intensive good (40/20 > 310/280)
and actually less output of the other good (30 < 40)
This is called the Rybczynski effect.

Remember we are assuming identical homothetic tastes

The relatively capital-rich country has


a relatively larger output of the relatively capital-intensive good
therefore a lower autarkic relative price of this good
therefore a comparative advantage in it

Will verify this in a more general setting, without fixed coefficients in production

2
C

K full-employ lines for H, D


62 slope = 0.8
56
50
40
H
D
30 L full-employ line
slope = 0.5

B
20 40 70 77.5 100
We expect trade to increase the relative price P of Beer in Denmark.
What will happen to the factor rewards W for Labor, R for capital in Denmark?
Zero pure profit conditions for equilibrium:
W + 4 R = P, 2 W + 5 R = 1
Solutions: R = ( 2 P – 1 ) / 3, W = ( 4 – 5 P ) / 3.

Increase in P
raises R by an even greater proportion, so raises R / P = ( 2 – [1/P] ) / 3
and lowers W (so obviously lowers W/P)
Numerical example:
P R W
0.6 0.2 / 3 1.0 / 3
0.7 0.4 / 3 0.5 / 3

(Need 0.5 < P < 0.8 to ensure positive R, W)

Result: Increase in the relative price of the capital-intensive good


raises the return to capital, lowers the return to labor
This is the source of distributive conflict in this model
It is called the Stolper-Samuelson effect

3
ASSUMPTIONS OF THE MODEL

Two goods, two factors, two countries. (2-by-2-by-2 “Noah's Ark” model)
Goods can be traded but not factors across countries.
Both factors mobile across sectors within each country.
Constant returns to scale in each sector; perfect competition in all 6 markets:
2 worldwide for the two goods, and 2 for factors within each country

NOTATION
Goods, X and Y, prices PX and PY
Capital endowment K, given. Quantities in the two sectors KX and KY; KX + KY = K
Labor endowment L, given. Quantities in the two sectors LX and LY; LX + LY = L
Production functions X = FX(KX,LX), Y = FY(KY,LY).
Wage W; return to capital R .

Foreign country variables with asterisk * ; home without.

4
KEY CONCEPT: RELATIVE FACTOR INTENSITY

At any given relative factor price ratio R/W,


the L/K ratio in each sector is chosen to minimize cost of production.
Therefore tangency between factor price ratio line slope = R/W
and production isoquant, slope = MRTS = - dL/dK, in each sector.
Call the Y-good relatively L-intensive (and the X-good relatively K-intensive)
if the resulting ratio LY /KY is always > LX / KX (equivalently, KX / LX > KY /LY )
L
[1] Always means for Y-isoquant
any R/W held the X-isoquant
same for X and Y L /K
[2] So Y-isoquant Y Y
flatter than X- slope = R/W
at intersection.
[3] If this is true L /K
X X
for one pair of
isoquants, it is
true for any pair,
because constant K
returns to scale. O
X

5
EFFICIENT ALLOCATION OF FACTORS ACROSS SECTORS

Efficiency requires equal MRTS in the two sectors.


Tangency in the factor allocation Edgeworth Box diagram.
K
The contract curve is O
everywhere below
the diagonal of box: slope = R/W
Slope of OXE L
< slope of OYE
LX / KX < LY /KY
E
L
X
(Y is rel. L-int.
X is rel. K-int.)

Can then plot the O


X
efficient (X,Y) K
X
combinations
to get the PPF.

6
PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY FRONTIER
Y
The PPF is bowed out.

Starting where X = 0 and all K and L


slope = PX /PY
go into producing Y, suppose we
want to produce the first unit of X. •
For this, L, K should be moved to X
in the ratio that the contract curve
starts from OX in the Edgeworth box.
X
For successive further units of X, we must
withdraw a larger ratio L/K, and that
reduces the output of Y (which is relatively L-intensive) by more and more.

If the goods were equally K (or L) intensive, the contract curve would coincide
with the diagonal OX OY . The rate at which Y is reduced for each unit
increase in X would be constant, and the PPF would be a straight line.

