-Absolute advantage: one country would have an absolute advantage over the other if it can produce same amount of goods with fewer resources
-This is then the ability of country to produce more goods than its competitors using same or less resources
Principle of Comparative Advantage
-A nation has comparative advantage in the production of a product when it can produce the product at a lower domestic opportunity cost than can a trading partner
-It is also the basis for all trade
-If the two nations specialize according to comparative advantage, then to get the other product, they must trade
Terms of Trade
-The rate of exchange of two products is be determined through negotiation
-The outcome is called the terms of trade
-Gains from trade are based on comparative advantage, not absolute advantage
Specialization and Trade
-Specialization based on comparative advantage improves global resource allocation
-Specialization and trade also increase productivity and the standard of living within a nation
-Because of specialization and trade, there will be a larger global output of goods and services
Input and Output Approach
-output problem approach: based on the most of an item producer can make if it specializes using a set amount of resources (apples per acre, widgets per hour)
-input problem approach: based on the least resources producer needs to make a set amount of an item (minutes per waffle, cups of flour per a dozen loaves)
-For output problems, you take B/A for comparative advantage and pick the highest amount for absolute advantage.
-For input problems, you do the opposite (A/B for comparative and pick lowest amount for absolute) - See more at: http://thekanishacorner.blogspot.com/2014/04/comparative-and-absolute-advantage.html?showComment=1400727389673#c5299564672104467699