File: c11; Chapter 11: International Trade and Economic Development



Similar documents
Chapter 10. Trade Policy in Developing Countries. Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop

Evolution of informal employment in the Dominican Republic

How To Help The World Coffee Sector

Food Commodity Trade The Need for a Regional Approach to Stimulate Agricultural Growth and Enhance Food Security

Chapter 7 The Asset Market, Money, and Prices

Globalization and International Trade

International Economics, 8e (Krugman) Chapter 10 Trade Policy in Developing Countries Import-Substituting Industrialization

CHAPTER 15 EXCHANGE-RATE ADJUSTMENTS AND THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS

Strategic Elements of Competitive Advantage. PPT 6 (First ppt slides after the mid-term) Assist. Prof. Dr. Ayşen Akyüz

OPENNESS TO TRADE: exports plus imports as a share of GDP, ranked against major competitors

3) The excess supply curve of a product we (H) import from foreign countries (F) increases as B) excess demand of country F increases.

Fifty years of Australia s trade

Business as Usual is Not an Option: Trade and Markets

Global Urbanization: Trends, Patterns, Determinants, and Impacts. Abdullah Baqui, DrPH, MPH, MBBS Johns Hopkins University

Reading the balance of payments accounts

Economic Policy and State Intervention (Richards and Waterbury CHs #2,3,7,8,9) 1. Recovery Since Growth Policies 3. Why the Middle East Chose

Comparing Levels of Development

Chapter 6 Economic Growth

How To Understand The Industrial Revolution

CHAPTER 12 CHAPTER 12 FOREIGN EXCHANGE

Best Essay from a First Year Student

CHAPTER 11: The Problem of Global Inequality

Ghana South Korea United States. Real GDP per capita (2005 dollars) Per centage of 1960 real GDP per capita real GDP per capita

The Natural Resource Content of United States Foreign Trade

Static & Dynamic Gains from Trade. Factors determining gains from trade.

Exercises Lecture 8: Trade policies

Working Paper Research Unit Global Issues Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

COMMON FUND FOR COMMODITIES THIRD UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON THE LEAST DEVELOPED COUNTRIES

The Balance of Payments, the Exchange Rate, and Trade

Policy Incentives Granted to Local SMEs in the Philippines

An Analysis of the Economic Effects of Japan-Korea FTA: Sectoral Aspects. Tomoyoshi Nakajima. August, 2002 Niigata, Japan

TYPES OF ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Definition Key Terms Countries

Chapter 16 THE FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET AND TRADE ELASTICITIES

real r = nominal r inflation rate (25)

Review and explanation of the ways to boost the stock market and attract investors

NRF 2015 Global Ecommerce: It s a Small World After All

CHAPTER 16 EXCHANGE-RATE SYSTEMS

Table 1: Resource Exports Per cent of total nominal exports; selected years

UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO BOULDER, COLORADO. Course Outline and Reading List

Answers to Text Questions and Problems in Chapter 11

GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT OF THE MALAYSIAN ECONOMY - An overview -

Target Retirement Funds

WTO NEGOTIATIONS ON TRADE IN SERVICES

A GLANCE AT THE EUROPEAN ENERGY MARKET LIBERALIZATION

OBJECTIVES CHAPTER OVERVIEW CHAPTER OUTLINE SEMINAR 28 NOV 2013

U.S. Agriculture and International Trade

a) Aggregate Demand (AD) and Aggregate Supply (AS) analysis

Regionalism and the World Trading System

Wheat Import Projections Towards Chad Weigand Market Analyst

Differentiated IP Regimes for Environmental & Climate Technologies. Keith Maskus ICCG ICARUS International Workshop Venice, May 20, 2011

Section 2 Evaluation of current account balance fluctuations

UNITED NATIONS AND ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

The Trans-Pacific Partnership and Asia-Pacific Integration: Brief overview. Peter A. Petri, Michael G. Plummer and Fan Zhai February 2015

U.S.-Mexico Trade Patterns Under NAFTA

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES. How the WTO deals with the special needs of an increasingly important group. 1. Overview. Chapter 6

NATIONAL INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES STRATEGY FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF AZERBAIJAN ( )

GLOBAL WOOD AND WOOD PRODUCTS FLOW

4. Market Structures. Learning Objectives Market Structures

Monetary policy assessment of 13 September 2007 SNB aiming to calm the money market

FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES

REVIEW ONE. Name: Class: Date: Matching

July Chart 1: World Edible Oil Production

Have Recent Increases in International Cereal Prices Been Transmitted to Domestic Economies? The experience in seven large Asian countries

Expenditure Changing and Expenditure Switching policies. In an open economy setting, policymakers need to achieve two goals of

Impact of Foreign Direct Investment, Imports and Exports

Comparative Analysis of Shanghai and Hong Kong s Financial Service Trade Competitiveness

Ch. 38 Practice MC 1. In international financial transactions, what are the only two things that individuals and firms can exchange? A.

