Deck 9: World Politics: Trade and Investment

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Question
The idea that states should seek relative rather than absolute gains to be stronger than their closest competitors reflects

A) The liberal perspective.
B) The constructivist perspective.
C) The realist perspective.
D) The Marxist perspective.
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Question
The _____________ perspective suggests that international trade benefits all when those seeking their own self-interest lead to a healthier economic system for all.

A) Liberal
B) Constructivist
C) Realist
D) Marxist
Question
Because nations have different allocations of resources, each can

A) Be entirely self-sufficient.
B) Enjoy a comparative advantage in producing certain products.
C) Enjoy equality of capital abundance.
D) Always have an absolute advantage in producing whatever it needs most.
Question
Suppose a country has a favorable climate and a great deal of land to produce one cash crop, such as bananas or coffee. This country is said to be

A) Labor abundant.
B) Capital abundant.
C) Land abundant.
D) Land deficient.
Question
A nation that is relatively rich, in terms of money as well as industrial plants and equipment, is considered

A) Labor abundant.
B) Capital abundant.
C) Land abundant.
D) Land deficient.
Question
Who is credited with the concept of comparative advantage?

A) Adam Smith
B) Thomas Jefferson
C) David Ricardo
D) David Hume
Question
Nations often impose trade barriers because

A) They wish to protect domestic industries.
B) They wish to provide consumers with the least expensive products.
C) Most consumers demand it.
D) They are effective free-market economic policies.
Question
Which of the following is not a trade barrier?

A) Tariff
B) Import quota
C) Gold standard
D) Internal subsidy
Question
Tariffs have what kind of effect on international trade?

A) They decrease the price of imported goods.
B) They increase the incentives for domestic producers to become more efficient.
C) They increase consumer access to foreign goods.
D) They decrease international competition.
Question
As a result of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, by 1932 the average tariff reached

A) 40 percent.
B) 49 percent.
C) 50 percent.
D) 59 percent.
Question
_______________ refers to a tariff levied by one country in response to tariffs imposed by another country.

A) Countervailing tariffs
B) Nontariff barrier
C) Import quotas
D) Voluntary export restrictions
Question
Between 1981 and 1994, the United States hoped to protect domestic automobile producers by threatening to impose tariffs against the Japanese if they did not restrict their car exports to the American market. This is an example of a(n)

A) Countervailing tariff.
B) Import quota.
C) Voluntary export restriction.
D) Import subsidy.
Question
A(n) _____________ is a limit on the number of imports that a state will receive from the rest of the world and is considered a _______________.

A) Subsidy; tariff barrier
B) Subsidy; nontariff barrier
C) Import quota type; tariff barrier
D) Import quota type; nontariff barrier
Question
Between 1981 and 1994, Japan agreed to comply to limit its exports of automobiles to the United States to avoid stiff tariffs from the United States, which was attempting to protect local automobile producers. This is an example of

A) A subsidy.
B) An internal tariff.
C) A voluntary export restriction.
D) A quota.
Question
In the 1990s, _______________ imposed a ban on importing genetically modified foods.

A) The United States
B) The European Union
C) Russia
D) Canada
Question
Which of the following countries agreed to a VER on its soft-lumber exports to the United States as part of a larger trade dispute?

A) Canada
B) Mexico
C) Iceland
D) Brazil
Question
The Agricultural Department in Country A pays wheat farmers a subsidy to allow them to price their goods below the cost of production to stay in business. This action allows for which of the following?

A) Allows wheat producers to compete against imported wheat
B) Allows wheat producers in Country A to compete on the international wheat market
C) Allows importers to price their wheat at a lower price on the international wheat market
D) Both a and b
Question
Subsidies are designed to help domestic industries by

A) Helping domestic producers compete at home against imported products.
B) Helping domestic producers compete abroad against foreign products.
C) Helping producers price their goods below the cost of production without going out of business.
D) All of the above.
Question
Which U.S. industry has brought antidumping suits against foreign producers before the U.S. Department of Commerce and the International Trade Commission over the past two decades?

A) Automobile
B) Computer
C) Steel
D) Clothing
Question
____________ refers to exporting a product at below the cost of production and shipping.

