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Comparative Advantage, Tariffs & Quick Revision

โšก Topic 06 of 6 ยท Chapter 11 ยท Quick Revision

Comparative Advantage, Tariffs & Quick Revision

Theory of comparative advantage, tariff vs non-tariff barriers, dumping, anti-dumping, and complete chapter revision.

๐Ÿ“– Theory of Comparative Advantage

The Theory of Comparative Advantage was developed by David Ricardo (1817). It states that countries should specialise in producing goods where they have a lower opportunity cost โ€” even if one country is better at producing everything.

๐ŸŒ Real-World Example

India has a comparative advantage in IT services and pharmaceuticals โ€” lower wages + skilled English-speaking workforce. USA has comparative advantage in aircraft and financial services. So India exports IT services to USA and imports aircraft โ€” both countries benefit from specialisation and trade. This is comparative advantage in action.

โญ Absolute vs Comparative Advantage: Absolute advantage = producing more with same resources. Comparative advantage = lower opportunity cost. Even if India is less efficient than USA in everything, India should still trade โ€” specialising in what it is relatively better at.

๐Ÿšง Trade Barriers

TypeDescriptionExamples
Tariff BarriersTax on imports โ€” raises price of foreign goodsIndia’s import duty on gold (15%), electronics
Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs)Non-tax restrictions on tradeQuotas, licensing, standards, subsidies
QuotaLimit on quantity of importsIndia’s sugar import quota
SubsidyGovernment support to domestic producersIndia’s agricultural subsidies (MSP, fertiliser)
EmbargoComplete ban on trade with a countryUSA embargo on Cuba

โš ๏ธ Dumping & Anti-Dumping

Dumping occurs when a country exports goods at a price below the cost of production or below the domestic price โ€” to capture foreign markets and destroy local competition.

  • Anti-dumping duty: Tax imposed to counter dumping โ€” WTO allows this
  • India is one of the world’s largest users of anti-dumping measures
  • India frequently imposes anti-dumping duties on Chinese goods (steel, chemicals, electronics)
๐ŸŒ Real-World Example

China sells steel in India at โ‚น30,000/tonne when Indian steel costs โ‚น45,000/tonne to produce. This is dumping โ€” it destroys India’s steel industry. India imposes anti-dumping duty of โ‚น15,000/tonne to level the playing field. WTO allows this under the Anti-Dumping Agreement.

๐Ÿ“Š Key Trade Concepts

ConceptDefinition
Terms of TradeRatio of export prices to import prices โ€” improving ToT means exports buy more imports
Free TradeNo barriers to trade โ€” WTO’s goal
ProtectionismUsing tariffs/NTBs to protect domestic industry
FTAFree Trade Agreement โ€” zero/low tariffs between partner countries
CEPAComprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement โ€” broader than FTA
MFNMost Favoured Nation โ€” WTO principle: treat all members equally

โœ… Complete Chapter 11 Revision Checklist

โœ… BoT = Balance of Trade (goods only); BoP = Balance of Payments (goods + services + capital)
โœ… India’s trade deficit: ~$265 billion (2022-23); top import = crude oil
โœ… India’s top export: Petroleum products, IT services, pharmaceuticals
โœ… India = world’s largest remittance recipient (~$100 billion/year)
โœ… WTO established: January 1, 1995; replaced GATT; HQ Geneva
โœ… India joined WTO: January 1, 1995 (founding member)
โœ… WTO DG: Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala โ€” first woman, first African
โœ… TRIPS: Intellectual property; GATS: Services; TRIMS: Investment measures
โœ… IMF + World Bank: Bretton Woods institutions (1944); HQ Washington D.C.
โœ… SDR: IMF’s reserve asset; basket of 5 currencies (USD, Euro, Yuan, Yen, GBP)
โœ… World Bank Group: IBRD, IDA, IFC, MIGA, ICSID
โœ… BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa; NDB HQ Shanghai
โœ… G20: 19 countries + EU + AU; India’s presidency 2022-23; New Delhi Summit
โœ… ASEAN: 10 Southeast Asian nations; India-ASEAN FTA (2010)
โœ… India withdrew from RCEP (2019) to protect domestic industry
โœ… India’s forex reserves: ~$600 billion (2023); 4th largest in world
โœ… India’s exchange rate: Managed float (dirty float)
โœ… Comparative advantage: David Ricardo (1817) โ€” specialise in lower opportunity cost goods
โœ… Dumping: Exporting below cost; Anti-dumping duty: WTO-permitted counter-measure
โœ… India’s FTP 2023-28: Target $2 trillion exports by 2030
โœ… India-UAE CEPA (2022): India’s first FTA in a decade