7
The slopes of the PPF at the points Y
where it meets the axes are finite
Slope at the Y-axis flatter, but > 0;
at the X-axis, steeper, but < ∞
slope = PX /PY

If PX and PY is outside the range of •


the finite slopes at the endpoints,
corner solution (specialization),
production of only one good.
X

So absolute supply curve for X is: P /P


X Y
compare / contrast with both s
Ricardo and Ricardo-Viner. X

We will mostly ignore X-axis


complete specialization MRT at
in Heckscher-Ohlin. Y-axis
It arises if one country's
K/L ratio is too high
or too low. X

8
PRICES OF GOODS AND FACTORS

So long as both goods are being produced, factor rewards R, W


depend only on goods prices PX and PY , not on factor endowments K, L.

To see this, remember that the four input coefficients


ALX = amount of labor used per unit of output of X etc.
are found by equality of MRTS and R/W, so they depend only on the ratio R/W.
Then the zero pure profit conditions for equilibrium are
AKX(R/W) R + ALX(R/W) W = PX , AKY(R/W) R + ALY(R/W) W = PY ,

Subject to some technical mathematical conditions, these have a unique solution


for R, W given PX and PY (see the fixed coefficient beer-cheese example).

This also means that when free trade equalizes goods prices across the countries,
it will also equalize factor prices across them!
Intuition: exporting a labor-intensive good is an indirect way to export labor.
In Heckscher-Ohlin, this goes to full extent, as if just one labor market.
Possible cause for concern for US labor?

9
SUPPLY AND TRADE

How does the PPF shift in response to changes in factor endowments?


Equivalently: how does it differ across countries with different factor endowments?

If both K and L doubled, all production possibilities and the PPF would shift
radially out in the same proportion because of constant returns to scale.
If one factor say K increases relative to the other, the shift of the PPF is
“biased” in favor of the good that uses K more intensively, here X.
This is intuitive, and illustrated for fixed coefficient case in the beer-cheese example.

The figure illustrates this for an Y


increase in K alone. It raises possible
outputs of both X and Y (intercepts
of the PPF on the axes) but that of X
slope = PX /PY
by more. This biased shift raises the
optimal X for any given PX / PY , • •
and actually lowers the optimal Y
(only slightly so in the figure)
by the Rybczynski effect.
X

10
Therefore the country that has the relatively larger K/L (say home)
has its relative supply curve (X/Y) function of PX / PY to the right
of that for the other country.
PX /PY RSW
Therefore it has comparative advantage RS* RS
in the X good, with the same
reasoning as that for earlier models.
A*
T
A
RD

X/Y

11
DISTRIBUTIVE CONFLICT

Who gains and who loses from trade? In home country, trade raises PX / PY
This raises R (reward to factor more intensively used in X production), lowers W.
Show this for the fixed coefficient case:

AKX R + ALX W = PX , AKY R + ALY W = PY


imply
R A − ALX ( PY / PX ) W AKX − AKY ( PX / PY )
= LY , =
PX AKX ALY − ALX AKY PY AKX ALY − ALX AKY

The denominator is positive because of the relative factor intensity condition.


As PX / PY increases, the numerator for R/PX increases, that for W/PY goes down.
So R/PX increases, and then R/PY also increases;
W/PY decreases, then W/PX also decreases.
Distributive conflict by class (type of factor), not occupational (type of sector).
Contrast with pure exchange (all factors specific), Ricardo-Viner (some specific)

12
Evidence on distributive conflict:
Magee examined the
positions (pro-free-trade
or protection) in testimony
by business and labor groups
to Congress in hearings on
the 1973 trade bill.

Theories predict:
[1] Both factors specific:
entries along diagonal.
Export sectors pro-trade,
import-competing ones
protectionist.
[2] Ricardo-Viner: Entries in
one vertical column.
[3] Heckscher-Ohlin: Entries
only in top right (if US is
capital abundant).

Clear victory for specificity!

13

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