Macroeconomics
13th Edition
ISBN: 9781337617444
Author: Roger A. Arnold
Publisher: Cengage
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Chapter 21, Problem 11QP
To determine
The effectiveness of voluntary agreement policy in international trade.
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The graph above is the U.S. market for some imported good. Supply is a flat curve. The U.S. can import the Chinese good for $40 and the Mexican good for $48. Assume the U.S. imposes $10 tariffs on each unit of the imported good. What will be the quantity imported? From which country? How your answer will change if the U.S. keep the $10 tariffs but join a trade bloc with Mexico? Will the country’s wellbeing increase or decrease? By how much (hint find the change in consumer surplus and the change in government revenue)? Explain your answers.
Country X can produce 1,000 units of food and 2,000 units of clothes. Country Y can produce 1,000 units of food and 1,000 units of clothes. In order to maximize trade according to the principles of comparative advantage,
country X should produce food and import clothes from country Y.
country Y should produce food and import clothes from country X.
country X and Y should produce both food and clothes to meet their own needs.
country Y should produce both food and clothes, and import additional clothes from country X.
An average worker in Brazil can produce an ounce of soybeans in 20 minutes and an ounce of coffee in 60 minutes, while an average worker in Peru can produce an ounce of soybeans in 50 minutes and an ounce of coffee in 75 minutes.
Who has the absolute advantage in coffee? Explain.
Who has the comparative advantage in coffee? Explain.
If the two countries specialize and trade with each other, who will import coffee? Explain.
Assume that the two countries trade and that the country importing coffee trades 2 ounces of soybeans for 1 ounce of coffee. Explain why both countries will benefit from this trade.
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