The provided document does not contain information regarding International trade (Topic 2.2.2). It is a technical configuration file for a web monitoring a
Topic Synopsis
The provided document does not contain information regarding International trade (Topic 2.2.2). It is a technical configuration file for a web monitoring agent and a 404 error page for the Pearson qualifications website.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Comparative advantage: A country should specialise in producing goods where it has a lower opportunity cost, then trade for other goods. This leads to mutual gains from trade.
- Balance of trade: The difference between a country's exports and imports. A surplus (exports > imports) can boost GDP, while a deficit may indicate competitiveness issues.
- Protectionism: Government policies like tariffs (taxes on imports), quotas (limits on quantity), and subsidies to domestic industries. These protect domestic jobs but can raise prices for consumers.
- Free trade: Trade without barriers. It increases choice, lowers prices, and promotes efficiency through competition. Examples include the EU single market and WTO agreements.
- Exchange rates: The price of one currency in terms of another. A weaker pound makes exports cheaper (boosting trade) but imports more expensive (causing inflation).