The Basic Laws of Trade: Reconstructing the Theory of International Trade

23 November 2023, Version 6
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

We developed hypothetical basic laws of trade that could reconstruct the theory of international trade. These laws could make global trade coherent and optimize the gains of trade for all nations. In general, the laws rearrange the foundation of trade theory, so that they naturally form a coherent interdependent economy, locally and internationally. The basic laws are more comprehensive than the comparative advantage theory as the theory is part of the laws. At the international level, the basic laws require a hypothetical true exchange rate (TER) that makes fundamentals and monetary aligned. If the TER requirement is fulfilled, then all countries should have equal comparative advantages, international trade should be relatively balanced, they all could benefit from trading regardless of competitiveness and cost, and gains from trade could be optimal for all nations. To demonstrate the workability of this hypothesis, we make trade simulations 2x2 and 5x20.

Keywords

Basic laws of trade
reconstructing the theory of international trade
theory of comparative advantage
optimizing gains of trade
international economics
exchange rate

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Comparative advantage and trade simulation 5x20 model
Description
We simulated 5 countries, namely China, South Korea, Indonesia, Turkiye, and India. Each country produces and consumes 20 products, namely A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, and T. The production costs of each product in each country are random with a range in their respective national currencies (China between 60 – 120 Chinese yuan, South Korea between 12,000 – 24,000 Korean Won, Indonesia between 145,000 – 290,000 Indonesian rupiahs, Turkiye between 170 – 340 Turkish lira, and India between 930 – 1860 Indian rupees). We assume that all goods can be traded (tradable) between countries. All countries can trade to get goods at a lower cost and larger market. We use 3 types of exchange rates to compare the results, namely the true exchange rate and misaligned 1 and 2.
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Supplementary weblinks

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