Exam 32: Comparative Advantage and the Open Economy
Exam 1: The Nature of Economics347 Questions
Exam 2: Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs412 Questions
Exam 3: Demand and Supply448 Questions
Exam 4: Extensions of Demand and Supply Analysis399 Questions
Exam 5: Public Spending and Public Choice359 Questions
Exam 6: Funding the Public Sector202 Questions
Exam 7: The Macroeconomy: Unemployment, Inflation, and Deflation412 Questions
Exam 8: Measuring the Economys Performance413 Questions
Exam 9: Global Economic Growth and Development282 Questions
Exam 10: Real GDP and the Price Level in the Long Run290 Questions
Exam 11: Classical and Keynesian Macro Analyses365 Questions
Exam 12: Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier445 Questions
Exam 13: Fiscal Policy273 Questions
Exam 14: Deficit Spending and the Public Debt145 Questions
Exam 15: Money, Banking, and Central Banking517 Questions
Exam 16: Domestic and International Dimensions of Monetary Policy357 Questions
Exam 17: Stabilization in an Integrated World Economy306 Questions
Exam 18: Policies and Prospects for Global Economic Growth216 Questions
Exam 19: Demand and Supply Elasticity413 Questions
Exam 20: Consumer Choice458 Questions
Exam 21: Rents, Profits, and the Financial Environment of Business445 Questions
Exam 22: The Firm: Cost and Output Determination387 Questions
Exam 23: Perfect Competition431 Questions
Exam 24: Monopoly386 Questions
Exam 25: Monopolistic Competition309 Questions
Exam 26: Oligopoly and Strategic Behavior306 Questions
Exam 27: Regulation and Antitrust Policy in a Globalized Economy309 Questions
Exam 28: The Labor Market: Demand, Supply and Outsourcing376 Questions
Exam 29: Unions and Labor Market Monopoly Power318 Questions
Exam 30: Income, Poverty, and Health Care302 Questions
Exam 31: Environmental Economics300 Questions
Exam 32: Comparative Advantage and the Open Economy314 Questions
Exam 33: Exchange Rates and the Balance of Payments300 Questions
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Since the 1930s, overall tariff rates in the United States have
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The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade is an international agreement
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Suppose that opportunity costs in India and Australia are constant. In India, maximum feasible hourly production rates are either 0.3 unit of cloth or 0.2 unit of food. In Australia, maximum feasible hourly production rates are either 0.5 unit of cloth or 0.5 unit of food. It is correct to state that
(Multiple Choice)
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If country A exports good X to country B and country B exports good Y to country A, it is most likely that
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According to the infant-industry argument, protection should be withdrawn from an infant industry when the companies in the industry
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If protective import-restricting tariffs are imposed by a country, in the majority of cases that nation's consumers end up
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If there are two goods and two countries, then one country can have
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Assume that U.S. producers can manufacture cookies at a lower opportunity cost than Mexican producers. If this is the case,
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In the long run, imports will most likely be paid for with
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-Refer to the above figures. A tariff is placed on a foreign good. Which figures represents the situation in the domestic market for a competing domestic good?

(Multiple Choice)
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Maximum Feasible Hourly Production Rates (in Tons) of Either
Knives or Forks Using All Available Resources
Product Country Alpha Country Beta
Knives 9 3
Forks 6 12
-Use the above table. Assuming constant opportunity costs, if countries Alpha and Beta specialize based on comparative advantage, then they will trade if the rate of exchange is
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"Everybody has a comparative advantage in something." Do you agree or disagree? Why?
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-According to the above table, which assumes that opportunity costs of producing goods X and Y are constant, which of the following statements is TRUE?

(Multiple Choice)
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If costs a firm $10 to produce a good and the same good sells for $7 abroad, then this firm is engaging in
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Maximum Feasible Hourly Production Rates of Either
Computers or Bicycles Using All Available Resources
Product United States Mexico
Computers 8 10
Bicycles 4 2
-Refer to the above table. It may be concluded that
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-According to the above table, which assumes that opportunity costs of producing goods X and Y are constant, Holly has comparative advantage in production of

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