Methods of Protection
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Subsidies can be:
–Direct – outright payments
–Indirect – special tax breaks or incentives, buying of surplus goods, providing low-interest loans or guaranteeing private loans. For example, the U.S. subsidizes the sugar and dairy industries, among others.
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Arguments for Free Trade
U.S. free-trade advocates typically argue that consumers benefit from freer trade. Free trade and the resulting foreign competition forces U.S. companies to keep prices low. Consumers have a larger variety of goods and services to choose from in open markets. Domestic companies have to modernize equipment and technologies to keep themselves competitive.
Any kind of protectionist measures, like tariffs, often bring about retaliatory actions from foreign governments, which may restrict the sale of U.S. goods in their markets. This may result in inflation and unemployment in the U.S. as the export industries suffer and prices of imports rise.
Measures of Trade
Balance of trade and balance of payments are two of the statistics most widely used to measure a country’s international trade position. Balance of trade is the difference between a nation’s exports and imports of both goods and services.
A «favorable» balance of trade, or trade surplus, occurs when exports exceed imports. A «negative» balance, or trade deficit, occurs when the imports surpass exports. From the mid-1970s through 2001, the U.S. ran persistent trade deficits.
The balance of trade alone does not give the whole picture. The detailed record of all economic transactions between a country and the rest of the world is called the balance of payments. This includes trade in:
– Goods and services; and
– Financial and non-financial assets.
The BoP is separated into two main accounts:
–Current account – records export/import of goods and services and interest payments. The merchandise trade balance is contained in this account.
–Capital account – records purchase or sale of assets or investments, like companies, stocks, bonds, bank accounts, real estate and factories.
If you buy an automobile made by a factory in Germany, the transaction will be recorded in the current account. However, if you buy the automobile factory or stock in the automobile factory, the transaction will be a part of the capital account.
Every international transaction automatically enters the BoP twice, once as a credit and once as a debit, resulting in two equal and opposite entries. A transaction that involves money flowing into the country is recorded as a balance of payment credit and anything that draws money out of the country is a balance of payment debit.
This system of double-entry bookkeeping tries to ensure that the current and capital accounts are balanced. However, due to accounting conventions and differences in the recorded values of transactions, this does not always happen. Accounting for these differences, called statistical discrepancies, makes possible the following fundamental identity of the balance of payment accounts:
Current account + Capital account + Statistical discrepancy = 0
Current Account
The current account consists of four sub accounts: