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ECO 358 International Economics Professor Malamud BEH 502 895 – 3294 Fax: 895 – 1354 Email: [email protected] Website: http://faculty.unlv.edu/bmalamud

ECO 358 International Economics

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ECO 358 International Economics. Professor Malamud BEH 502 895 – 3294 Fax: 895 – 1354 Email: [email protected] Website: http://faculty.unlv.edu/bmalamud. International Economics: The Way the World Works. Objectives : Facts : the world’s economies and relations between them - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ECO 358 International Economics

ECO 358International Economics

• Professor Malamud• BEH 502• 895 – 3294 Fax: 895 – 1354• Email: [email protected] • Website: http://faculty.unlv.edu/bmalamud

Page 2: ECO 358 International Economics

International Economics: The Way the World Works

Objectives:Facts:

the world’s economies and relations between themPrinciples:

Trade flowsCapital flows

Currency exchange ratesAdvantages and disadvantages of fixed and floating rates

Issues:Globalization: Is The World Flat ?!?!

ProtectionRebalancing

Page 3: ECO 358 International Economics

International Interdependencies

• Trade: goods, services, raw materials, energy• Finance: exchange rates, foreign debt, foreign

investment (fdi and portfolio investment)• Business: multinational enterprises (MNEs), global

production• Migration: flows of skilled workers, unskilled

workers, family members

Page 4: ECO 358 International Economics

World In Recession Unemployment Rate

Country 2007 2009

United States 4.6% 10.5%Japan 3.8% 5.5%Britain 5.3% 7.8%Canada 6.0% 8.5%

EU 9.3%France 7.9% 10.0%Germany 9.0% 7.6%Italy 6.2% 7.4%Spain 8.3% 19.3%

Brazil 9.3% 8.1%Russia 5.9% 9.9%India 7.2% 7.2%China 4.0% 9.0% (1/09)

Page 5: ECO 358 International Economics

Trade in goods and services (percent of gdp)

Country % of GDP, 2002 % of GDP, 2006 Exports Imports Exports Imports

Netherlands 53 46 71 63Canada 37 33 46 40Germany 31 25 40 35South Korea 27 26 43 40Norway 31 18 45 28France 22 21 26 27United Kingdom 18 21 26 30United States 9 13 11 15Japan 10 8 11 10

Page 6: ECO 358 International Economics

Macro Facts: Trade Deficit, Goods & Services

Page 7: ECO 358 International Economics

Today’s Report

Page 8: ECO 358 International Economics

Macro Facts: Merchandise Trade Deficit

Page 9: ECO 358 International Economics
Page 10: ECO 358 International Economics

-7.00

-6.00

-5.00

-4.00

-3.00

-2.00

-1.00

0.00

1.00

2.00

Balance on Unilateral Transfers

Balance on ServicesBalance on Income

Balance on Merchandise Trade

Balance on Current Account

US Current Account TransactionsBalances as % of GDP, 1960 - 2008

Page 11: ECO 358 International Economics

Eurozone 16• Germany• France• Italy• Netherlands• Belgium• Luxembourg

• Austria• Ireland• Spain• Finland• Portugal• Greece

• Slovenia• Cyprus• Malta• Slovakia

Page 12: ECO 358 International Economics
Page 13: ECO 358 International Economics

Trade Issues• If one country gains, must the other lose?

• Think comparative advantage.

• Do imports reduce employment?• Do tariffs/quotas/restrictions save jobs?

• When might they?

• Should weak domestic industries be subsidized?• Is a trade deficit “bad”? Is a surplus “good”?• Does “fair trade” mean that our exports to a

country will equal our imports from it?