Deck 21: International Trade and Comparative Advantage

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Exports are goods produced domestically and sold abroad.
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Gain from trade is the increase in total production due to specialization allowed by trade.
Question
Unequal distribution of resources is one of the main reasons for international trade.
Question
Specialization means that a country devotes its energy and resources to only a small proportion of the world's productive activities.
Question
If South Korea has an absolute advantage in the production of an item, it must also have a comparative advantage in the production of that item.
Question
Voluntary exchange is based on the principle that all parties must gain from trade.
Question
When a country removes a specific import restriction, it always benefits every worker in that country.
Question
Imports are goods produced abroad and sold domestically.
Question
If producers have different opportunity costs of production, trade will allow them to consume outside their production possibility frontiers.
Question
Self-sufficiency is the best way to increase one's material welfare.
Question
If one country has an absolute advantage in every commodity, there is no reason for it to trade.
Question
If England uses one week's time to produce 10 yards of cloth or 2 barrels of wine and Portugal uses one week's time to produce 12 yards of cloth or 6 barrels of wine, England has the comparative advantage in both goods.
Question
Absolute advantage is the ability to produce a good using fewer inputs than another producer.
Question
Absolute advantage is a comparison among producers based on productivity.
Question
Comparative advantage, not absolute advantage, determines the decision to specialize in production.
Question
Comparative advantage is a comparison among producers based on opportunity cost.
Question
If England uses one week's time to produce 10 yards of cloth or 2 barrels of wine and Portugal uses one week's time to produce 12 yards of cloth or 6 barrels of wine, then England has a comparative advantage in the production of cloth.
Question
Comparative advantage is the ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.
Question
If gains from trade are based solely on comparative advantage, and if all countries have the same opportunity costs of production, then there are no gains from trade.
Question
The U.S. Constitution prevents tariffs on trade between the individual states.
Question
Opportunity cost refers to whatever is given up to obtain some item.
Question
An export subsidy is a payment by the government to exporters to permit them to charge lower prices.
Question
A tariff is a tax on imports imposed by the country that is importing the goods.
Question
The principle of comparative advantage states that countries should specialize in the production of goods for which they have a lower opportunity cost of production than their trading partners.
Question
An export subsidy helps reduce the selling price of a product by allowing individual producers to charge less and still cover all of their production costs.
Question
Large gains from trade are most likely when countries are very different.
Question
A country's comparative advantage can be illustrated by the graph of the production possibilities frontier.
Question
If two countries voluntarily trade two goods with one another, the rate of exchange between the goods must fall in between the price ratios that would prevail in the two countries in the absence of trade.
Question
Dumping means selling goods in a foreign market at lower prices than those charged in the home market.
Question
Even though international trade is more complicated, supply and demand are still at the center of the price determination mechanism.
Question
Equilibrium price in international trade is the common price between exporting and importing countries.
Question
Trade adjustment assistance provides special unemployment benefits, loans, retraining programs, and other aid to workers and firms that are harmed by foreign competition.
Question
Quotas and tariffs provide the same outcome: restriction of international trade and higher prices for consumers.
Question
The United States is known worldwide as being a low-tariff nation.
Question
The United States has relatively low tariffs.
Question
A quota sets the maximum amount of a good that is permitted into a country.
Question
If a country's productivity doubles for everything it produces, this will not alter its prior pattern of specialization because it has not altered its comparative advantage.
Question
Talented people who are best at everything have a comparative advantage in the production of everything.
Question
The quantity supplied by domestic producers in an importing country must be less than the quantity demanded by its population.
Question
Comparative advantage is illustrated by the slopes of production possibilities frontiers.
Question
A tariff is a tax on imports.
Question
If a nation has an absolute advantage in the production of a good,

