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1. Th e following table shows the number of donuts or cupcakes that John and Erica...
Below is a table showing the daily production numbers for 1 worker in both Mexico and Canada. Use these numbers to answer the questions below. 1 worker in Mexico can produce in 1 day 1 worker in Canada can produce in 1 day 50 sodas or 10 pizzas 40 sodas or 2 pizzas a. What country has the absolute advantage in pizzas? Explain your answer with numbers. b. What country has the absolute advantage in sodas? Explain your answer with...
Question 02 i. The following table shows the number of units per 1-day of labour for garments and mobile phones produced in China and Bangladesh. Mop Garments Mobile phones - China 10 units 4 units Ab.at 3 . - Bangladesh 15 units 5 units a. Calculate the autarky price ratios for both Bangladesh and China. .33 (02 marks) Compra (03 marks) c. Which country has comparative advantage in mobile phones? Which country has comparative in garments? Explain. (03 marks) d....
6. The following table shows how many hours it would take to produce one meter of cloth or one kilogram of wheat for country A and country B._? Cloth wheat Country A 1 hour/per meter 3 hours/per kg Country B 2 hours / per meter 4 hours/per kg According to the absolute advantage theory, is there a basis for trade between country A and country B? Explain. Which country has the comparative advantage in wheat production? Explain your answer. Now...
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1. The United States and Brazil each produce only cheese and wine. Domestic prices are given in the following table United States $5 per pound Brazil 8 BRL per pound 15 BRL per bottle Wine $8 per bottle On April 1, the London exchange listed an exchange rate of $1-1 BRL According to the table, (1) production of wine has an absolute advantage in the production of cheese and (2) has an absolute...
The following graph shows the production possibilities frontier for the imaginary country of Contente under conditions of increasing costs. In the absence of trade, the relative cost of corn in Contente in terms of phones (or the marginal rate of transformation (MRT) of corn into phones) is shown by the slope of line t1, tangent to the production possibilities frontier at point A. 300 270 Consumption After Trade 240 210 180 В с CORN (Bushels) 150 120 90 60 30...
D Question 1 1 pts Consider the market for raspberries in Australia. Which of the following would most likely lead to a decrease in demand O A decrease in the price of gooseberries, a substitute for raspberries. An increase in the price of blueberries, a complement for raspberries A decrease in income if raspberries are an inferior good. O A severe frost that destroys most of the Tasmanian raspberry crop. Both a and b are correct. DI Question 2 1...
Q 1: Clancy and Eileen are farmers. Each one owns a 20-acre plot
of land. The following table shows the amount of corn and rye each
farmer can produce per year on a given acre. Each farmer chooses
whether to devote all acres to producing corn or rye or to produce
corn on some of the land and rye on the rest.CornRye(Bushels per acre)(Bushels per acre)Clancy205Eileen5010On the following graph, use the blue line (circle symbol) to
plot Clancy's production possibilities...
1. Given the information in Table 1, in a two country and two-product Ricardian model, which of the following statements is (are) true? Table 1 Unit Labour Requirements T-shirt Brandy 4 hours 12 hours 6 hours 12 hours United States France A) The pretrade price ratio in France is 1 brandy - 2 T-shirts. B) The US pretrade price ratio is 1 brandy - 4 T-shirts. C) The US pretrade price ratio is 1 T-shirt = 1/3 brandy. D) The...
Match the following: Adam Smith David Ricardo John Maynard Keynes Choices: (2 are not used.) a. founder of modern market economics comparative advantage-argument for mutual benefits of international trade comparative advantage-emphasized job displacements of international trade founder of modern macroeconomics invented capitalism duo If a firm has trouble selling its good, it can lower price. increase demand. decrease supply. both a) and b) are correct. 6. People often pay too much for goods because they are not aware of which...
Chapter overview 1. Reasons for international trade Resources reasons Economic reasons Other reasons 2. Difference between international trade and domestic trade More complex context More difficult and risky Higher management skills required 3. Basic concept s relating to international trade Visible trade & invisible trade Favorable trade & unfavorable trade General trade system & special trade system Volume of international trade & quantum of international trade Commodity composition of international trade Geographical composition of international trade Degree / ratio of...