A) Subsidies
B) Price supports
C) Dumping
D) Balance of trade
Question
The United States refers to internal subsidies as

A) Price supports.
B) Dumping.
C) Balance of trade.
D) Quotas.
Question
A balance-of-payments sheet tells all but

A) How much money a country's citizens earned overseas.
B) A country's trade balance.
C) The minimum hourly wage in the country.
D) The official level of foreign aid given to other countries.
Question
At the end of the fiscal year, Country A has imported more than it has exported. This country is said to have a

A) Trade surplus.
B) Trade deficit.
C) Balance of trade.
D) None of the above.
Question
The system that allows for the balance of payments to always equal zero is called

A) Single-entry bookkeeping.
B) Double-entry bookkeeping.
C) Triple-entry bookkeeping.
D) Debit-credit entry bookkeeping.
Question
Barter systems are considered inefficient because

A) They prove difficult to establish rates of exchange between goods and services.
B) There must be a coincidence of wants.
C) Many commodities are perishable.
D) All of the above.
Question
A medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value are all used to describe

A) An exchange rate system.
B) Money.
C) A barter system.
D) None of the above.
Question
In the United States, which department has exclusive authority to issue paper and coin currency?

A) Internal Revenue Service
B) State Department
C) Treasury Department
D) Department of Commerce
Question
Which of the following is an example of a fixed exchange rate system?

A) The Smoot-Hawley Tariff
B) Voluntary export restriction
C) The gold standard
D) The barter system
Question
The gold standard and the Bretton Woods system were both examples of

A) A fixed exchange rate system.
B) A floating exchange rate system.
C) A hybrid floating exchange rate system.
D) None of the above.
Question
To help protect the value of currency under a fixed exchange rate system, government officials might

A) Raise interest rates to shore up the value of their currency.
B) Inflate the exchange rate to maintain its fixed value.
C) Stop defending the currency.
D) All of the above.
Question
The advantage of a fixed exchange rate system is

A) It makes the international economy more stable and predictable.
B) It accurately reflects the health of a nation's economy.
C) It prevents states from pursuing harmful economic policies.
D) It allows currency values to fluctuate according to their true value.
Question
A restaurant owner in the United States purchases five crates of wine from a French wine maker for $500 in May. In June, the same five crates of wine cost $700. The international system is operating under a

A) Fixed exchange rate.
B) Floating exchange rate.
C) Modified exchange rate.
D) Final exchange rate.
Question
Raising interest rates in an attempt to help the domestic economy under a fixed exchange rate system

A) Makes borrowing money more expensive.
B) Reduces the number of domestic purchases.
C) Increases the demand for domestic investments by foreign investors.
D) All of the above.
Question
When domestic investments become more attractive because of higher interest rates, investors will demand more of the domestic (or local) currency. The effect is

A) An increase in the value of the domestic currency.
B) A decrease in the value of the domestic currency.
C) The local government will impose quotas on domestic investment.
D) Foreign investors become increasingly wary of the domestic currency.
Question
All of the following cities are major centers for foreign exchange markets except

A) London.
B) Hong Kong.
C) Tokyo.
D) Berlin.
Question
The currency market is considered unstable and unpredictable because of

A) The various factors that influence the appeal of any particular state's money.
B) The number of investors looking for a quick trade.
C) The level of government intervention in the currency market.
D) Both a and b
Question
The foreign exchange market has a unique appeal in that

A) Traders can participate 24 hours per day.
B) Traders must do business through a major investment firm.
C) Traders can set up online trading accounts.
D) Both a and c
Question
The fixed rate exchange system was abandoned in

A) 1970.
B) 1973.
C) 1977.
D) 1983.
Question
Speculation in currency markets in 1997-1998 contributed to the collapse of all but which of the following nation's currencies?

A) The Philippines
B) China
C) Thailand
D) Indonesia
Question
Capital markets include all of the following except

A) Banks.
B) Stock and bond exchanges.
C) Commodities exchanges.
D) Foreign direct investment.
Question
________________ bonds are considered one of the most secure investments in the world because the government is unlikely to default.

A) U.S. Treasury
B) Russian Treasury
C) British Treasury
D) Canadian Treasury
Question
Since 2001, the United States has relied on which two countries to purchase U.S. Treasury bonds to avoid raising interest rates?

