3: Implications on SEM Flashcards

1
Q

Problems of the EU in the 80s.

A
  • Compared to the USA and Japan low growth rates as well as high unemployment rates
  • Leading high technology companies tended to be either American or Japanese
  • Compared to American and Japanese firms, EU firms faced considerable disadvantages created by barriers still existent in the internal market
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2
Q

SEM Assumptions

A
  • Access to larger markets
  • Increase in efficiency
  • Gains in competitiveness
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3
Q

SEM Arrangements

A

Objective: Realization of the four freedoms

  • Free movement of goods
  • Free movement of services
  • Free movement of people
  • Free movement of capital

abolishment of barriers, restrictions and controls:

  • frontier controls
  • mutual recognition of standards
  • lifiting financial service barriers
  • elimination of business license requirements
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4
Q

SEM Achievements

A
  • Larger variety of consumption
  • Increase in competition and liberalization
  • Increase in consumer protection
  • Reduction in export bureaucracy
  • Establishment of the right to work, study or retire in any of the member states
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5
Q

Rationale for SEM (From CU to SEM - reasons?)

A
  • A reduction in monopoly power which improves efficiency in enterprises and leads to rationalization of industrial structures as well as the setting of prices closer to costs of production (x inefficiency)
  • An increase in the incentives for innovation, new processes and new products which is stimulated by the dynamics of the internal market.
  • Realization of economies of scale, which means cost reduction due to an increase in the size of production units and enterprises.
  • An increase in the division of labor and specialization according to comparative advantages.
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6
Q

Free Movement of Capital and Labor

A
  • freedom of movement of production factors (capital, labor, enterprises, services)
  • associated with labor migration:
  • pull factors (availability of jobs and higher wages)
  • push factors (low earnings and lack of jobs opportunities at home)
  • friction factors (cost of movement, cultural/linguistic)
  • legal limitations (immigration-restricting measure from receiving country)
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7
Q

LM is lower in EU, compared to US.

What are reasons?

A

lingua franca eases mobility

common social security system is missing in EU

different market regulations

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8
Q

Capital Market Integration

A
  • Allowance of free capital account convertibility
  • Liberalization of capital in- and outflows
  • Liberalization of foreign direct investment
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9
Q

Connection Solow and FDI

A
  • FDI leads to growth effects (GDP growth)
  • net inflows of investment to acquire a lasting management interest of at least 10% in an enterprise operating in an economy other than that of the investor.
  • Greenfield investment
  • Acquisitions
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10
Q

Effects of FDI on Host Country

A

Positive:

  • Resource-transfer effect (capital, technology, know-how)
  • Employment effect
  • Capital account – initial capital inflow
  • Competition and growth effect

Negative:

  • Adverse effects on competition
  • Adverse effect on balance of payments
  • National sovereignty and autonomy
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11
Q

Effects of FDI on Home Country

A

Positive:

  • Foreign earnings
  • Multinational enterprises generate valuable skills from exposure to foreign markets

Negative:

  • Capital account – FDI outflow
  • Employment effect
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12
Q

Explain that model.

A
  • Consider a simple model of an economy with two sectors
  • Perfect labor mobility between sectors
  • TRADABLE vs. NON-TRADABLE
  • Labor in the tradable goods sector is less productive in poor countries
  • Labor productivity in the non-tradable goods sector is roughly the same across countries.
  • If prices of tradables are roughly the same when expressed in the same currency yet labor productivity is lower in poor countries →wages are lower in these countries.
  • Lower wages in poor countries lead to lower production costs for non-tradables.
  • Hence, the price level (a weighted average of tradables and non-tradables) is lower in poor countries.
  • The tradable goods sector is booming →labor is attracted to this particular sector.
  • Labor moves from the non-tradable goods sector to the tradable goods sector.
  • In order to keep workers in the other sectors (medium-term and long-term labor mobility provided), other non-tradable goods sectors have to pay higher wages.
  • During the catching-up process, productivity tends to increase faster in the tradable goods sector than in the non-tradable goods sector.
  • This leads to higher inflation!
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