Absolute and Comparative Advantage

In trade, absolute advantage is when a country can produce a greater quantity of a good or service with the same input (typically labor) at a lower cost. The theory of absolute advantage was developed by the Scottish economist Adam Smith in his book The Wealth of Nations. 

Comparative advantage is a theory developed by the English political economist David Ricardo in his book On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation. Comparative advantage, also called Ricardian advantage, describes one country's ability to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than another country. Opportunity cost is the idea that making and selling one product or service is a trade-off, since you forfeit the opportunity to produce another product instead.

Read this section and answer the questions at the end.

Solutions

Answers to Self-Check Questions

  1. False. Anything that leads to different levels of productivity between two economies can be a source of comparative advantage. For example, the education of workers, the knowledge base of engineers and scientists in a country, the part of a split-up value chain where they have their specialized learning, economies of scale, and other factors can all determine comparative advantage.
  2. Brazil has the absolute advantage in producing beef and the United States has the absolute advantage in autos. The opportunity cost of producing one pound of beef is 1/10 of an auto; in the United States it is 3/4 of an auto.
  3. In answering questions like these, it is often helpful to begin by organizing the information in a table, such as in the following table. Notice that, in this case, the productivity of the countries is expressed in terms of how many workers it takes to produce a unit of a product.

    Country One Sweater One Bottle of wine
    France 1 worker 1 worker
    Tunisia 2 workers 3 workers
    Table 7.


    In this example, France has an absolute advantage in the production of both sweaters and wine. You can tell because it takes France less labor to produce a unit of the good.