Chapter 25: Problem 894
Relate the principle of comparative advantage to the concept of opportunity cost.
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Chapter 25: Problem 894
Relate the principle of comparative advantage to the concept of opportunity cost.
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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The cost of producing one ton of steel in the United States is one ton less of coffee. The cost of producing one ton of steel in Brazil is foregoing two tons of coffee. Given that Brazil specializes in coffee production and the United State specializes in steel production, how will the price of steel (in terms of coffee) change in the United States? How will the price of steel change in Brazil? Generalize this result for any two nations trading on the basis of comparative advantage.
In an industrial country, capital is abundant. In a rural country, land is abundant. If these two countries trade, each specializing in the good it has a comparative advantage in, what will happen to the prices of the resources (capital and land) in the two countries?
Given that Sri Lanka can produce two tons of tea at a cost of one ton of steel production, while the United States can produce one ton of steel at a cost of one ton of tea production, which country will produce steel? Which will produce tea? Draw the production possibilities frontier for each country (given that the United States can produce at most twenty tons of tea, while Sri Lanka can produce at most only ten).
If the United States could produce five automobiles instead of one ton of food (that is, the opportunity cost of producing one ton of food is five automobiles) and maximum food production is five million tons, then the maximum automobile production is twenty-five million. Given that on the international market ten automobiles can be exchanged for one ton of food, compare the production possibilities frontier with the trading possibilities frontier.
Give the significance of the "most favored nation clause" in the Gatt agreement.
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