A) Canada and Great Britain
B) Great Britain and Germany
C) Germany and Japan
D) Japan and China
Question
One of the effects of the Japanese and Chinese purchases of U.S. Treasury bonds is that

A) The American real estate business is protected from a collapse that would occur if interest rates were to be raised.
B) The American consumer continues to spend rather than save.
C) Japanese and Chinese exports to the United States continue to benefit.
D) All of the above.
Question
The process of buying an existing business in a foreign country as opposed to merely investing in the business is referred to as a

A) Cash buyout.
B) Merger and acquisition.
C) Foreign direct investment.
D) Domestic direct investment.
Question
Most foreign direct investment takes place

A) Between developed countries.
B) Between developed and developing countries.
C) Between developing countries.
D) Between the United States and China.
Question
Patents, copyrights, trademarks, industrial design rights, and trade secrets are all covered under

A) Research and development rights.
B) Foreign direct investment.
C) Intellectual property rights.
D) Mergers and acquisitions
Question
Which of the following do multinational corporations look at when considering investing in foreign country?

A) Incentive packages put together by host states
B) Levels of local development
C) The level of corruption within a state
D) Both b and c
Question
Currently, the most popular FDI destination is

A) The United States.
B) Hong Kong.
C) China.
D) India.
Question
The Number One Oil Company in Country A is up for sale and has several foreign bidders as well as a domestic bidder. One of the foreign bidders, Country B, has failed to address immigration issues that negatively influence Country A. As a result, the domestic bidder is awarded the sale. This is an example of

A) Nationalist pressure to resist foreign investment.
B) International pressure to resist foreign investment.
C) The natural state of international investment.
D) None of the above.
Question
According to the text, all of the following factor into a state's economic strengths as well as vulnerabilities except

A) A state's raw materials.
B) A state's population.
C) A state's industrial capacity.
D) A state's political institutional structure.
Question
The three categories of economic power are

A) Territory, population, and trade and industry.
B) Territory, population, and geography.
C) Population, geography, and trade and industry.
D) Population, geography, and technology.
Question
Gross national income measures

A) How much money a nation has.
B) The market value of goods and services a nation produces.
C) The market value of exports a nation sells.
D) A nation's expenditures on goods and services.
Question
Gross national income differs from gross domestic product in that

A) The former does not take into account the amount of income earned by a nation's citizens operating outside its borders.
B) The latter does not take into account the amount of income earned by a nation's citizens operating outside its borders.
C) The former looks only at the total value of goods and services produced within a country.
D) None of the above.
Question
Which of the following best characterizes U.S. economic performance during the 1980s?

A) The U.S. economy was declining in absolute terms.
B) The relative size of the U.S. economy increased in comparison with that of Japan and Germany.
C) The U.S. economy was growing in absolute terms.
D) The U.S. share of world production was increasing both absolutely and relatively.
Question
In 2002, ______________ suffered from the lowest growth rate in the European Union.

A) France
B) Germany
C) Italy
D) Great Britain
Question
Which of the following resulted in a dampening of economic growth of the German economy?

A) The end of the Cold War
B) The Gulf War
C) The Iran-Iraq War
D) None of the above
Question
Which country moved from a budget surplus in 2001 to a budget deficit by 2005?

A) The United Kingdom
B) France
C) Japan
D) The United States
Question
In the information age, which of the following will become increasingly important?

A) Knowledge
B) Information
C) Communication
D) All of the above
Question
Which nation dominates in the realm of information technology?

A) Japan
B) South Korea
C) Germany
D) The United States
Question
What percentage of U.S. companies sell their products online?

A) 25 percent
B) 35 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 60 percent
Question
As of 2011, more than ____________ percent of the world's population has Internet access.

A) 50
B) 32
C) 70
D) None of the above
Question
Technology has allowed for all of the following except

A) Globalization of the job market.
B) Spread of economic gains from the wealthiest countries to developing states.
C) The shift in developing countries from producing textiles to producing computer chips.
D) The shift in developed countries from exporter to importer.
Question
Which philosopher wrote Leviathan, which describes the natural states of humankind as a "war of all against all"?

