Consider
your typical day. You wake up in the morning and you pour yourself juice from
oranges grown in Florida and coffee from beans grown in Brazil. Over breakfast
you watch a news program broadcast from New York on your television made in
japan. You get dressed in clothes made of cotton grown in Georgia and sewn in
factories in Thailand. You drive to class in a car made of parts manufactured
in more than a dozen countries around the world. Then you open up your
economics textbook written by an author living in Massachusetts, published by a
company located in Ohio, and printed on paper made from trees grown in Oregon
Every day
you rely on many people from around the world most of whom you do not know to
provide you with the goods and services that you enjoy. Such interdependence is
possible because people trade with one another. Those people who provide you
with goods services are not acting out of generosity or concern for your
welfare. Nor is some government agency directing them to make what two want and
give it to you. Instead people provide you and other consumers with the goods
and services they produce because they get something in retarn.
In
subsequent chapters we will examine how our economy coordinates the activities
of millions of people with varying tastes and abilities. As a starting point
for this analysis, here we consider the reasons for economic interdependence.
One of the Ten Principles of Economics highlighted in Chapter 1 is that trade
can make why people choose to depend on others for goods and services with
their neighbors and why nations trade with other nations. In this chapter, we
examine this principle more closely. What exactly do people gain when they
trade with one another? Why do people choose to become interdependent?
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