5 Steps to a 5 AP Macroeconomics 2019

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
International Trade ❮ 171

•   Tariff revenue. The government collects $10 × 2 million = $20 million in tariff revenue,
as seen in the shaded box in Figure 12.10 This is a transfer from consumers of steel to
the government, not an increase in the total well-being of the nation.
• Inefficiency. There was a reason the world price was lower than the domestic price. It was
more efficient to produce steel abroad and export it to the United States. By taxing this effi-
ciency, the United States promotes the inefficient domestic industry and stunts the efficient
foreign sector. As a result, resources are diverted from the efficient to the inefficient sector.
• Deadweight loss now exists.

Quotas
Quotas work in much the same way as a tariff. An import quota is a maximum amount of
a good that can be imported into the domestic market. With a quota, the government only
allows two million tons to be imported. Figure 12.11 looks much like Figure 12.10, only
without revenue collected by government. So the impact of the quota, with the exception
of the revenue, is the same: higher consumer price and inefficient resource allocation.

Sd

Dd
Quantity of Steel
(millions of tons)

$ per ton

Pd = $1 00

8

Pt = $90

10 12

imports = 2

911

Pw = $80

dead weight loss

Figure 12.10

Figure 12.11

Sd

Dd
Quantity of Steel
(millions of tons)

$ per ton

Pd = $1 00

8

Pq = $90

10 12

import quota = 2

911

Pw = $80

“It is important
to know the
differences
between tariffs
and quotas.”
—Lucas, AP
Student

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