International Trade
"Trade is the engine of globalisation. It moves goods, services, capital, and ideas across borders."
1. Chapter Overview
INTERNATIONAL TRADE is the exchange of goods and services between countries. It exists because: resources are UNEVENLY distributed, production costs DIFFER, and no country is SELF-SUFFICIENT. This chapter covers: the BASIS of trade (why countries trade), types of trade (bilateral, multilateral), the WORLD TRADE ORGANISATION (WTO), and the pattern of global trade FLOWS.
2. Why Do Countries Trade?
- Uneven distribution of resources: Saudi Arabia has oil. Japan does not. Brazil has coffee-growing climate. Russia does not.
- Differences in production costs: Labour is cheaper in India, so IT services 'flow' from India to the world. Labour is expensive in Germany, so manufacturing moved to China.
- Specialisation and efficiency: If each country produces what it produces BEST (comparative advantage), everyone benefits from trade.
Balance of Trade
- Exports — Imports = Balance of Trade
- Exports > Imports = Trade SURPLUS
- Imports > Exports = Trade DEFICIT
- India: HISTORICALLY a trade deficit (imports > exports). Crude oil is India's largest import.
3. Types of Trade
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Bilateral | Agreement between TWO countries. Reciprocal tariff reductions. |
| Multilateral | Trade among MANY countries. WTO framework. |
Free Trade vs Protectionism
- Free Trade: Eliminate barriers (tariffs, quotas) — goods flow freely. WTO promotes this.
- Protectionism: Protect DOMESTIC industries through tariffs, quotas, subsidies. Developing countries argue they NEED protection for infant industries.
4. World Trade Organisation (WTO)
- Established: January 1, 1995 (replaced GATT — General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade)
- HQ: Geneva, Switzerland
- Functions: (a) SET RULES for international trade, (b) RESOLVE trade disputes, (c) PROMOTE trade liberalisation (reduce barriers)
- India is a FOUNDING MEMBER
Criticisms of WTO
- Dominated by DEVELOPED countries
- Agricultural subsidies in USA/EU → unfair competition for farmers in poor countries
- 'One-size-fits-all' liberalisation doesn't account for developing countries' needs
5. Global Trade Patterns
Major Trading Blocs
| Bloc | Members |
|---|---|
| EU (European Union) | 27 European countries. Deepest integration — common currency (Euro), free movement. |
| NAFTA / USMCA | USA, Canada, Mexico |
| ASEAN | 10 Southeast Asian countries |
| MERCOSUR | Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay |
| SAARC | South Asian countries. Ineffective — due to India-Pakistan tensions. |
Major World Trade Flows
- Manufactured goods: China → World
- Crude oil: Middle East → East Asia, Europe
- Services (IT, BPO): India → USA, Europe
- Tourism: Europe and Southeast Asia are the top destinations
6. Exam Focus
- Basis of trade — uneven resources, cost differences, specialisation
- Balance of trade — exports minus imports. India's deficit.
- WTO — established 1995, HQ Geneva, functions. Criticisms.
- Trading blocs — EU, NAFTA, ASEAN. SAARC (ineffective).
- Major trade flows — China (manufactures), Middle East (oil), India (IT)
7. Conclusion
International trade is the CONNECTIVE TISSUE of the global economy:
- WHY TRADE: No country has everything. Trade lets countries SPECIALISE and exchange.
- WTO: The referee. Sets rules. Resolves disputes. Imperfect — but vital.
- FLOWS: China ships goods. Middle East ships oil. India ships services. Europe ships tourists and luxury goods.
- DEBATE: Free trade or protectionism? The debate continues — but trade, in some form, is INEVITABLE.
'No nation was ever ruined by trade.' — Benjamin Franklin. The question is not WHETHER to trade — but on WHAT TERMS.
