Benefits of international trade

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Slide 1: Video
Economie

This lesson contains 19 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.

Items in this lesson

Slide 1 - Video

Chapter 17
Section 1:Benefits and Issues of International Trade
Pages 510-519

Slide 2 - Slide

Objectives
Determine why nations choose to specialize their economies.
Analyze the theory of comparative advantage
Compare absolute and comparative advantage 


Slide 3 - Slide

Definition
Specialization is a situation that occurs when individuals or businesses produce a narrow range of products.​​
Economic interdependence is a situation in which producers in one nation depend on others to provide goods and services
they do not produce.​

Slide 4 - Slide

Suppose that you and a
friend are responsible for providing costumes  and making the set for a play. Your friend owns 
a sewing machine and is able to design clothes.
You are handy with tools and have a workshop in your basement. 

Slide 5 - Slide

 Should you divide the work for
both tasks equally or divide it so that your friend  does all the sewing and you build the set? Give reasons for their answers. Point
out that nations face similar decisions when they  consider trade with other nations.​

Slide 6 - Slide

Answer the above questions.

Slide 7 - Mind map

Why should nations specialize in what they produce most efficiently and trade for the rest?

Slide 8 - Open question

What is a situation that occurs when individuals or businesses
produce a narrow range of products?
A
Economic interdependence
B
Prosperity
C
Depresssion
D
Specialization

Slide 9 - Quiz

0

Slide 10 - Video

Slide 11 - Link

What if, he
suggested, Portugal makes both products more efficiently than England? Would trade, at least for Portugal, no longer be beneficial?

Slide 12 - Mind map

Answer
 That trade would still be beneficial. He based his conclusion on the opportunity costs each nation spends to make its products. 

Slide 13 - Slide

Does the law of comparative advantage apply only to nations, or does it apply to
individuals as well? Explain your answer.​

Slide 14 - Open question

​Absolute advantage
is the ability of one trading  nation to make a product more efficiently than
another trading nation.​​
Comparative  advantage is a trading  nation’s ability to produce  something at a lower  opportunity cost than that  of another trading nation.​
​The law of comparative advantage states  that countries gain when  
they produce items they are
most efficient at producing and are at the lowest  opportunity cost.​

Slide 15 - Slide

Slide 16 - Video

What is the idea that a nation will specialize in
what it can produce at a lower opportunity cost than any other nation?

Slide 17 - Mind map

Compare the difference between absolute advantage and comparative advantage.Use examples to prove your answer

Slide 18 - Open question

What are the important points of the lesson?

Slide 19 - Mind map