EC239 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5: Real Wages, Comparative Advantage, International Trade
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1. Use the information in the table below to answer the following questions.
Ā | US | Argentina |
wheat | 300 | 20 |
beef | 100 | 20 |
(a) Does either country have an absolute advantage in the production of wheat or beef? Explain.
(b) What is the opportunity cost of wheat in each country?
(c) What is the opportunity cost of beef in each country?
(d) Analyze comparative advantage and opportunities for trade between the U.S. and Argentina.
2. Suppose that China is labor-abundant country and U.S. is capital-abundant country. iPad is capital-intensive and cloth is labor-intensive. Show that U.S. exports iPad after opening up to trade using Heckscher-Ohlin model.
3. Explain the immiserizing growth using standard trade model.
4. Consider the following Heckscher-Ohlin model: there are two countries, America and China, two goods, high-tech manufactures and low-tech manufactures, and two factors of production, skilled labor and unskilled labor. America is skilled-labor abundant and China is unskilled-labor abundant. High-tech manufactures are skilled-labor intensive and low-tech manufactures are unskilled-labor intensive. What happens to the price of high-tech manufactures relative to the price of low-tech manufactures in America following trade?
1.Purchasing power parity implies that
a. the real exchange rate is equal to 1.
b. the law of one price does not hold.
c. inflation rates are equal across countries.
d. the real exchange rate is equal to 0.
e. if the domestic country has low prices, then the domestic currency will depreciate until foreign citizens can buy the same amount of goods as domestic citizens.
Ā
2.Which of the following is a prediction from the PPP model of exchange rates?
A. An increase in the US money supply leads to an appreciation of the dollar in the long run.
B. An increase in US production leads to a depreciation of the dollar.
C. An increase in US production will lead to a proportional increase in the inflation rate.
D, An increase in the US money supply leads to a depreciation of the dollar in the long run.
E.An increase in the US interest rates leads to a fall in prices.
Ā
3.Relative purchasing power parity predicts that
A.the difference between the inflation rates in the two countries should equal the ratio of the interest rates in the two countries.
B. the difference between the inflation rates in two countries should equal the per cent change in the exchange rate.
C.inflation rates should be equal across countries.
D.the real exchange rate should equal one.
E.relative price levels in the two countries should be equal when expressed in the same currency.
Ā
4.Which of the following is NOT a valid explanation for the failure of purchasing power parity?
a. Differences in monetary policies across countries
b. Lack of competition
c. Transportation costs
d. Trade barriers
Ā
5.If P represents (the level of) domestic prices, P* represents (the level of) foreign prices and E represents the exchange rate as units of domestic currency per units of foreign currency, then the real exchange rate equals
a. EP/P* |
b. P*/EP |
C. E/PP* |
d. EP*/P |
e. P/P* |
Ā |
6.The difference between nominal and real interest rates is that
A.Nominal interest rates are measured in terms of a country's output, while real interest rates are measured in monetary terms
B.Nominal interest rates are measured in monetary terms, while real interest rates are measured in terms of a country's output
C.Nominal interest rates can fluctuate, while real interest rates always remain fixed
D.Real interest rates can fluctuate, while nominal interest rates always remain fixed
E.Real interest rates are the same in every country, while nominal interest rates are different for every country
Ā
7.Which of the following is predicted to cause the value (or price or cost) of U.S. goods to appreciate relative to the value (or price or cost) of foreign goods in the long run?
a. An increase in the growth rate of U.S. GNP. b. A decrease in the growth rate of U.S. GNP.
c. A decline in the growth rate of the U.S. money supply.
d. An increase in the price of petroleum that reduces world demand for American cars. e. An appreciation of the dollar.