Deck 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts

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Question
Movies are a major export of the U.S.
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Question
Reductions in transportation costs help explain the increase in U.S. trade flows.
Question
A country with negative net exports has a trade surplus.
Question
When net capital outflow is negative, it means that on net the value of domestic assets purchased by foreigners exceeds the value of foreign assets purchased by domestic residents.
Question
If a country's imports exceed its exports it has a trade surplus.
Question
When a company from Germany builds an automobile factory in the United States, the German firm has engaged in foreign direct investment.
Question
Both foreign direct investment and foreign portfolio investment by U.S. residents increase U.S. net capital outflow.
Question
Reduced barriers to trade help explain an increase in U.S. exports and imports relative to GDP since 1950.
Question
A rational investor will always purchase the bond that pays the highest real interest rate.
Question
By itself, if a U.S. firm builds a new factory overseas, U.S. net capital outflow rises.
Question
By itself, when a Japanese bank purchases a bond issued by a U.S. corporation, U.S. net capital outflow rises.
Question
Over the past six decades, the U.S. economy has experienced a dramatic increase in the relative importance of international trade and finance.
Question
If a country sells more goods and services abroad than it purchases abroad, it has positive net exports and a trade surplus.
Question
U.S. exports make up less than 20 percent of GDP.
Question
If a country's net exports fall, then its net capital outflow falls by the same amount.
Question
For an economy as a whole, net exports must equal minus one times net capital outflow.
Question
If purchases of foreign assets by U.S. residents exceed purchases of U.S. assets by foreign residents, then U.S. net capital outflow is positive.
Question
Net capital outflow is the purchase of domestic assets by foreign residents minus the purchase of foreign assets by domestic residents.
Question
If a U.S. firm buys Chinese toys using previously obtained Chinese currency, then both U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow decrease.
Question
A country must have a positive net outflow of capital if it has a trade deficit.
Question
A nation with a trade surplus will necessarily have saving that is greater than domestic investment.
Question
If Walmart buys $50 million worth of consumer goods from China and sells them in the U.S., and China uses the $50 million to purchase U.S. bonds, U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow both fall.
Question
To increase domestic investment, a country must increase its saving.
Question
The large trade deficits in the U.S. during the 1990's were primarily associated with a rise in domestic investment spending rather than a rise in the budget deficit.
Question
From 2008 to 2012 both U.S. saving and U.S. investment fell.
Question
The increase in the trade deficit in the 1980's reflected a decrease in national saving that is associated with an increase in the government budget deficit.
Question
If the exchange rate is 80 yen per dollar, then a hotel room in Tokyo that costs 25,000 yen costs $200.
Question
Other things the same, if U.S. net capital outflow rises, so does U.S. saving.
Question
When U.S. national saving rises, domestic investment also necessarily rises.
Question
If a nation is selling more goods and services to foreigners than it is buying from them, then on net it must be buying assets abroad.
Question
In an open economy national saving equals domestic investment plus net capital outflow.
Question
If the exchange rate is 12.5 pesos per U.S. dollar, it is also 1/12.5 U.S. dollars per peso.
Question
If a nation is selling more goods and services to foreigners than it is buying from them, then on net it must be selling assets abroad.
Question
If a country's trade surplus falls, its net capital outflow rises.
Question
It is possible for a country to have domestic investment that exceeds national saving.
Question
If the price of a good in the U.S. is $10, the exchange rate is 2 units of foreign currency per dollar, and the foreign price of the same good is 30 units of foreign currency, then the real exchange rate is 2/3.
Question
In an open economy, national saving can be less than investment.
Question
A Turkish firm exchanges lira (Turkish currency) for dollars. It then uses these dollars to purchase computers from the U.S. These actions decrease U.S. net capital outflow and increase U.S. net exports.
Question
If a German firm buys goods from a U.S. firm with dollars it obtains by exchanging euros for dollars, both U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow increase.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in the nominal exchange rate raises the real exchange rate.
