A) How does international trade affect consumer well-being?
B) Who gains and who loses from free trade among countries?
C) How do the gains from trade compare to the losses?
D) Which argument for restricting free trade is politically feasible?
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Multiple Choice
A) $8, with 70 wagons produced in this country, 20 of which are exported.
B) $8, with 90 wagons produced in this country, 50 of which are exported.
C) $5, with 40 wagons produced in this country and another 30 wagons imported.
D) $5, with 40 wagons produced in this country and another 50 wagons imported.
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Multiple Choice
A) higher in the steel market, lower in the rice market, and unchanged in the TV market.
B) higher in the rice and steel markets, and unchanged in the TV market.
C) lower in the rice and TV markets, and higher in the steel market.
D) lower in the rice and steel markets, and the same in the TV market.
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Multiple Choice
A) the domestic price is equal to the world price.
B) carnations are sold at $8 in this market.
C) there is a shortage of 400 carnations in this market.
D) this country imports 200 carnations.
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Multiple Choice
A) the domestic price of coffee will be greater than the world price of coffee.
B) the domestic price of coffee will be lower than the world price of coffee.
C) the domestic price of coffee will equal the world price of coffee.
D) The world price of coffee does not matter; the domestic price of coffee prevails.
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Multiple Choice
A) Iran is an exporter of lumber.
B) the domestic quantity of lumber supplied exceeds the domestic quantity of lumber demanded at the world price without the tariff.
C) the world price without the tariff is less than the price of lumber without trade.
D) the world price without the tariff is greater than the price of lumber without trade.
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Multiple Choice
A) G.
B) C + G.
C) A + C + G.
D) A + B + C + G.
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Multiple Choice
A) The quantity of wagons that this country imports would increase.
B) The quantity of wagons that this country imports would decrease, but the country would still be an importer of wagons.
C) This country would switch from being an importer of wagons to an exporter of wagons.
D) The domestic price without trade would move closer to the world price.
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Multiple Choice
A) $80.
B) $97.50.
C) $162.50.
D) $495.50.
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Multiple Choice
A) $900.
B) $1,100.
C) $1,500.
D) $2,000.
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Multiple Choice
A) P1 and Q1.
B) P1 and Q4.
C) P2 and Q2.
D) P2 and Q3.
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Multiple Choice
A) $400.
B) $500.
C) $600.
D) $750.
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Multiple Choice
A) Free trade benefits a country when it exports but harms it when it imports.
B) "Voluntary" limits on Canadian exports of hogs are better for the United States than U.S. tariffs placed on Canadian hog exports.
C) Tariffs and quotas differ in that tariffs work like a tax and therefore impose deadweight losses, whereas quotas do not impose deadweight losses.
D) Free trade benefits a country both when it exports and when it imports.
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Multiple Choice
A) consumer surplus increases and total surplus increases in the market for that good.
B) consumer surplus increases and total surplus decreases in the market for that good.
C) consumer surplus decreases and total surplus increases in the market for that good.
D) consumer surplus decreases and total surplus decreases in the market for that good.
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Multiple Choice
A) producer surplus increases and total surplus increases in the market for that good.
B) producer surplus increases and total surplus decreases in the market for that good.
C) producer surplus decreases and total surplus increases in the market for that good.
D) producer surplus decreases and total surplus decreases in the market for that good.
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True/False
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) is a direct quantitative restriction on the amount of a good that can be imported.
B) increases the domestic quantity supplied.
C) increases domestic consumer surplus.
D) All of the above are correct.
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Multiple Choice
A) absolute advantage.
B) strategic advantage.
C) comparative advantage.
D) technical advantage.
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Multiple Choice
A) protectionism based on the national-security argument.
B) protectionism based on the infant-industry argument.
C) protectionism based on the unfair-competition argument.
D) keeping world markets relatively open.
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