A)it can produce that good at a lower opportunity cost than its trading partner.
B)it can produce that good using fewer resources than its trading partner.
C)it will specialize in the production of that good and export it.
D)all of these.
Question
According to William Safire, "helpfulism" is basically protectionism.
Question
Mercantilism is a doctrine that holds that exports are good for a country, whereas imports are harmful.
Question
Strategic trade policy relies on threats of protectionism to protect free trade.
Question
A quota brings a more serious misallocation of resources than a tariff.
Question
An import quota will ordinarily raise the price of the good in the importing country.
Question
The strategic argument for protectionism holds that a nation may sometimes have to threaten protectionism to induce other countries to drop their own protectionist measures.
Question
Tariffs are more desirable than quotas if a government wants to increase revenues and reduce benefits to inefficient exporters.
Question
Both tariffs and quotas will restrict supplies coming into the country from abroad.
Question
Many countries impose tariffs or quotas to protect the domestic industry from competition.
Question
If a country's workers can produce 10 hamburgers per hour or 5 bags of French fries per hour. If there is no trade, the price of 1 bag of fries is 2 hamburgers.
Question
If a country has an absolute advantage in the production of an item, it must also have a comparative advantage in the production of that item.
Question
If every country uses tariffs, everyone is likely to lose.
Question
Dumping is a trade practice in which countries sell goods in a foreign market at cheaper prices than the goods can be produced domestically.
Question
Labor is defined as cheap only if its productivity is very low.
Question
The infant-industry argument for trade protection holds that new industries need to be protected from foreign competition until they develop and flourish.
Question
A quota specifies the maximum amount of a good that is permitted into the country from abroad per unit of time.
Question
A tariff has one distinct advantage over a quota. It increases tax revenues to the government.
Question
Any restriction of international trade that is accomplished by a quota can also be accomplished by a tariff.
Question
One of the main reasons that people want to limit imports is the

A)fear that imports will decrease the income of Americans.
B)idea that cheap foreign labor destroys American jobs.
C)concept that if trade benefits another country, it must harm the United States.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
Trade between nations usually means that

A)one country is richer than another.
B)one country becomes richer while the other becomes poorer.
C)both trading nations show some gains.
D)one trading country is trying to "beggar its neighbor."
Question
The logic of why international trade increases well-being is

A)a major revision of the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
B)completely different from the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
C)a narrow, special case of the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
D)no different from the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
Question
Comparing international trade with trade among the different states of the United States shows that

A)the logic of international trade is quite different from that of intranational trade.
B)the basic reasons for trade are equally applicable within a country or among countries.
C)there is no need to study international trade as a special subject.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
__________ is a payment by the government to exporters to permit them to reduce the selling prices of their goods so they can compete more effectively in foreign markets.

A)Export subsidy
B)Import subsidy
C)Tariff
D)All of these
Question
Trade between two nations is complicated by

A)the variability in exchange rates of the respective nation's currencies.
B)different production techniques in the nations.
C)the age and experience of the respective nation's diplomats.
D)the variability in climate between the nations.
Question
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of I unit of food in country A is</strong> A)¼ of a unit of electronics. B)½ of a unit of electronics. C)1\3 of a unit of electronics. D)All of these. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The opportunity cost of I unit of food in country A is

A)¼ of a unit of electronics.
B)½ of a unit of electronics.
C)1\3 of a unit of electronics.
D)All of these.
Question
Nothing raises the standard of living more than a greater

A)abundance of goods.
B)effort of production.
C)population.
D)number of import tariffs.
E)All of the above are true.
Question
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   Which of the following statements about absolute advantage is true?</strong> A)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of food while country B has the absolute advantage in the production of electronics. B)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics. C)Country B has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics. D)All of these. <div style=padding-top: 35px> Which of the following statements about absolute advantage is true?

A)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of food while country B has the absolute advantage in the production of electronics.
B)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics.
C)Country B has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics.
D)All of these.
Question
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of a unit of electronics in Country B is</strong> A)3 units of food. B)2 units of food. C)5 units of food. D)none of these. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The opportunity cost of a unit of electronics in Country B is

A)3 units of food.
B)2 units of food.
C)5 units of food.
D)none of these.
Question
A common fallacy that is used to oppose trade is the idea that

A)the only gains from trade go to the rich, so the poor must lose.
B)"you get what you pay for."
C)"if it's not broken, don't fix it."
D)one country's gain must be another's loss.
E)what is true for one is true for all.
Question
One reason why nations trade is because

A)trading provides opportunities to earn profits.
B)the rate of interest is not the same in all countries.
C)resources are not equally distributed to all nations.
D)some nations like to build one thing while others like to build another.
Question
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.
<strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of 1 unit of electronics in country A is</strong> A)4 units of food. B)3 units of food. C)2 units of food. D)all of these. <div style=padding-top: 35px> The opportunity cost of 1 unit of electronics in country A is