Question
If over the next year the inflation rate in the euro area is higher than the inflation rate in Japan, then the euro should depreciate relative to the Japanese yen.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in the U.S. real exchange rate makes U.S. goods more expensive relative to foreign goods.
Question
When the central bank of some country prints large quantities of money, that county's currency loses value both in terms of the goods and services it buys and in terms of the amount of foreign currencies it can buy.
Question
Many economists believe that the theory of purchasing-power parity describes the forces that determine exchange rates in the long run.
Question
If foreign residents purchase 30 billion pesos of Mexican assets and Mexican residents purchase 25 billion pesos of foreign assets, then Mexico has a net capital outflow of 5 billion pesos.
Question
According to purchasing power parity, the nominal exchange rate between the U.S. and another country should equal the price level of foreign goods divided by the price level of U.S. goods.
Question
If the purchasing power of the dollar is always the same at home and abroad, then the nominal exchange rate defined as units of foreign currency per dollar decreases if the U.S. price level rises more than the price level in foreign countries.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in domestic prices raises the real exchange rate.
Question
In the 1970s and 1980s the U.S. dollar depreciated against the German mark and appreciated against the Italian lira because U.S. inflation was lower than in Germany but higher than in Italy.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in the real exchange rate raises U.S. net exports.
Question
If prices in the U.S. rise faster than prices in the United Kingdom, then according to the doctrine of purchasing-power parity the U.S. nominal exchange rate should rise
Question
Jason plans to buy shrimp in Florida and sell them in Manhattan, Kansas where the price is higher. Jason plans to engage in arbitrage.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in foreign prices raises the real exchange rate.
Question
According to purchasing-power parity theory, the nominal exchange rate between the U.S. and another country should equal the U.S. price level divided by the price level in the foreign country.
Question
If U.S. residents purchase $450 billion of foreign assets and foreigners purchase $575 billion of U.S. assets, then the U.S. has net capital outflows of -$125 billion and a trade deficit of $125 billion.
Question
Other things the same, an increase in the foreign price level leads to an increase in the real exchange rate.
Question
If prices in Mexico rise at a higher rate than prices in the U.S., then according to purchasing-power parity the U.S. nominal exchange rate with Mexico should rise.
Question
If the U.S. real exchange rate is greater than 1, then there is the possibility of arbitraging by buying foreign goods to sell in the U.S.
Question
The theory of purchasing-power parity states that a unit of a country's currency should be able to buy the same quantity of goods in foreign countries as it does in the domestic economy.
Question
Purchasing-power parity says that the nominal exchange rate must equal the real exchange rate.
Question
In the first quarter of 2015 the U.S. had a trade deficit. In the first quarter of 2016 exports fell and imports rose. According to these numbers what happened to net exports?
Question
Last year a country sold $500 billion euros worth of goods to foreigners and had a trade deficit of $100 billion euros. What was the value of its imports?
Question
A U.S. firm called EcoWind produces windmills for households to generate electricity. It uses 25,000 recently obtained pesos to buy copper from a mining company in Argentina. As a result of this exchange, by how much, if at all, and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
Question
If a country's exports were 500 billion pesos and its imports were 300 billion pesos, what would its trade balance be?
Question
A country had a net capital outflow of $1.5 trillion and imports of $0.5 trillion. What was the value of its exports?
Question
Last year residents of Country A purchased $600 billion of foreign assets. Foreigners purchased $425 billion dollars of assets and $375 billion of goods and services from country A. What was the value of Country A's imports?
Question
The Norwegian government uses $500,000 of previously obtained U.S. dollars to buy $500,000 of police cars from a U.S. company.
As a result of this exchange, by how much, if at all, and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
Question
As measured by the amount of trade it does, has the U.S. economy become more internationalized? Provide two reasons for this change.
Question
Other things the same, if the government reduced its budget deficit, the country's trade balance would rise.
Question
A U.S. mutual fund uses $1 million to buy yen from a Japanese bank. It then uses these yen to buy stocks in a Japanese electronics firm. The Japanese electronic firm then exchanges the $1 million dollars of yen for dollars from a U.S. bank. It uses these dollars to buy equipment manufactured by a company located in the U.S.
