International Economics, 7e (Husted/Melvin) Chapter 3 The Classical Model of International Trade
International Economics, 7e (Husted/Melvin) Chapter 3 The Classical Model of International Trade
International Economics, 7e (Husted/Melvin) Chapter 3 The Classical Model of International Trade
Multiple-Choice Questions
1)
Mercantilism
A)
was a system of export promotion and barriers to imports practiced by governments, especially in the
17th and 18th centuries.
C)
Both A and C.
Answer:
2)
1
D
3)
says that the price of a good is determined by the amount of labor required to produce it.
D)
4)
Given constant returns to scale between labor and output, if it takes 10 hours to make 1 yard of cloth,
then 100 yards of cloth can be made in
A)
10 hours.
B)
100 hours.
C)
1000 hours.
D)
2
3
Answer the question(s) below based on the information in the following table
Country
Goods A B
X 3 9
Y 4 2
5)
Good X.
B)
Good Y.
C)
Neither X nor Y.
D)
Both X and Y.
Answer:
6)
Good X.
B)
Good Y.
C)
Neither X nor Y.
D)
Both X and Y.
4
Answer:
7)
Refer to the table above. If countries were to trade along the lines of absolute advantage
A)
A would export X to B.
B)
8)
Refer to the table above. If countries were to trade along the lines of comparative advantage
A)
A would export X to B.
B)
5
A
9)
Refer to the table above. In autarky the relative price of X (in terms of Y) in A would be
A)
3/4
B)
4/3
C)
3/9
D)
$3
Answer:
6
Answer the question(s) below based on the information in the following table
Country
Goods A B
Beer 3 9
Wine 1 2
10)
beer.
B)
wine.
C)
11)
beer.
B)
wine.
C)
12)
Refer to the table above. For trade to occur along the lines of comparative advantage, wages in A relative
to wages in B (measured in the same currency)
A)
13)
Refer to the table above. If each country were to reduce production of its comparative disadvantage good
by 1 unit, world output of wine would rise by
A)
1.5 units.
B)
2 units.
C)
3 units.
D)
3.5 units.
Answer:
8
14)
Refer to the table above. The relative price of beer in terms of wine in B is
A)
$4.50.
B)
2.
C)
4.5.
D)
$2.00.
Answer:
9
Answer the question(s) below based on the following diagram of a country in international trade
equilibrium.
15)
Refer to the figure above. This country has comparative advantage in good
A)
S.
B)
T.
C)
Y.
D)
Z.
Answer:
16)
B.
B)
10
C.
C)
D.
D)
E.
Answer:
17)
B.
B)
C.
C)
D.
D)
E.
Answer:
18)
OA units of Z.
B)
AB units of Z.
C)
11
AC units of Y.
D)
AD units of Y.
Answer:
12
19)
OA units of Z.
B)
AB units of Z.
C)
AC units of Y.
D)
AD units of Y.
Answer:
20)
considerable trade will occur between countries with different levels of technology.
C)
small countries could obtain all of the gains from trade when trading with large countries.
D)
21)
13
A)
how much the autarky price differs from the international price (i.e. the terms of trade).
C)
22)
countries with high wages will have higher relative prices of all goods.
D)
23)
14
absolute advantage.
B)
comparative advantage.
C)
physical advantage.
D)
24)
Both A and B.
D)
Neither A nor B.
Answer:
25)
15
relative differences in labor productivity between countries.
C)
Both A and B.
D)
Neither A nor B.
Answer:
Answer the question(s) below based on the information in the following table, where the numbers
represent the number of labor hours it will take to produce a unit of the given good
Spain France
Grapes 3 9
Textiles 1 2
The numbers represent the number of labor hours it will take to produce a unit of the given good.
26)
grapes.
B)
textiles.
C)
27)
16
A)
grapes.
B)
textiles.
C)
28)
Refer to the table above. Once trade begins, a possible international price (i.e. terms of trade) for textiles
in terms of grapes is
A)
$5.
B)
2/5.
C)
2.
D)
4/5.
Answer:
29)
Refer to the table above. If complete specialization occurs, and France has a labor force of 30,000 hours of
labor, then after trade begins it will produce
A)
17
2000 units of grapes.
B)
30)
Refer to the table above. France will gain from trade so long as the international price of grapes measured
in terms of textiles is below
A)
$15.
B)
3.
C)
5.
D)
8.
Answer:
18
True or False Questions
1)
An international division of labor will have no effect on total world output because resources are limited.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
None Given
2)
True
Explanation:
None Given
3)
A country must have absolute advantage in a good in order to have comparative advantage in that good.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
None Given
4)
19
A country must have comparative advantage in a good in order to have absolute advantage in that good.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
None Given
5)
False
Explanation:
6)
Countries with low wages will always be able to export to countries with high wages.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
7)
If country A has a larger trade triangle than country B, reciprocal demand will lead to an increase in the
20
relative price of A's imports.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
8)
In a two country world, at least one country must lose from trade.
Answer:
False
Explanation:
None Given
9)
Once trade begins, a country will tend to specialize completely in the production of its export good.
Answer:
True
Explanation:
None Given
10)
A country gains more from international trade the more its terms of trade differ from its autarky price.
Answer:
21
True
Explanation:
None Given
22
Essay Questions
1)
Countries
A B
Goods
X 8 4
Y 4 1
(a) Which country has absolute advantage in which good and why?
(b) Which country has comparative advantage in which good and why?
(c) If A is endowed with 8000 hours of labor, how much X will it produce after trade begins? How
much Y? Explain.
(d) What is the allowable range on A's wages relative to B's if trade is flowing between these two
countries according to comparative advantage?
Answer:
2)
Explain how trade will tend to emerge along the lines of comparative advantage if markets are allowed to
work freely.
Answer:
Comparative advantage is determined by autarky prices. Foreign demand will tend to drive up (down)
the autarky price of a country's comparative advantage (disadvantage) good, raising short term profits
and attracting resources to that industry. These resources come from the import competing comparative
disadvantage sector.
3)
Starting from a situation where country A which exports good S and imports good T has a larger trade
triangle than country B, explain how the process of reciprocal demand leads to international trade
equilibrium.
Answer:
If A has a larger trade triangle than B it wants to trade more than B. Consider the S market. A's desired
exports exceed B's desired imports. The price of S must fall. As this occurs, the two trade triangles move
toward congruency.
23
4)
Suppose that workers in A can produce 1 unit of S in 3 hours and 1 unit of T in 9 hours. Suppose further
that the relative price of S in B is 2. Graph the PPF for country A. Indicate the exact slope of the PPF.
Show how the autarky equilibrium is determined. Illustrate a hypothetical international trade
equilibrium, including production and consumption points, and trade volumes for a given (your
assumption-be explicit) but permissible value of the international terms of trade.
Answer:
24
The autarky price of S in A is 1/3, so that must be the slope of its PPF. A has comparative
advantage in S, so once trade begins it must completely specialize in S. The international terms
of trade must lie between 1/3 and 2.
25