A)4 units of food.
B)3 units of food.
C)2 units of food.
D)all of these.
Question
The main reason why one nation trades with another is to

A)save its natural resources from rapid depletion.
B)exploit the advantages of specialization.
C)eliminate the danger of retaliation from other nations.
D)improve political alliances.
Question
Suppose a country's workers can produce 4 watches per hour or 16 rings per hour. If there is no trade

A)domestic price of 1 ring is 1\4th of a watch.
B)domestic price of 1 ring is 4 watches.
C)domestic price of 1 ring is 5 watches.
D)all of these.
Question
If a nation has a comparative advantage in the production of a good,

A)it can produce that good at a lower opportunity cost than its trading partner
B)it can produce the good using fewer resources than its trading partner.
C)it can benefit by restricting imports of that good.
D)None of these.
Question
Political factors influence international trade because

A)foreign trade always involves at least two governments.
B)foreign governments are much less concerned with the welfare of citizens in other countries.
C)foreign governments often establish impediments to free international trade.
D)All of the above are correct.
Question
One of the major reasons why nations trade is that

A)nations choose to trade for largely unknown reasons.
B)resources are not equally distributed across the planet.
C)nations wish to exert cultural influence abroad.
D)nations wish to copy others and need imports to study.
Question
If Argentina has a large amount of farmland and Great Britain has many factories,

A)the two nations have no reason to trade.
B)Argentina will be willing to trade but Great Britain will not.
C)Great Britain will be willing to trade but Argentina will not.
D)the two nations will probably engage in mutually advantageous trade.
Question
Suppose a country's workers can produce 4 watches per hour or 16 rings per hour. If there is no trade

A)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 4 rings.
B)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 1\4th of a ring.
C)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 5 rings.
D)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 1\5th of a ring.
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Deck 21: International Trade and Comparative Advantage
1
Exports are goods produced domestically and sold abroad.
True
2
Gain from trade is the increase in total production due to specialization allowed by trade.
True
3
Unequal distribution of resources is one of the main reasons for international trade.
True
4
Specialization means that a country devotes its energy and resources to only a small proportion of the world's productive activities.
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5
If South Korea has an absolute advantage in the production of an item, it must also have a comparative advantage in the production of that item.
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6
Voluntary exchange is based on the principle that all parties must gain from trade.
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7
When a country removes a specific import restriction, it always benefits every worker in that country.
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8
Imports are goods produced abroad and sold domestically.
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9
If producers have different opportunity costs of production, trade will allow them to consume outside their production possibility frontiers.
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10
Self-sufficiency is the best way to increase one's material welfare.
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11
If one country has an absolute advantage in every commodity, there is no reason for it to trade.
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12
If England uses one week's time to produce 10 yards of cloth or 2 barrels of wine and Portugal uses one week's time to produce 12 yards of cloth or 6 barrels of wine, England has the comparative advantage in both goods.
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13
Absolute advantage is the ability to produce a good using fewer inputs than another producer.
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14
Absolute advantage is a comparison among producers based on productivity.
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15
Comparative advantage, not absolute advantage, determines the decision to specialize in production.
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16
Comparative advantage is a comparison among producers based on opportunity cost.
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17
If England uses one week's time to produce 10 yards of cloth or 2 barrels of wine and Portugal uses one week's time to produce 12 yards of cloth or 6 barrels of wine, then England has a comparative advantage in the production of cloth.
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18
Comparative advantage is the ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.
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19
If gains from trade are based solely on comparative advantage, and if all countries have the same opportunity costs of production, then there are no gains from trade.
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20
The U.S. Constitution prevents tariffs on trade between the individual states.
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21
Opportunity cost refers to whatever is given up to obtain some item.
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22
An export subsidy is a payment by the government to exporters to permit them to charge lower prices.
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23
A tariff is a tax on imports imposed by the country that is importing the goods.
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24
The principle of comparative advantage states that countries should specialize in the production of goods for which they have a lower opportunity cost of production than their trading partners.
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25
An export subsidy helps reduce the selling price of a product by allowing individual producers to charge less and still cover all of their production costs.
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26
Large gains from trade are most likely when countries are very different.
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27
A country's comparative advantage can be illustrated by the graph of the production possibilities frontier.
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28
If two countries voluntarily trade two goods with one another, the rate of exchange between the goods must fall in between the price ratios that would prevail in the two countries in the absence of trade.
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29
Dumping means selling goods in a foreign market at lower prices than those charged in the home market.
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30
Even though international trade is more complicated, supply and demand are still at the center of the price determination mechanism.
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31
Equilibrium price in international trade is the common price between exporting and importing countries.
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32
Trade adjustment assistance provides special unemployment benefits, loans, retraining programs, and other aid to workers and firms that are harmed by foreign competition.
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33
Quotas and tariffs provide the same outcome: restriction of international trade and higher prices for consumers.
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34
The United States is known worldwide as being a low-tariff nation.
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35
The United States has relatively low tariffs.
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36
A quota sets the maximum amount of a good that is permitted into a country.
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37
If a country's productivity doubles for everything it produces, this will not alter its prior pattern of specialization because it has not altered its comparative advantage.
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38
Talented people who are best at everything have a comparative advantage in the production of everything.
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39
The quantity supplied by domestic producers in an importing country must be less than the quantity demanded by its population.
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40
Comparative advantage is illustrated by the slopes of production possibilities frontiers.
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41
A tariff is a tax on imports.
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42
If a nation has an absolute advantage in the production of a good,