A) Niccolò Machiavelli
B) Thomas Hobbes
C) John Locke
D) Hans Morgenthau
Question
States may refuse to cooperate because

A) They distrust one another.
B) They fear that other states will gain relatively more than they will.
C) They fear that other states will benefit disproportionately from cooperation.
D) All of the above.
Question
Realists believe that

A) Nation-states are the principal actors in economics.
B) Economic factors are more important than military power.
C) Individuals are the principal actors in economics.
D) Free trade is always the best policy.
Question
The extreme approach to trade that emphasizes that a state exports more than it imports is referred to as

A) Mercantilism.
B) Marxism.
C) Materialism.
D) Massive retaliation.
Question
Liberals believe that which of the following is beneficial for international economics?

A) Tariffs
B) Free markets
C) Government intervention
D) Voluntary export restrictions
Question
__________ wrote about the "unseen hand" in his 1776 book The Wealth of Nations.

A) Thomas Jefferson
B) Adam Smith
C) David Ricardo
D) Karl Marx
Question
Economic liberals believe that

A) Individuals are irrational in their economic decision making.
B) States are the principal actors in economics.
C) Government intervention is beneficial to the individual and international economy.
D) Individuals' self-interest not only increases their own wealth but also unintentionally improves the general public good.
Question
Trade liberals argue that cooperation is both

A) Possible and beneficial.
B) Impossible and useless.
C) Unfavorable and unachievable.
D) Feasible and improbable.
Question
The purpose of the tit-for-tat strategy is to

A) Demonstrate your willingness to cooperate with your opponent.
B) Establish international regimes.
C) Create prisoner's dilemmas in international relations.
D) Provide for economic interdependence.
Question
Regimes do which of the following?

A) They reduce the attractiveness of cheating.
B) They establish norms that facilitate cooperation.
C) They possess multiple and effective mechanisms and institutions to enforce agreements.
D) Both a and b
Question
Hegemons are often responsible for

A) Providing loans to countries in need.
B) Providing markets for commodities.
C) Making the seas safe for international commerce.
D) All of the above.
Question
Decline of the hegemon is inevitable because

A) There are no long-term benefits of hegemony.
B) The costs of hegemony tend to grow over time.
C) No state wants to be the hegemon for a prolonged period of time.
D) All of the above.
Question
Define the concepts of capital abundant, land abundant, and labor abundant and explain why they are important.
Question
Define comparative advantage, and briefly explain its importance to trade theory.
Question
Define trade barriers, and list three different types.
Question
Define VER and give an example.
Question
Differentiate between tariffs and NTBs.
Question
What is dumping, why do states do it, and what can be done about it?
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Deck 9: World Politics: Trade and Investment
1
The idea that states should seek relative rather than absolute gains to be stronger than their closest competitors reflects

A) The liberal perspective.
B) The constructivist perspective.
C) The realist perspective.
D) The Marxist perspective.
The realist perspective.
2
The _____________ perspective suggests that international trade benefits all when those seeking their own self-interest lead to a healthier economic system for all.

A) Liberal
B) Constructivist
C) Realist
D) Marxist
Liberal
3
Because nations have different allocations of resources, each can

A) Be entirely self-sufficient.
B) Enjoy a comparative advantage in producing certain products.
C) Enjoy equality of capital abundance.
D) Always have an absolute advantage in producing whatever it needs most.
Enjoy a comparative advantage in producing certain products.
4
Suppose a country has a favorable climate and a great deal of land to produce one cash crop, such as bananas or coffee. This country is said to be

A) Labor abundant.
B) Capital abundant.
C) Land abundant.
D) Land deficient.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
A nation that is relatively rich, in terms of money as well as industrial plants and equipment, is considered

A) Labor abundant.
B) Capital abundant.
C) Land abundant.
D) Land deficient.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Who is credited with the concept of comparative advantage?

A) Adam Smith
B) Thomas Jefferson
C) David Ricardo
D) David Hume
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Nations often impose trade barriers because

A) They wish to protect domestic industries.
B) They wish to provide consumers with the least expensive products.
C) Most consumers demand it.
D) They are effective free-market economic policies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which of the following is not a trade barrier?

A) Tariff
B) Import quota
C) Gold standard
D) Internal subsidy
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Tariffs have what kind of effect on international trade?