As a result of these exchanges, by how much, if at all, and in which direction does:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
Question
A country recently had a trade deficit of $2.5 trillion and purchased $3 trillion of foreign assets. How many of its assets did foreigners purchase?
Question
A U.S. grocery store chain bought $800,000 worth of Kenyan currency from a bank in Kenya. It then used these funds to buy $800,000 worth of coffee from Kenyan coffee growers.
As a result of this exchange, by how much and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
Question
A U.S. bank loaned a Canadian oil company 1 million U.S. dollars. The Canadian company then used the entire loan to buy mining equipment from a U.S. company.
As a result of these transactions, by how much and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
Question
A country had a net capital outflow of 300 billion euros and exports of 400 billion euros. What was the value of its imports?
Question
If the U.S. real exchange rate with Japan is greater than 1, then U.S. goods are relatively cheap.
Question
A U.S. mutual fund buys stock issued by a corporation in Colombia. A U.S. grocery store chain builds and manages a new warehouse in Honduras. Which one(s) of these is foreign direct investment? Which one(s) would be taken into account when computing U.S. net capital outflows?
Question
A country recently had a trade deficit of 350 billion euros. Its residents also purchased 400 billion euros of foreign assets. What was the value of this country's assets purchased by foreigners?
Question
Last month a country sold more goods and services to residents of foreign countries than it purchased from them. What does this imply about this country's trade balance?
Question
If a country's saving rises, then either its investment or its net capital outflow rises (or both).
Question
A department store chain in Japan uses yen to purchase 500,000 U.S. dollars from a U.S. bank. It then uses these dollars to buy DVDs from a U.S. filmmaker. As a result of these transactions:
A. By how much and in what direction did U.S. net exports change?
B. By how much and in which direction did U.S. net capital outflow change?
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Deck 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
1
Movies are a major export of the U.S.
True
2
Reductions in transportation costs help explain the increase in U.S. trade flows.
True
3
A country with negative net exports has a trade surplus.
False
4
When net capital outflow is negative, it means that on net the value of domestic assets purchased by foreigners exceeds the value of foreign assets purchased by domestic residents.
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5
If a country's imports exceed its exports it has a trade surplus.
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6
When a company from Germany builds an automobile factory in the United States, the German firm has engaged in foreign direct investment.
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7
Both foreign direct investment and foreign portfolio investment by U.S. residents increase U.S. net capital outflow.
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8
Reduced barriers to trade help explain an increase in U.S. exports and imports relative to GDP since 1950.
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9
A rational investor will always purchase the bond that pays the highest real interest rate.
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10
By itself, if a U.S. firm builds a new factory overseas, U.S. net capital outflow rises.
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11
By itself, when a Japanese bank purchases a bond issued by a U.S. corporation, U.S. net capital outflow rises.
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12
Over the past six decades, the U.S. economy has experienced a dramatic increase in the relative importance of international trade and finance.
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13
If a country sells more goods and services abroad than it purchases abroad, it has positive net exports and a trade surplus.
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14
U.S. exports make up less than 20 percent of GDP.
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15
If a country's net exports fall, then its net capital outflow falls by the same amount.
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16
For an economy as a whole, net exports must equal minus one times net capital outflow.
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17
If purchases of foreign assets by U.S. residents exceed purchases of U.S. assets by foreign residents, then U.S. net capital outflow is positive.
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18
Net capital outflow is the purchase of domestic assets by foreign residents minus the purchase of foreign assets by domestic residents.
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19
If a U.S. firm buys Chinese toys using previously obtained Chinese currency, then both U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow decrease.
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20
A country must have a positive net outflow of capital if it has a trade deficit.
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21
A nation with a trade surplus will necessarily have saving that is greater than domestic investment.
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22
If Walmart buys $50 million worth of consumer goods from China and sells them in the U.S., and China uses the $50 million to purchase U.S. bonds, U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow both fall.
