Bundle: Principles of Economics, 8th + MindTap Economics, 1 term (6 months) Printed Access Card
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781337378710
Author: N. Gregory Mankiw
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Question
Chapter 3, Problem 5CQQ
To determine
Comparative advantage for the export of goods and services.
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Students have asked these similar questions
Suppose that in a day a worker in the United States can produce 10 bushels of corn or 2 shirts. In Russia a worker can produce 9 bushels of corn or 3 shirts in one day. Which of the following would benefit both the United States and Russia if trade occurred?
1 shirt for 6 bushels of corn
-----1 shirt for 4 bushels of corn
1 shirt for 1 bushel of corn
1 shirt for 2 bushels of corn
Im doing review for a class and I realize that 1 shirt and for bushels are the correct answer I am just confused on what formula would apply to figue this out
You are watching the nightly news. A political candidate being interviewed says, "I'm for
free trade, but it must be fair trade. If our foreign competitors will not raise their
environmental regulations, reduce subsidiaries to their export industries, and lower
tariffs on their imports of our goods, we should retaliate with tariffs and import quotas on
there goes to show them that we won't be played for fools!"
A) If a foreign country artificially lowers the cost of production for its producers with
lax environmental regulations and direct subsidiaries and then exports the
products to us, who gains and who loses in our country, producers or
consumers?
B) Continuing form part A above, does our country gain or lose? Why?
C) If a foreign country subsidizes the production of a good exported to the United
States, who bears the burden of their mistaken policy?
D) What happens to our overall economic well-being if we restrict trade with a
country that subsidizes its export industries?…
The world has two countries, A and Z, which each produce two products, gadgets and whizbangs. Without
world trade, the domestic price of gadgets in A is lower than the price of gadgets in Z. We can say that
Country Z has a comparative advantage in gadgets and should be exporting
them.
Country Z should specialize in producing gadgets.
Country A has a comparative advantage in gadgets and should be exporting them.
Country A has a comparative advantage in whizbangs and should be importing
them.
Chapter 3 Solutions
Bundle: Principles of Economics, 8th + MindTap Economics, 1 term (6 months) Printed Access Card
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- Use the Graph below to answer the questions about International Trade: Price P1 P2 P3 A B D F с E D -Quantity a. At equilibrium, what area represents Consumer Surplus? Blank 1 and Blank 2. b. At equilibrium, what area represents Producer Surplus? Blank 3 and Blank 4. c. Which Price Level would make this country become an importer of this good? Blank 5 d. Which Price Level would make this country become an exporter of this good? Blank 6arrow_forwardAssume the United States is an importer of televisions and there are no trade restrictions. US consumers buy 1 million televisions per year, of which 400,000 are produced domestically and 600,000 are imported,a. Suppose that a technological advance among Japanese television manufacturers causes the world price of televisions to fall by $100. Draw a graph to show how this change affects the welfare of U.S. consumers and U.S. producers and how it affects total surplus in the United States.b. After the fall in price, consumers buy 1.2 million televisions, of which 200,000 are produced domestically and 1 million are imported. Calculate the change in consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus from the price reduction. c. If the government responded by putting a $100 tariff on imported televisions, what would this do? Calculate the revenue that would be raised and the deadweight loss. Would it be a good policy from the standpoint of U.S. welfare? Who might support the policy?d.…arrow_forwardAn automobile company has two factories, one in Vietnam and one in Australia, each with the same number of workers. The Vietnamese factory can produce either 150 engines or 100 transmissions per day. The Australian factory can produce either 200 engines or 150 transmissions per day. A. Which factory has an advantage is irrelevant since the theory of comparative advantage only applies to countries, not companies. B. The Australian factory has an comparative advantage in the production of transmissions. C. The Vietnamese factory has an absolute advantage producing both engines and transmissions. D. The Vietnamese factory has a comparative advantage in the production of transmissions.arrow_forward
- Assume Australia is an importer of sofas and there are no trade restrictions. Australian consumers buy 1 000 000 sofas per year, of which 450 000 are produced domestically and 550 000 are imported.a Suppose that a technological advance among Swedish sofa manufacturers causes the world price of sofas to fall by $200. Draw a graph to show how this change affects the welfare of Australian consumers and Australian producers, and how it affects total surplus in Australia.b After the fall in price, Australian consumers buy 1 150 000 sofas, of which 300 000 are produced domestically and 850 000 are imported. Calculate the change in consumer surplus, producer surplus and total surplus from the price reduction.c If the government responded by putting a $200 tariff on imported sofas, what would this do? Calculate the revenue that would be raised and the deadweight loss. Would it be a good policy from the standpoint of Australian welfare? Who might support the policy?d Suppose that the fall in…arrow_forwardAssume Australia is an importer of sofas and there are no trade restrictions. Australian consumers buy 1 000 000 sofas per year, of which 450 000 are produced domestically and 550 000 are imported.a Suppose that a technological advance among Swedish sofa manufacturers causes the world price of sofas to fall by $200. Draw a graph to show how this change affects the welfare of Australian consumers and Australian producers, and how it affects total surplus in Australia.b After the fall in price, Australian consumers buy 1 150 000 sofas, of which 300 000 are produced domestically and 850 000 are imported. Calculate the change in consumer surplus, producer surplus and total surplus from the price reduction.c If the government responded by putting a $200 tariff on imported sofas, what would this do? Calculate the revenue that would be raised and the deadweight loss. Would it be a good policy from the standpoint of Australian welfare? Who might support the policy?d Suppose that the fall in…arrow_forwardWrite an essay related to this treatise:NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement): In the introduction, develop the origin of comparative advantage and its relationship with international trade, using the selected treaty as an example. In the development of the essay, present:to. A description of the treaty that includes:* the reasons for the creation of the selected treaty and the countries included in it.* the benefits and effects of export and import in the treaty.* What were the obstacles encountered in the development of the treaty.arrow_forward
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