A)it can produce that good at a lower opportunity cost than its trading partner.
B)it can produce that good using fewer resources than its trading partner.
C)it will specialize in the production of that good and export it.
D)all of these.
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43
According to William Safire, "helpfulism" is basically protectionism.
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44
Mercantilism is a doctrine that holds that exports are good for a country, whereas imports are harmful.
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45
Strategic trade policy relies on threats of protectionism to protect free trade.
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46
A quota brings a more serious misallocation of resources than a tariff.
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47
An import quota will ordinarily raise the price of the good in the importing country.
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48
The strategic argument for protectionism holds that a nation may sometimes have to threaten protectionism to induce other countries to drop their own protectionist measures.
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49
Tariffs are more desirable than quotas if a government wants to increase revenues and reduce benefits to inefficient exporters.
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50
Both tariffs and quotas will restrict supplies coming into the country from abroad.
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51
Many countries impose tariffs or quotas to protect the domestic industry from competition.
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52
If a country's workers can produce 10 hamburgers per hour or 5 bags of French fries per hour. If there is no trade, the price of 1 bag of fries is 2 hamburgers.
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53
If a country has an absolute advantage in the production of an item, it must also have a comparative advantage in the production of that item.
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54
If every country uses tariffs, everyone is likely to lose.
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55
Dumping is a trade practice in which countries sell goods in a foreign market at cheaper prices than the goods can be produced domestically.
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56
Labor is defined as cheap only if its productivity is very low.
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57
The infant-industry argument for trade protection holds that new industries need to be protected from foreign competition until they develop and flourish.
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58
A quota specifies the maximum amount of a good that is permitted into the country from abroad per unit of time.
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59
A tariff has one distinct advantage over a quota. It increases tax revenues to the government.
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60
Any restriction of international trade that is accomplished by a quota can also be accomplished by a tariff.
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61
One of the main reasons that people want to limit imports is the

A)fear that imports will decrease the income of Americans.
B)idea that cheap foreign labor destroys American jobs.
C)concept that if trade benefits another country, it must harm the United States.
D)All of the above are correct.
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Unlock for access to all 226 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
62
Trade between nations usually means that

A)one country is richer than another.
B)one country becomes richer while the other becomes poorer.
C)both trading nations show some gains.
D)one trading country is trying to "beggar its neighbor."
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63
The logic of why international trade increases well-being is

A)a major revision of the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
B)completely different from the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
C)a narrow, special case of the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
D)no different from the logic of why trade within a country increases well-being.
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Unlock for access to all 226 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Comparing international trade with trade among the different states of the United States shows that

A)the logic of international trade is quite different from that of intranational trade.
B)the basic reasons for trade are equally applicable within a country or among countries.
C)there is no need to study international trade as a special subject.
D)All of the above are correct.
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Unlock for access to all 226 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
__________ is a payment by the government to exporters to permit them to reduce the selling prices of their goods so they can compete more effectively in foreign markets.

