Test your knowledge with free interactive questions on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

Terms of Trade

Terms of trade describe the price of a nation's exports relative to the price of a nation's imports.

Terms of Trade

Terms of Trade

  • A nation's Terms of Trade = (Average export price index ÷ Average import price) X 100.
  • A nation's terms of trade have improved if they can buy more imports for a given amount of exports.
  • Brazil exports oil. When the oil price is very high, Brazil can buy more consumer goods and machinery (capital goods) with a given amount of oil exported because the value of their export index rises.
  • If an increase in import prices is larger than an increase in export prices, then a nation's terms of trade have worsened.
Factors affecting terms of trade

Factors affecting terms of trade

  • Anything affecting exports and imports will affect terms of trade.
    • A technological advance in the nation will allow it to export either higher quality goods (worth more money) or export higher volumes of goods.
    • A tariff imposed by another nation will automatically worsen a nation's terms of trade.
    • A commodity price boom could improve a commodity exporter's terms of trade and worsen a commodity importer's terms of trade.
    • An increase in the value of a nation's currency will lower the price of imports in the country, improving terms of trade.
Impact of worsening terms of trade

Impact of worsening terms of trade

  • Worsening terms of trade will mean that a nation can afford to import a lower value of goods from abroad.
  • If the nation continues to import as they did before, their current account deficit will get worse.
  • A nation's domestic industry may become more price competitive relative to imported goods and this may increase tax revenues for the government.
  • Worsening terms of trade may cause cost-push inflation as either more expensive domestic goods have to be purchased or more expensive imports still have to be bought.
Jump to other topics
1

Introduction to Markets

2

Market Failure

3

The UK Macroeconomy

4

The UK Economy - Policies

5

Business Behaviour

6

Market Structures

7

A Global Perspective

8

Finance & Inequality

9

Examples of Global Policy

Practice questions on Terms of Trade

Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
Answer all questions on Terms of Trade

Unlock your full potential with Seneca Premium

  • Unlimited access to 10,000+ open-ended exam questions

  • Mini-mock exams based on your study history

  • Unlock 800+ premium courses & e-books

Get started with Seneca Premium