A) remains limited to high-income groups.
B) necessitates production of that product in those countries.
C) necessitates outsourcing of production to low-cost locations.
D) raises the cost of production in the United States.
E) causes a shift in the position of the United States from that of an exporter to an importer.
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Essay
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Essay
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) differences in technology leads to differences in productivity, which in turn, drives international trade patterns.
B) nations may benefit from trade irrespective of resource endowments or technology.
C) the demand for most new products tends to be based on nonprice factors.
D) globally dispersed production reduces the production costs of mature products.
E) comparative advantage does not arrive from a difference in factor endowments but from a difference in productivity.
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Multiple Choice
A) the market mechanism determines what a country imports and what it exports.
B) a country engages in international trade even for products it is able to produce for itself.
C) an economic gain by one country results in an economic loss by another.
D) limits on imports are often in the interests of domestic producers, but not domestic consumers.
E) one country has an absolute advantage in the production of all goods.
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Multiple Choice
A) the cost of labor in these advanced countries begins to increase.
B) it becomes profitable for foreign firms to invest in production facilities in the United States.
C) the firms in the United States begin to gain an absolute advantage.
D) it begins to limit the potential for exports from the United States.
E) the same product will begin to command a higher price.
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Multiple Choice
A) U.S. imports become less capital-intensive than U.S. exports.
B) The pattern of international trade is affected by differences in factor endowments rather than differences in productivity.
C) Over time, the United States switches from being an exporter of a product to an importer of the product.
D) The wage rates in the United States decrease.
E) Developing nations fail to upgrade their skill levels to compete with advanced countries.
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Multiple Choice
A) Tariff barriers determine the flow of goods and services between nations.
B) Countries are simultaneously encouraging exports and discouraging imports.
C) First entrants to the industry ensure their nations have the first-mover advantages.
D) Nations with an absolute advantage in producing certain goods trade them for goods produced by other countries.
E) Gold and silver are the mainstays of national wealth and essential to vigorous commerce.
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Multiple Choice
A) The Samuelson critique
B) Mercantilism
C) Ricardo's theory of comparative advantage
D) Adam Smith's theory of absolute advantage
E) The Leontief paradox
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Multiple Choice
A) of the uncertainty and risks inherent in introducing new products.
B) they believed that foreign production facilities were inferior in technical skills.
C) they believed that U.S. labor costs were much lower than those in foreign markets.
D) the U.S. government was critical of outsourcing production to other countries.
E) of the high trade barriers implemented by several Asian and European countries.
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Multiple Choice
A) The position of a nation regarding the components of production necessary to compete in a given industry
B) The presence or absence of related industries that are internationally competitive
C) The conditions governing how companies are created, organized, and managed and the nature of domestic rivalry
D) The nature of home demand for the industry's product or service
E) The economic and strategic advantages that accrue to early entrants into an industry
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) New trade theory
B) Product life-cycle theory
C) Mercantilism
D) Heckscher-Ohlin theory
E) Theory of national competitive advantage
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Multiple Choice
A) The uncertainties and risks inherent in introducing new products are very low.
B) The demand for most new products tends to be based mainly on price.
C) U.S. labor costs are relatively low compared to global standards.
D) Firms can charge relatively high prices for new products.
E) The production of innovative products in other advanced countries limits the potential for exports from the United States.
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Multiple Choice
A) Trade barriers
B) Vigorous domestic rivalry
C) Purchasing power parity
D) The availability of a captive market
E) First-mover advantages
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