A)Export subsidy
B)Import subsidy
C)Tariff
D)All of these
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66
Trade between two nations is complicated by

A)the variability in exchange rates of the respective nation's currencies.
B)different production techniques in the nations.
C)the age and experience of the respective nation's diplomats.
D)the variability in climate between the nations.
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Unlock for access to all 226 flashcards in this deck.
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67
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of I unit of food in country A is</strong> A)¼ of a unit of electronics. B)½ of a unit of electronics. C)1\3 of a unit of electronics. D)All of these. The opportunity cost of I unit of food in country A is

A)¼ of a unit of electronics.
B)½ of a unit of electronics.
C)1\3 of a unit of electronics.
D)All of these.
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68
Nothing raises the standard of living more than a greater

A)abundance of goods.
B)effort of production.
C)population.
D)number of import tariffs.
E)All of the above are true.
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Unlock Deck
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69
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   Which of the following statements about absolute advantage is true?</strong> A)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of food while country B has the absolute advantage in the production of electronics. B)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics. C)Country B has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics. D)All of these. Which of the following statements about absolute advantage is true?

A)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of food while country B has the absolute advantage in the production of electronics.
B)Country A has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics.
C)Country B has the absolute advantage in the production of both food and electronics.
D)All of these.
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70
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B. <strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of a unit of electronics in Country B is</strong> A)3 units of food. B)2 units of food. C)5 units of food. D)none of these. The opportunity cost of a unit of electronics in Country B is

A)3 units of food.
B)2 units of food.
C)5 units of food.
D)none of these.
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71
A common fallacy that is used to oppose trade is the idea that

A)the only gains from trade go to the rich, so the poor must lose.
B)"you get what you pay for."
C)"if it's not broken, don't fix it."
D)one country's gain must be another's loss.
E)what is true for one is true for all.
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72
One reason why nations trade is because

A)trading provides opportunities to earn profits.
B)the rate of interest is not the same in all countries.
C)resources are not equally distributed to all nations.
D)some nations like to build one thing while others like to build another.
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73
The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.
<strong>The following table shows the units of output a worker can produce per month in country A and country B.   The opportunity cost of 1 unit of electronics in country A is</strong> A)4 units of food. B)3 units of food. C)2 units of food. D)all of these. The opportunity cost of 1 unit of electronics in country A is

A)4 units of food.
B)3 units of food.
C)2 units of food.
D)all of these.
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74
The main reason why one nation trades with another is to

A)save its natural resources from rapid depletion.
B)exploit the advantages of specialization.
C)eliminate the danger of retaliation from other nations.
D)improve political alliances.
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75
Suppose a country's workers can produce 4 watches per hour or 16 rings per hour. If there is no trade

A)domestic price of 1 ring is 1\4th of a watch.
B)domestic price of 1 ring is 4 watches.
C)domestic price of 1 ring is 5 watches.
D)all of these.
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76
If a nation has a comparative advantage in the production of a good,

A)it can produce that good at a lower opportunity cost than its trading partner
B)it can produce the good using fewer resources than its trading partner.
C)it can benefit by restricting imports of that good.
D)None of these.
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77
Political factors influence international trade because

A)foreign trade always involves at least two governments.
B)foreign governments are much less concerned with the welfare of citizens in other countries.
C)foreign governments often establish impediments to free international trade.
D)All of the above are correct.
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78
One of the major reasons why nations trade is that

A)nations choose to trade for largely unknown reasons.
B)resources are not equally distributed across the planet.
C)nations wish to exert cultural influence abroad.
D)nations wish to copy others and need imports to study.
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79
If Argentina has a large amount of farmland and Great Britain has many factories,

A)the two nations have no reason to trade.
B)Argentina will be willing to trade but Great Britain will not.
C)Great Britain will be willing to trade but Argentina will not.
D)the two nations will probably engage in mutually advantageous trade.
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80
Suppose a country's workers can produce 4 watches per hour or 16 rings per hour. If there is no trade

A)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 4 rings.
B)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 1\4th of a ring.
C)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 5 rings.
D)the opportunity cost of 1 watch is 1\5th of a ring.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 226 flashcards in this deck.