ECO 305 Week 4 Quiz – Strayer



Click on the Link Below to Purchase A+ Graded Course Material


Quiz 3 Chapter 5 and 6

CHAPTER 5

NONTARIFF TRADE BARRIERS

MULTIPLE CHOICE

            1.         The imposition of a tariff on imported steel for the home country results in:
a.         Improving terms of trade and rising volume of trade
b.         Higher steel prices and falling steel consumption
c.         Lower profits for domestic steel companies
d.         Higher unemployment for domestic steel workers


           

            2.         Which of the following refers to a market-sharing pact negotiated by trading partners to moderate the intensity of international competition?
a.         Orderly marketing agreement
b.         Local content requirements
c.         Import quota
d.         Trigger price mechanism


           

            3.         Suppose the United States and Japan enter into a voluntary export agreement in which Japan imposes an export quota on its automakers. The largest share of the export quota's "revenue effect" would tend to be captured by:
a.         The U.S. government
b.         Japanese automakers
c.         American auto consumers
d.         American autoworkers


           

            4.         Suppose the government grants a subsidy to domestic producers of an import-competing good. The subsidy tends to result in deadweight losses for the domestic economy in the form of the:
a.         Consumption effect
b.         Redistribution effect
c.         Revenue effect
d.         Protective effect


           

            5.         Tariffs and quotas on imports tend to involve larger sacrifices in national welfare than would occur under domestic subsidies. This is because, unlike domestic subsidies, import tariffs and quotas:
a.         Permit less efficient home production
b.         Distort choices for domestic consumers
c.         Result in higher tax rates for domestic residents
d.         Redistribute revenue from domestic producers to consumers


           

            6.         Suppose the government grants a subsidy to its export firms that permits them to charge lower prices on goods sold abroad. The export revenue of these firms would rise if the foreign demand is:
a.         Elastic in response to the price reduction
b.         Inelastic in response to the price reduction
c.         Unit elastic in response to the price reduction
d.         None of the above


           

            7.         Because export subsidies tend to result in domestic exporters charging lower prices on their goods sold overseas, the home country's:
a.         Export revenues will decrease
b.         Export revenues will rise
c.         Terms of trade will worsen
d.         Terms of trade will improve


           

            8.         Which trade restriction stipulates the percentage of a product's total value that must be produced domestically in order for that product to be sold domestically?
a.         Import quota
b.         Orderly marketing agreement
c.         Local content requirement
d.         Government procurement policy


           

            9.         The imposition of a domestic content requirement by the United States would cause consumer surplus for Americans to:
a.         Rise
b.         Fall
c.         Remain unchanged
d.         None of the above


           

            10.       Domestic content legislation applied to autos would tend to:
a.         Support wage levels of American autoworkers
b.         Lower auto prices for American autoworkers
c.         Encourage American automakers to locate production overseas
d.         Increase profits of American auto companies


           

            11.       Compared to an import quota, an equivalent tariff may provide a less certain amount of protection for home producers since:
a.         A tariff has no deadweight loss in terms of production and consumption
b.         Foreign firms may absorb the tariff by offering exports at lower prices
c.         Tariffs are effective only if home demand is perfectly elastic
d.         Quotas do not result in increases in the price of the imported good


           

            12.       Empirical studies show that because voluntary export quotas are typically administered by exporting countries, foreign exporters tend to:
a.         Raise their export prices, thus capturing much of the quota's revenue effect
b.         Lower their export prices, thus losing much of the quota's revenue effect
c.         Raise their export prices, thus selling more goods overseas
d.         Lower their export prices, thus selling fewer goods overseas


           

            13.       Concerning the restrictive impact of an import quota, assume there occurs an increase in the domestic demand for the import product. As long as the quota falls short of what would be imported under free market conditions, the economy's adjustment to the increase in demand would take the form of:
a.         A decrease in domestic production of the import good
b.         An increase in the amount of the good being imported
c.         An increase in the domestic price of the import good
d.         A decrease in domestic consumption of the import good


           

            14.       Assume the U.S. has a competitive advantage in producing calculators, while the rest of the world has a competitive advantage in steel. Suppose the U.S. and the rest of the world enter into an agreement to lower import quotas below existing levels on calculators and steel. Which of the following would least likely occur for the U.S.? Rising levels of:
a.         Consumer surplus for American buyers of steel
b.         Producer surplus for American steelmakers
c.         Production in the American calculator industry
d.         Producer surplus for American calculator producers


           

            15.       A firm that faces problems of falling sales and excess productive capacity might resort to international dumping if it:
a.         Can charge higher prices in markets that are elastic to price changes
b.         Earns revenues on foreign sales that at least cover variable costs
c.         Can sell at that price where domestic and foreign demand elasticities equate
d.         Is able to force foreign prices below marginal production costs


           

            16.       A producer successfully practicing international dumping would charge:
a.         A relatively higher price in the more inelastic market
b.         A relatively higher price in the more elastic market
c.         The same price in all markets, regardless of their elasticities
d.         Different prices in all markets, regardless of their elasticities


           

            17.       The practice of Canadian firms dumping their products in Sweden poses a problem for economic policymakers since dumping tends to:
a.         Favor Swedish consumers over Canadian consumers
b.         Favor Swedish producers over Canadian producers
c.         Become widespread as firms operate at full productive capacity
d.         Result in firms charging prices above the total costs of production


           

            18.       The United Auto Workers union attempted to win the approval of legislation that would moderate the practice of foreign sourcing on the part of American auto manufacturers. Which of the following best represents this legislation?
a.         Voluntary export quotas
b.         Trigger price mechanism
c.         Tariff quotas
d.         Local content laws


           

            19.       A main factor behind the president's decision to extend relief to steel firms in the form of trigger prices was that:
a.         Dumping complaints can be time consuming and expensive to implement
b.         The Tokyo Round outlawed the granting of subsidies to steel firms
c.         Trigger prices involve zero deadweight welfare loss for the economy
d.         Orderly marketing agreements were too costly to administe

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

PAD 500 Week 4 Discussion Questions – Strayer NEW

PAD 540 Week 4 Assignment 1 – Strayer

PAD 530 Week 4 Assignment 2 – Strayer