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23
To increase domestic investment, a country must increase its saving.
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24
The large trade deficits in the U.S. during the 1990's were primarily associated with a rise in domestic investment spending rather than a rise in the budget deficit.
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25
From 2008 to 2012 both U.S. saving and U.S. investment fell.
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26
The increase in the trade deficit in the 1980's reflected a decrease in national saving that is associated with an increase in the government budget deficit.
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27
If the exchange rate is 80 yen per dollar, then a hotel room in Tokyo that costs 25,000 yen costs $200.
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28
Other things the same, if U.S. net capital outflow rises, so does U.S. saving.
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29
When U.S. national saving rises, domestic investment also necessarily rises.
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30
If a nation is selling more goods and services to foreigners than it is buying from them, then on net it must be buying assets abroad.
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31
In an open economy national saving equals domestic investment plus net capital outflow.
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32
If the exchange rate is 12.5 pesos per U.S. dollar, it is also 1/12.5 U.S. dollars per peso.
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33
If a nation is selling more goods and services to foreigners than it is buying from them, then on net it must be selling assets abroad.
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34
If a country's trade surplus falls, its net capital outflow rises.
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35
It is possible for a country to have domestic investment that exceeds national saving.
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36
If the price of a good in the U.S. is $10, the exchange rate is 2 units of foreign currency per dollar, and the foreign price of the same good is 30 units of foreign currency, then the real exchange rate is 2/3.
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37
In an open economy, national saving can be less than investment.
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38
A Turkish firm exchanges lira (Turkish currency) for dollars. It then uses these dollars to purchase computers from the U.S. These actions decrease U.S. net capital outflow and increase U.S. net exports.
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39
If a German firm buys goods from a U.S. firm with dollars it obtains by exchanging euros for dollars, both U.S. net exports and U.S. net capital outflow increase.
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40
Other things the same, an increase in the nominal exchange rate raises the real exchange rate.
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41
If over the next year the inflation rate in the euro area is higher than the inflation rate in Japan, then the euro should depreciate relative to the Japanese yen.
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42
Other things the same, an increase in the U.S. real exchange rate makes U.S. goods more expensive relative to foreign goods.
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43
When the central bank of some country prints large quantities of money, that county's currency loses value both in terms of the goods and services it buys and in terms of the amount of foreign currencies it can buy.
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44
Many economists believe that the theory of purchasing-power parity describes the forces that determine exchange rates in the long run.
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45
If foreign residents purchase 30 billion pesos of Mexican assets and Mexican residents purchase 25 billion pesos of foreign assets, then Mexico has a net capital outflow of 5 billion pesos.
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46
According to purchasing power parity, the nominal exchange rate between the U.S. and another country should equal the price level of foreign goods divided by the price level of U.S. goods.
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47
If the purchasing power of the dollar is always the same at home and abroad, then the nominal exchange rate defined as units of foreign currency per dollar decreases if the U.S. price level rises more than the price level in foreign countries.
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48
Other things the same, an increase in domestic prices raises the real exchange rate.
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49
In the 1970s and 1980s the U.S. dollar depreciated against the German mark and appreciated against the Italian lira because U.S. inflation was lower than in Germany but higher than in Italy.
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50
Other things the same, an increase in the real exchange rate raises U.S. net exports.
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51
If prices in the U.S. rise faster than prices in the United Kingdom, then according to the doctrine of purchasing-power parity the U.S. nominal exchange rate should rise
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52
Jason plans to buy shrimp in Florida and sell them in Manhattan, Kansas where the price is higher. Jason plans to engage in arbitrage.
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53
Other things the same, an increase in foreign prices raises the real exchange rate.
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54
According to purchasing-power parity theory, the nominal exchange rate between the U.S. and another country should equal the U.S. price level divided by the price level in the foreign country.
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55
If U.S. residents purchase $450 billion of foreign assets and foreigners purchase $575 billion of U.S. assets, then the U.S. has net capital outflows of -$125 billion and a trade deficit of $125 billion.
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56
Other things the same, an increase in the foreign price level leads to an increase in the real exchange rate.
