Comparative Advantage
Comparative Advantage

Comparative Advantage

Comparative Advantage Theory

 Excellency in international business can be done through comparative advantage theory which uses the opportunity cost to determine the appropriate produce the country should produce. This theory was developed by a British economist David Ricardo, in his writing “On the Principle of Political Economy and Taxation”. This theory is useful where one country has the absolute advantage in producing all the goods. The comparative advantage theory directs the country, business organization, or individual to take benefit by producing which goods more efficiently than others. The comparative advantage theory uses opportunity cost to determine which goods the country can produce more efficiently than others however other goods can also be produced less efficiently overall.

Key concepts

Absolute advantage vs comparative advantage

Absolute advantage theory describes one country producing goods in more quantity in the same resources compared to another. For example, country A produces goods X in 50 units in the same resource another country B produces Goods Y in 20 units. Here country A has an absolute advantage over B in producing goods X.

Comparative advantage: comparative advantage theory describes how one country can produce goods more efficiently than another based on the opportunity cost even if that country is less efficient in producing the same goods overall.

Opportunity Cost

Comparative advantage theory guides a country to produce goods which opportunity cost less compared to others. Comparative theory can direct the country to produce the goods more efficiently even if it is less efficient in producing that good overall. As its opportunity cost is less compared to others it can be better than other goods.

Example of comparative advantage theory

Example 01

Assume India can produce Rice in 50 units and Wheat in 100 units at a specific cost.

Whereas Bangladesh can produce 20 units of rice and 200 units of wheat at a specific cost

Opportunity cost
Country A

1 unit of rice = 2 units of Wheat

1 unit of Wheat = 0.5 units of rice

Country B

1 unit of rice = 10 units of wheat

1 unit of wheat = 0.1 unit of rice

Analysis of the above opportunity cost

Comparative Advantage in Producing Rice

            India: 1 unit of rice has cost of 2 units of wheat

            Bangladesh: 1 unit of rice has cost of 10 unit of wheat

Here the opportunity cost of India in rice production is less than that of Bangladesh hence India has a comparative advantage in producing Rice.

Comparative Advantage in Producing Wheat

            India: 1 unit of Wheat costs 0.5 units of rice

            Bangladesh: 1 unit of costs 0.1 unit of rice

Here the opportunity cost of Bangladesh in producing Wheat is less than that of India. So Bangladesh has a comparative advantage in producing wheat.

Advantage of any country After Specialization and Trade

If any country specializes in producing goods according to comparative advantage then the world can take benefits from trade. Let us understand how much goods are produced with specialization and without specialization according to comparative advantage.

Without specialization

India produces 50 units of wheat and 100 units of rice

Bangladesh produces 20 units of rice and 200 units of wheat

Total output produced in the World

Rice= 100 +20=120 units

Wheat=50+200=250

With Specialization

India produces 200 units of rice

Bangladesh produces 400 units of wheat

Total output produced in the World

Rice = 200 units

Wheat =400 units

Assume India trades 50 units of rice in exchange of  100 units of wheat

Final Consumption

India has 150 Units of Rice and 100 Units of Wheat

Bangladesh has 50 units of rice and 300 units of Wheat

From the above example, it has been concluded that the world economies can take more benefits if all the countries implement the comparative advantage theory to produce goods more efficiently by becoming specialized in producing those goods.

Many countries are less efficient in many goods overall however they can implement comparative advantage and take advantage of trade. Through trade, they can increase their resources at the same cost. The trade bloc that is intergovernmental agreements can enable to implement of these theories successfully and get the benefits of trade.

Example 2

Assume

Japan produces 200 LED TVs and 50 units of Rice

India produces 50 units of LED TVs and 200 units of rice

Opportunity Cost

Country Japan

            Opportunity Cost of 1 unit of  LED TV

            1 unit of LED =50 units of rice/ 200 LED TV=0.25  Unit of Rice

            Hence Japan sacrificed 0.25 units of rice to produce 1 LED TV

            The opportunity cost of 1 unit of Rice

            200 LED TV/50 units of rice =4 LED TVs

            Hence Japan sacrificed 4 LED TVs to produce 1 unit of rice

Country India

            The opportunity cost of 1 LED TV

            200 units of rice/ 50 LED TVs= 4 units of rice

            The opportunity cost of 1 unit of rice

            50 units of LED TV/200 Units of rice= 0.25 units of LED TVs  

Comparative Advantage of LED

Japan has less opportunity cost in producing LED than India. Thus Japan comparative advantage in producing LED.

Comparative Advantage of Rice

India has less comparative opportunity cost in producing rice than that of Japan. Thus India has a comparative advantage in producing rice.

Based on the comparative advantage theory India has a comparative advantage in producing rice over Japan whereas Japan has a comparative advantage in producing LED over India.

Advantage of the world after specialization and trade

Before specialization

Japan produces 200 LED and 50 units of Rice

India produces 200 units of rice and 50 units of LED

Total consumption of the world before specialization and trade

Total LED TV= 200+50=250 units

Total Rice= 50+200=250 units

After specialization according to comparative advantage

Total Rice production = 400 units

Total LED TV = 400

After specialization, if India produces Rice instead of LED TV and Japan Produces LED TV instead of rice then the total production increases to 400 units of rice and 400 Units of LED TVs. This increased production quantity when exchanged under trade as follows

If Japan makes trade of 100 LED TVs they get 100 units of rice

Hence after specialization and trade both countries can get benefits as follows

Japan gets 100 units of rice and 300 units of LED TVs

India gets 100 units of LED and 300 units of rice.

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