Submitted by Premium_Woman t3_z405vj in explainlikeimfive
Kingjoe97034 t1_ixoj8ye wrote
It isn’t countries doing this. It is companies. Just because a company has access to a resource, and someone in the same country wants that resource, it doesn’t mean they have arranged to sell to the closer buyer. They may have a better deal to sell to someone in another country. The same goes for the buyer. They might have a better seller lined up elsewhere.
It sounds inefficient, but not necessarily, depending on how the supply lines are set up.
Herpes-in-space t1_ixolob4 wrote
Right, say we're in Herpinastan and I own a salt mine. You own a beef buillion cube company and need salt. Maybe local market conditions dictate you can pay $1 per pound of salt, but Americans will pay $6 per pound if we call it Herpina Sea Salt.
My salt would be exported and you may need to import some.
Tederator t1_ixql7rt wrote
I read an article many years ago about this, giving the example of Canadians importing American carrots because they look nicer and the US buying Canadian carrots because they taste sweeter.
dmazzoni t1_ixpfv3h wrote
As a theoretical example: one company in California orders the resource it needs from Mexico. A company in Illinois produces the same resource and sells it to Canada.
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