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57
If prices in Mexico rise at a higher rate than prices in the U.S., then according to purchasing-power parity the U.S. nominal exchange rate with Mexico should rise.
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58
If the U.S. real exchange rate is greater than 1, then there is the possibility of arbitraging by buying foreign goods to sell in the U.S.
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59
The theory of purchasing-power parity states that a unit of a country's currency should be able to buy the same quantity of goods in foreign countries as it does in the domestic economy.
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60
Purchasing-power parity says that the nominal exchange rate must equal the real exchange rate.
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61
In the first quarter of 2015 the U.S. had a trade deficit. In the first quarter of 2016 exports fell and imports rose. According to these numbers what happened to net exports?
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62
Last year a country sold $500 billion euros worth of goods to foreigners and had a trade deficit of $100 billion euros. What was the value of its imports?
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63
A U.S. firm called EcoWind produces windmills for households to generate electricity. It uses 25,000 recently obtained pesos to buy copper from a mining company in Argentina. As a result of this exchange, by how much, if at all, and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
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64
If a country's exports were 500 billion pesos and its imports were 300 billion pesos, what would its trade balance be?
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65
A country had a net capital outflow of $1.5 trillion and imports of $0.5 trillion. What was the value of its exports?
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66
Last year residents of Country A purchased $600 billion of foreign assets. Foreigners purchased $425 billion dollars of assets and $375 billion of goods and services from country A. What was the value of Country A's imports?
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67
The Norwegian government uses $500,000 of previously obtained U.S. dollars to buy $500,000 of police cars from a U.S. company.
As a result of this exchange, by how much, if at all, and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
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68
As measured by the amount of trade it does, has the U.S. economy become more internationalized? Provide two reasons for this change.
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69
Other things the same, if the government reduced its budget deficit, the country's trade balance would rise.
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70
A U.S. mutual fund uses $1 million to buy yen from a Japanese bank. It then uses these yen to buy stocks in a Japanese electronics firm. The Japanese electronic firm then exchanges the $1 million dollars of yen for dollars from a U.S. bank. It uses these dollars to buy equipment manufactured by a company located in the U.S.
As a result of these exchanges, by how much, if at all, and in which direction does:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
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71
A country recently had a trade deficit of $2.5 trillion and purchased $3 trillion of foreign assets. How many of its assets did foreigners purchase?
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72
A U.S. grocery store chain bought $800,000 worth of Kenyan currency from a bank in Kenya. It then used these funds to buy $800,000 worth of coffee from Kenyan coffee growers.
As a result of this exchange, by how much and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
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73
A U.S. bank loaned a Canadian oil company 1 million U.S. dollars. The Canadian company then used the entire loan to buy mining equipment from a U.S. company.
As a result of these transactions, by how much and in which direction did:
A. U.S. net exports change?
B. U.S. net capital outflow change?
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74
A country had a net capital outflow of 300 billion euros and exports of 400 billion euros. What was the value of its imports?
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75
If the U.S. real exchange rate with Japan is greater than 1, then U.S. goods are relatively cheap.
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76
A U.S. mutual fund buys stock issued by a corporation in Colombia. A U.S. grocery store chain builds and manages a new warehouse in Honduras. Which one(s) of these is foreign direct investment? Which one(s) would be taken into account when computing U.S. net capital outflows?
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77
A country recently had a trade deficit of 350 billion euros. Its residents also purchased 400 billion euros of foreign assets. What was the value of this country's assets purchased by foreigners?
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78
Last month a country sold more goods and services to residents of foreign countries than it purchased from them. What does this imply about this country's trade balance?
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79
If a country's saving rises, then either its investment or its net capital outflow rises (or both).
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80
A department store chain in Japan uses yen to purchase 500,000 U.S. dollars from a U.S. bank. It then uses these dollars to buy DVDs from a U.S. filmmaker. As a result of these transactions:
A. By how much and in what direction did U.S. net exports change?
B. By how much and in which direction did U.S. net capital outflow change?
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