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🚧 Exports and Imports | Protectionism, Tariffs and Who Benefits From Them - YouTube
Channel: EconClips
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What do we pay with for the products and services
we need?
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With money, of course.
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But if we realize that money is merely a medium
of exchange,
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then what do we ultimately pay with?
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We pay with production.
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To be able to consume, one first needs to
produce.
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Consider a simple example:
Suppose that I’m a hairdresser who wants
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to buy some bread rolls.
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I can go to a grocery store and offer to buy
the rolls in exchange for styling baker's hair.
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I may even be able to do that, provided that
the baker wants my services.
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But the owner of the bakery may turn out to
be bald, and thus consider my service to be worthless.
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This is what makes money a useful medium of
exchange.
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I can make money by styling, say, my friend
Jessica’s hair, and then use the money to
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buy the rolls.
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But let us not fool ourselves.
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The truth of the matter is that I buy the
rolls with my hairdressing services.
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I produce my services, and this production
allows me to eat the rolls.
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The fact that money is used as a medium of
exchange does not change the basic truth that
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in order to buy something we have to sell
something first.
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Such exchange, if voluntary, is obviously
beneficial for both parties.
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If it were not, then no one would participate
in it.
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It suits me that as a hairdresser I can focus
on providing the services I am good and efficient
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at, and leave baking bread rolls to people
who are best at it.
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While the bald baker does not need my services,
he is free to use the money he earns by selling
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his products to get other goods he needs.
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It can turn out, for instance, that Jessica
knows how to prepare a hair growth lotion
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which she sells to the baker on a regular
basis.
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Thanks to the market exchange, me, Jessica,
and the bald baker can all get what we want
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cheaper and better than possible, were we
to produce these things ourselves.
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Then what are imports and exports?
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Basically, when you import something, you
are buying it.
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An export, in turn, is a sale.
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The only reason we have separate names for
these transactions is because they involve
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individuals from different countries.
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The economic laws, however, do not change
simply because we have crossed a border.
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We still have to pay for consumption with
production, and the voluntary exchange remains
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beneficial for both parties.
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To put it simply, we use exports to pay for
imports.
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You probably heard a claim that exports are
more important than imports.
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Let us go back to the hairdresser’s case.
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What do I care most about as a hairdresser?
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Do I want to have more clients than bread
rolls?
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Is production my real goal?
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Clearly not.
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I would be most happy just lying belly up
on a beach, having free bread rolls served
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to me by a waiter.
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My goal is to be able to consume more, not
to have to produce more.
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Production is only a means to this end.
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What we want is to import more, because it
means getting all the cool stuff from abroad.
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Export is a “necessary evil” that allows
us to pay for the imported goods.
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If we would be able to continually import
without exporting, it would be better for us!
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But we cannot have that.
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With that in mind, we can now talk about protectionism.
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Consider this: we all know that sanctions
are used to harm a country.
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However, many people for different reasons
consider trade tariffs and restrictions, that
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is imposing trade sanctions on ourselves,
to be a positive thing.
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“We will stimulate domestic demand,” they
say.
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Is this the right thinking?
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Let us go back to an example from a previous
video.
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There are two countries.
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One is up far North and the other down far
South.
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Suppose that there is no contact between them.
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The Northerners are superb producers of spruce
planks, but they want oranges as well.
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This is why some individuals bore huge costs
to build greenhouses, thus creating just the
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right conditions for growing oranges.
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The Southern country has an abundance of oranges,
and they grow everywhere without any need
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to create special conditions for them.
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At some point these two countries establish
trade relations.
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The Northern market is suddenly flooded with
cheap oranges.
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Southern oranges, even after paying for transportation,
are half as cheap and much tastier than the
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sour Northern ones grown in greenhouses.
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You may think that access to cheaper oranges
would benefit everyone.
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Well, almost everyone.
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Most Northern orange producers will be most
unhappy.
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Some of them will try to push for tariffs
in an effort to protect domestic producers.
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One of them will say that 500 people employed
in his company will suddenly lose their jobs.
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Another will argue that the Southern competition
is unfair because Southerners have more sun
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than Northerners.
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Were orange producers to succeed in pushing
through the tariffs on Southern oranges, they would gain,
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but all other people including
domestic consumers would lose.
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After all, the only reason for importing Southern
oranges is that it is more profitable to grow them there.
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Introducing tariffs means that all consumers
are subsidizing less efficient domestic producers
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by spending more on oranges than on anything
else.
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Moreover, human capital, i.e. the employees
of orange companies, is frozen in this ineffective
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activity, thus hindering the development of
more effective industries that want to expand
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their businesses and need employees.
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To put it simply, it wastes limited resources
on unprofitable production avenues.
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These resources could otherwise supply both
countries with much more added value.
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For any individual, city, province, or country
it is a blessing to be able not to spend money
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to produce something if it can be bought for
less.
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True, in the absence of such a tariff the
ineffective producer will get into trouble,
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and he will probably have to close his business
or restructure it.
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But the same applies on an even narrower scale.
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A more effective producer may appear in a
city or one of its districts, thus pushing
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out a less effective producer out of his line
of work.
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Which producer in his right mind cares whether
he was pushed out of a market by domestic
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or foreign competition?
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None.
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Consumers do not care about this either.
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They just want to get a cheaper and better
product.
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In this way, their living standard will increase,
because they will be able to afford to buy
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more goods with their newly saved money.
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This also creates a chance for the producer
who was pushed out of his line of work.
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Now that the people can afford new things,
he can start to provide them.
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In other words, importing a product closes
one avenue of work while opening up another
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someplace else.
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Thus free trade increases the wealth of both
sides of the transaction.
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When we recognize that exchanges are positive
for individuals, we must let go of the notion
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that the sum of these positive exchanges between
individuals can have a negative effect.
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The imposition of tariffs and restrictions
on trade, however, will always cause economic problems.
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On the other hand, taking part in the international
division of labor increases our standard of living.
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There is a question, however, that is worth
asking.
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Can we make our production more competitive
than the production of other countries?
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In a way, yes.
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As Jan Jakub Tyszkiewicz writes in his article,
quite wittily entitled “Our enemy, imports”:
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“Factors that make it more profitable to
produce a good in one place instead of another
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can be divided into two types: intervention-based
and market-based.”
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It is quite difficult to influence market-based
factors to improve, because they boil down
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to such matters as availability of raw materials,
geographic location, or, for example, manufacturing
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traditions, while intervention-based factors
can hinder productivity quite easily.
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Some of these intervention-based factors include
market regulations, taxes and fees, or trade
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unions having a grip over legislators.
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True, we have little influence over the fact
that a country simply has no significant oil
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reserves, and thus cannot be an oil superpower.
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With a bit of goodwill of the government,
however, we can abolish governmental interventions
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hindering our productivity.
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Obviously, nothing will change the fact that
our production capabilities will still be
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limited, as is always the case, but we will
become more effective in our production.
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So the recipe for a better position on international
markets is less regulation instead of more of it.
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Having better conditions to operate a business
translates into an ability to compete with
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other companies more effectively where possible.
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No additional assistance from the government
is needed.
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