Copyright 2013 wolfssl Inc. All rights reserved. 2

WTO E-Learning. WTO E-Learning Copyright August The WTO and Trade Economics: Theory and Policy

Trading Policy and Georgian Export

Economics 380: International Economics Fall 2000 Exam #2 100 Points

Midterm Exam - Answers. November 3, 2005

The Specific-Factors Model: HO Model in the Short Run

Chapter 7 Monopoly, Oligopoly and Strategy

The Standard Trade Model

Global Dimensions of Nonprofit Law. By Lester M. Salamon and Susan L.Q. Flaherty

How To Finance Export-Oriented Smes

Interim Results 28 August 2014

E D I T I O N CLEP O F F I C I A L S T U D Y G U I D E. The College Board. College Level Examination Program

Main Street. Economic information. By Jason P. Brown, Economist, and Andres Kodaka, Research Associate

S&P 500 Composite (Adjusted for Inflation)

Meat and Meat products: price and trade update Issue 1 May Meat and Meat products. Price and Trade Update: April

TRADE AND FOOD SECURITY: A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE

Woodworking And Many Others Packaging. Heavy Equipment ABOUT ATRAFIN

Deciding to Go International. Asim Khan, CEO. Business Management Group, Inc. 620 Newport Center Drive, Suite Newport Beach, CA 92660

Global Economic Issues and Policies

Private Equity in Asia

Examiners Report June GCE Economics 6EC04 01

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapter. Key Concepts

Wind power in Denmark 1

Transcription:

File: c11; Chapter 11: International Trade and Economic Development Multiple Choice 1. According to traditional trade theory, a developing nation should export the commodity: a. of its comparative advantage b. that it can produce relatively more efficiently c. intensive in the nation's relatively abundant factor d. all of the above 2. Which of the following is false with respect to traditional trade theory? a. it can incorporate changes in factor endowments and technology b. it leads to the best allocation of resources at any point in time c. it is a dynamic theory d. it is based on comparative advantage 3. According to Nurkse, international trade was an engine of growth for: a. the regions of recent settlements during the 19th century b. regions of recent settlements during the 20th century c. developed nations during the 19th century d. developed nations during the 20th century 4. Trade cannot be an engine of growth for today's developing nations because: a. the income elasticity for many of their exports is less than 1 b. the development of synthetic substitutes c. technical advances reduced the raw-material content of many products d. all of the above 5. If the prices of a nation's exports and imports both rise, the nation's commodity terms of trade: a. improve b. deteriorate c. remain unchanged 6. The nation's commodity terms of trade times the productivity index in its export sector gives the nation's a. income terms of trade b. double factoral terms of trade c. single factoral terms of trade d. barter terms of trade (ch11.docx) 11-1 Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

7. When a nation's commodity terms of trade deteriorate and its single factoral terms of trade improve, the nation's welfare: a. falls b. rises c. remains unchanged 8. Developing nations often experience wildly fluctuating export prices for their primary products because of: a. inelastic and stable demand and supply b. elastic and unstable demand and supply c. inelastic and unstable demand and supply d. elastic and stable demand and supply 9. MacBean found that the export instability faced by developing nations was: a. not very large and did not seriously interfere with development b. very large and seriously interfered with development c. very large but did not seriously interfere with development d. not very large but seriously interfered with development 10. Supporting the price of a commodity by buying it when its price is low is: a. a buffer stock b. a purchase contract c. an export control d. a marketing board 11. The policy of import substitution was most vigorously followed by: a. large developing nations during the 1970's b. large developing nations during the 1960's c. small developing nations during the 1970's d. small developing nations during the 1960's 12. What is the advantage of a policy of import substitution? a. setting up an industry to replace imports minimizes risk of failure because the market for the product already exists in the nation as evidenced by the nation's imports of the commodity b. It is easier for developing nations to protect their domestic market against foreign competition than to force developed nations to lower their trade barriers against their manufactured exports c. foreign firms are induced to establish tariff factories to overcome the tariff wall of developing nations (ch11.docx) 11-2 Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

d. all of the above. 13. Which are is not an advantage of export-oriented industrialization? a. It overcomes the smallness of the domestic market and allows developing nations to take advantage of economies of scale b. domestic industries grow accustomed to protection and have an incentive to become more efficient c. production of manufactured goods for export requires and stimulates efficiency throughout the economy d. the expansion of manufactured exports is not limited by the size of the domestic market 14. Those nations that liberalized trade during the past decade a. grew faster than those that did not b. grew more slowly than those that did not c. grew at about the same rate as those that did not 15. Which of the following is not part of the demand for a NIEO? a. the establishment of international commodity agreements b. preferential access for the manufactured exports of developed nations c. removal of the agricultural trade barriers in developed nations d. increasing the yearly flow of foreign aid to developing nations 16. During the 1950 s, 1960 s and 1970 s the predominant growth strategy for developing nations was one of a. import substitution b. export orientation c. communism d. none of the above 17. The terms of trade for most developing nations over the last thirty years have generally been a. improving b. about the same c. worsening d. depend largely on the export commodity 18. The primary exports of developing nations tend to face demand that is and supply that is. a. elastic; elastic b. inelastic; inelastic (ch11.docx) 11-3 Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

c. elastic; inelastic d. inelastic; elastic 19. The following is not an example of an international commodity agreement. a. marketing boards b. buffer stocks c. export controls d. purchase contracts 20. The following region of the world has been the least successful in creating economic development and growth over the last thirty years a. Latin America b. Asia c. Africa d. Europe Short Answer 21. Explain why international trade cannot be expected to be the primary engine of growth for today s developing nations. 22. What is the difference between import substitution and export orientation? 23. What are the current problems facing developing countries 24. List four of the Millennium Development Goals. (ch11.docx) 11-4 Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Essay 25. (a) Why did large developing nations generally follow a policy of import substitution as a strategy for growth during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s? Why was this not generally possible for small developing nations? (b) Why was the policy of import substitution generally a failure? (c) Why did developing nations that switched from a policy of import substitution to a policy of export promotion generally grow faster during the past decade? (ch11.docx) 11-5 Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.