Econ

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The United States national minimum wage is _____________.

$7.25/hour

The membership of the WTO includes about __________ nations.

150

Despite interlocking import quotas, tariffs, and nontariff barriers, the share of apparel sold in the United States that is imported rose from about _________ in 1999 to about ________ today.

50%-75%

The acronym GATT stands for:

General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade

It is sometimes argued that nation should not depend too heavily on other countries for supplies of certain key products. This argument is commonly known as the _______________.

National Interest Argument

__________________ are ways that a nation can draw up regulations, inspections, and paperwork to make it more costly or difficult to import products.

Nontariff barriers

The race to the bottom scenario of global environmental degradation is explained roughly like this:

Profit-seeking multinational companies shift their production from countries with strong environmental standards to countries with weak standards, thus reducing their costs and increasing their profits.

Which of the following would be expected if the tariff on foreign-produced automobiles were increased?

The supply of foreign automobiles to the domestic market would be reduced, causing auto prices to rise.

Why would foreign firms export a product at less than its cost of production—which presumably means making a loss?

This may be part of a long-term strategy in which foreign firms would sell at below the cost of production in the short-term for a time, and when they have driven out the domestic U.S. competition, they would then raise prices.

Politicians often argue for tariff increases in order to reduce the nation's dependence on imports. If tariffs are increased, the long-run effect is most likely to be:

a decrease in both American imports and exports.

A tariff differs from a quota in that a tariff is:

a tax imposed on imports, whereas a quota is an absolute limit to the number of units of a good that can be imported.

As international trade increases, it contributes to a shift in jobs away from industries where that economy does not have a(n) __________ advantage and toward industries where it has a(n) ___________ advantage.

comparative; comparative

An import quota or tariff on French wine that raises the prices for wine will probably:

hurt domestic wine drinkers but help domestic wineries, which will gain from the higher prices.

Introducing a tariff on vitamin Z would:

increase American consumption of domestically produced vitamin Z.

Import tariffs generally ________ the output of domestic producers of the affected products and also _________ the output of domestic exporters.

increase, decrease

________________________ is theoretically possible, even sensible: give an industry a short-term indirect subsidy through protection, and then reap the long-term economic benefits of having a vibrant healthy industry.

infant industry argument

"Tariffs and other trade restrictions increase the domestic scarcity of products from abroad. Such policies benefit domestic producers of the restricted products at the expense of domestic consumers." This statement:

is essentially correct.

Economists would say tariffs:

limit voluntary exchanges.

There are nontariff barriers in the form of _______________ regulations, in which certain textiles are made in the United States, shipped to other countries, combined in making apparel with textiles made in those other countries—and then re-exported back to the United States at a lower tariff rate.

rules of origin

International trade is fundamentally a ________________________.

win-win situation


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