ECNS 202 PRINTOUT
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781337096584
Author: Mankiw
Publisher: CENGAGE L
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Chapter 9, Problem 6CQQ
To determine
How tariff and the import quota differ.
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Analyze the Economic Effects of Tariffs and Quotas. Give examples.
What is the effect of placing tariffs on products imported into the U.S. from other countries? Are there any problems with this?
The effect of imposing a tariff on a specific imported good is to
the domestic price of the good and
the domestic production of the good. Select one: a. increase; increase b. decrease; increase c. decrease;
decrease d. decrease; to leave unaffected.
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- Vietnam has a policy of free trade in motorcycles which are sold in world markets at a price of 10,000 per motorcycle. Under free trade, Vietnam produces 100,000 motorcycles and imports 100,000 motorcycles. To provide some protection to the domestic industry, Vietnam imposes an import tariff of $1500 per motorcycle. With this tariff in place, production in Vietnam rises by 5,000 motorcycles and consumption drops by the same amount. Calculate the effects of the tariff on: a. Consumer Surplus b. Producer Surplus c. Government Revenues d. Overall Welfare e. If the tariff imposed by the Vietnamese had led to small reduction in world prices of, say, 250 dollars, how, qualitatively, would the welfare calculations (a), (b), (c) and (d) above change?arrow_forwardIf the demand of an imported good is perfectly inelastic, a tariff imposed on its import will be: a. Paid entirely by the domestic producers of the good b. Paid entirely by the consumers of the good c. Split between the consumers and producers of the good d. Split between the domestic and foreign producers of the goodarrow_forwardWhat will a tariff and an import quota do to the quantity of imports and the domestic price? reduce the quantity of imports and lower domestic price increase the quantity of imports and raise domestic price increase the quantity of imports and lower domestic price reduce the quantity of imports and raise domestic pricearrow_forward
- Why would an importing country use a tariff rather than a quota?arrow_forwardCan someone answer d,e, and f?arrow_forwardJapan imports crayons into its country; they are a price taker in this market. Suppose the world price of crayons is $5. If Japan imposes a $1 tariff on crayons, what would be the domestic price of crayons and what will happen to the quantity bought? a The quantity bought will increase and the price will be $6. b The quantity bought will fall and the price will be $6. c The quantity bought will fall and the price will be $4. d The quantity bought will increase and the price will be $4arrow_forward
- How does the imposition of an import tariff by a country affect its domestic market for the imported goods? A. It increases the domestic supply, leading. to lower prices. B. It decreases the domestic supply, leading to higher prices. C. It increases the domestic demand, leading to higher prices. D. It decreases the domestic demand, leading to lower prices.arrow_forwardPlease help me solve this problem. Thanks!arrow_forwardGeorgia and Moldova are famous for their quality of wine and the United Kingdom decides to start importing from them. There is an 5£ tariff on imported wine. Considering the graph below, where does the UK buy its wine from and how much does it cost on the domestic market? Price per bottle £10 £7 Moldovan price £5 Georgian price UK demand for imported wine Quantity (millions of bottles per year) 10 15 22 Suppose the UK joins a trade bloc with Moldova and maintains its 5£ tariff on wine from outside the bloc. a) What will the new domestic price be? b) How much do consumers gain/lose? c) How about the government? d) Is there trade creation or trade dıversion or both? e) How much does the UK gain/lose?arrow_forward
- 1) The loss of consumer benefits when a tariff imposed on imported consumer good is called: a) Consumer surplus b) Net-welfare gain c) Consumer deadweight cost d) Producer deadweight cost 2) Which one is not true about countries of the world? a) Only large countries involve in an international trade b) Openness of countries to international trade vary between countries c) Countries produce, exchange, and consume goods and services d) Economic development of countries is little affected by the extent of their engagement in international trade e) a and darrow_forwardYou have just been put in charge of trade policy for Malawi. Coffee is a recent crop that is growing well and the Malawian export market is developing. As such,Malawi coffee is aninfant industry.Malawi coffee producers come to you and ask for tariff protection from cheap Tanzanian coffee. What sorts of policies will you enact? Explain.arrow_forwardA tariff is usually considered to be better than a quota because quotas hurt domestic producers; tariffs hurt foreign producers. tariffs produce tax revenue. tariffs help domestic producers more than quotas. quotas are inflexible. it does not distort trade as much.arrow_forward
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