SAN JOSÉ STATE UNIVERSITY
ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT
Thayer Watkins

Comparative Advantage

The most important principle in explaining regional specialization is the concept of comparative advantage, first formulated by the British economist David Ricardo. The key word in "comparative advantage" is "comparative." A region specializes in those products in which its productive capabilities in comparison to those of its potential trading partners are comparatively better than those of the other products. To illustrate this let us consider the example used by Ricardo.

England and Portugal can both produce cloth and wine. Suppose that one worker in England working one year can produce 10 yards of cloth or 5 gallons of wine. On the other hand, one worker in Portugal can produce 6 yards of cloth or 4 gallons of wine. In this example, the English workers are more productive in producing both cloth and wine than the Portuguese workers. In actuality, the English might be more productive in producing cloth and the Portuguese more productive in producing wine. In such a case, England would be said to have an absolute advantage in producing cloth and Portugal in producing wine. But there is no challenge in explaining specialization if each trading partner has an absolute advantage in its specialization. The challenge is to explain specialization for the case of a country, in this example Portugal, that does not have an absolute advantage in any product.

Consider first the situation without trade. Suppose there are one million workers in England and one million workers in Portugal. In England the combinations of cloth and wine that can be produced, the so-called production-possibilities curve is as shown below.

The English worker/consumers must choose a combination of cloth and wine that they can produce and which is the most desirable given their tastes for cloth and wine. If one more gallon of wine is produced the production of cloth must be cut by 2 yards. The prices of cloth and wine must reflect this trade-off. If the price of a yard of cloth is one pound sterling then a gallon of wine must sell for 2 pounds sterling. The income of the English workers is 10 million pounds sterling and this is also their level of consumer expenditure. Suppose that without trade England produces and consumes 6 million yards of cloth and 2 million gallons of wine.

The production possibilities curve for Portugal is shown below.

The trade-off between cloth and wine is such that if one more gallon of wine is produced the production of cloth must be cut by 1.5 yards of cloth. production of cloth must be cut by 2 yards. The prices of cloth and wine must reflect this trade-off. If the price of a yard of cloth is 10 escudos then a gallon of wine must sell for 15 escudos. The income of the Portuguese workers is 60 million escudos and this is also their level of consumer expenditure. Suppose that without trade Portugal produces and consumes 3 million yards of cloth and 2 million gallons of wine.

Now let us suppose trade is allowed and an exchange rate of 8 escudos per pound sterling develops, but that temporarily the prices of cloth and wine in the two countries remains the sames as before trade. In Portugal someone will recognize that if they produces one more gallon of wine and sell it in England for two pound sterling they can buy two yards of cloth. Therefore the increased production of wine, which required a cutback in production of cloth in Portugal of 1.5 yards, ultimately allowed the Portuguese to consume 2 more yards of cloth. Likewise in England someone will recognize that if one more yard of cloth is produced it can be taken to Portugal and sold for 10 escudos and those 10 escudos traded for two-thirds of a gallon of wine. Thus the cutback in production of wine in England of one half gallon ultimately led to an increase in consumption of wine by two-thirds of a gallon.

Therefore Portugal would expand production of wine and the cloth industry would disappear, while in England no more wine would be produced and all labor would go into the production of cloth. With extensive trade the relative prices of cloth and wine in England and Portugal would change and ultimately become the same. The situation would be as shown below.

The condition for equilibrium is that the relative price of cloth and wine would have to such that the export of cloth from England is equal to the amount of cloth Portugal wants to import and the amount of wine exported from Portugal would have to be equal to the amount of wine England wants to import.

Comparative advantage is not a static matter. As the set of trading partners changes so would any nations comparative advantage.