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An Examination of the Ricardian Model of Comparative Advantage Yields

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Essay

An examination of the Ricardian model of comparative advantage yields the clear result that trade is (potentially) beneficial for each of the two trading partners since it allows for an expanded consumption choice for each. However, for the world as a whole the expansion of production of one product must involve a decrease in the availability of the other, so that it is not clear that trade is better for the world as a whole as compared to an initial situation of non-trade (but efficient production in each country). Are there in fact gains from trade for the world as a whole?
Explain.


Definitions:

Scheffé Test

A statistical procedure for comparing more than two means while controlling the overall Type I error rate.

Analytical Comparisons

The process of examining similarities and differences between two or more items or data sets, often to evaluate or assess characteristics.

Null Hypothesis

Restated, it is the hypothesis in statistical testing that assumes no significant difference or relationship exists between specified populations, parameters, or data sets.

Statistically Insignificant

A term indicating that the observed difference or relationship in the data could have occurred by chance and does not signify a real effect.

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