International trade is the exchange of capital, goods, and services across international borders or territories. In most countries, such trade represents a significant share of gross domestic product (GDP). While international trade has been present throughout much of history (see Silk Road, Amber Road), its economic, social, and political importance has been on the rise in recent centuries.
Industrialization, advanced transportation, globalization, multinational corporations, and outsourcing
are all having a major impact on the international trade system.
Increasing international trade is crucial to the continuance of globalization. Without international trade, nations would be limited to the goods and services produced within their own borders.
International trade is, in principle, not different from domestic trade
as the motivation and the behavior of parties involved in a trade do
not change fundamentally regardless of whether trade is across a border
or not. The main difference is that international trade is typically
more costly than domestic trade. The reason is that a border typically
imposes additional costs such as tariffs, time costs due to border delays and costs associated with country differences such as language, the legal system or culture.
Another difference between domestic and international trade is that factors of production such as capital and labor
are typically more mobile within a country than across countries. Thus
international trade is mostly restricted to trade in goods and services,
and only to a lesser extent to trade in capital, labor or other factors
of production. Trade in goods and services can serve as a substitute
for trade in factors of production.
Instead of importing a factor of production, a country can import
goods that make intensive use of that factor of production and thus
embody it. An example is the import of labor-intensive goods by the
United States from China. Instead of importing Chinese labor, the United
States imports goods that were produced with Chinese labor. One report
in 2010 suggested that international trade was increased when a country
hosted a network of immigrants, but the trade effect was weakened when
the immigrants became assimilated into their new country.
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