A) They decrease the price of imported goods.
B) They increase the incentives for domestic producers to become more efficient.
C) They increase consumer access to foreign goods.
D) They decrease international competition.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
As a result of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff, by 1932 the average tariff reached

A) 40 percent.
B) 49 percent.
C) 50 percent.
D) 59 percent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
_______________ refers to a tariff levied by one country in response to tariffs imposed by another country.

A) Countervailing tariffs
B) Nontariff barrier
C) Import quotas
D) Voluntary export restrictions
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Between 1981 and 1994, the United States hoped to protect domestic automobile producers by threatening to impose tariffs against the Japanese if they did not restrict their car exports to the American market. This is an example of a(n)

A) Countervailing tariff.
B) Import quota.
C) Voluntary export restriction.
D) Import subsidy.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A(n) _____________ is a limit on the number of imports that a state will receive from the rest of the world and is considered a _______________.

A) Subsidy; tariff barrier
B) Subsidy; nontariff barrier
C) Import quota type; tariff barrier
D) Import quota type; nontariff barrier
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14
Between 1981 and 1994, Japan agreed to comply to limit its exports of automobiles to the United States to avoid stiff tariffs from the United States, which was attempting to protect local automobile producers. This is an example of

A) A subsidy.
B) An internal tariff.
C) A voluntary export restriction.
D) A quota.
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k this deck
15
In the 1990s, _______________ imposed a ban on importing genetically modified foods.

A) The United States
B) The European Union
C) Russia
D) Canada
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16
Which of the following countries agreed to a VER on its soft-lumber exports to the United States as part of a larger trade dispute?

A) Canada
B) Mexico
C) Iceland
D) Brazil
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The Agricultural Department in Country A pays wheat farmers a subsidy to allow them to price their goods below the cost of production to stay in business. This action allows for which of the following?

A) Allows wheat producers to compete against imported wheat
B) Allows wheat producers in Country A to compete on the international wheat market
C) Allows importers to price their wheat at a lower price on the international wheat market
D) Both a and b
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k this deck
18
Subsidies are designed to help domestic industries by

A) Helping domestic producers compete at home against imported products.
B) Helping domestic producers compete abroad against foreign products.
C) Helping producers price their goods below the cost of production without going out of business.
D) All of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which U.S. industry has brought antidumping suits against foreign producers before the U.S. Department of Commerce and the International Trade Commission over the past two decades?

A) Automobile
B) Computer
C) Steel
D) Clothing
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k this deck
20
____________ refers to exporting a product at below the cost of production and shipping.

A) Subsidies
B) Price supports
C) Dumping
D) Balance of trade
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k this deck
21
The United States refers to internal subsidies as

A) Price supports.
B) Dumping.
C) Balance of trade.
D) Quotas.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
A balance-of-payments sheet tells all but

A) How much money a country's citizens earned overseas.
B) A country's trade balance.
C) The minimum hourly wage in the country.
D) The official level of foreign aid given to other countries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
At the end of the fiscal year, Country A has imported more than it has exported. This country is said to have a

A) Trade surplus.
B) Trade deficit.
C) Balance of trade.
D) None of the above.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The system that allows for the balance of payments to always equal zero is called

A) Single-entry bookkeeping.
B) Double-entry bookkeeping.
C) Triple-entry bookkeeping.
D) Debit-credit entry bookkeeping.
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Barter systems are considered inefficient because

A) They prove difficult to establish rates of exchange between goods and services.
B) There must be a coincidence of wants.
C) Many commodities are perishable.
D) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
A medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value are all used to describe

A) An exchange rate system.
B) Money.
C) A barter system.
D) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In the United States, which department has exclusive authority to issue paper and coin currency?

A) Internal Revenue Service
B) State Department
C) Treasury Department
D) Department of Commerce
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following is an example of a fixed exchange rate system?

A) The Smoot-Hawley Tariff
B) Voluntary export restriction
C) The gold standard
D) The barter system
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The gold standard and the Bretton Woods system were both examples of

A) A fixed exchange rate system.
B) A floating exchange rate system.
C) A hybrid floating exchange rate system.
D) None of the above.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
To help protect the value of currency under a fixed exchange rate system, government officials might

A) Raise interest rates to shore up the value of their currency.
B) Inflate the exchange rate to maintain its fixed value.
C) Stop defending the currency.
D) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The advantage of a fixed exchange rate system is

A) It makes the international economy more stable and predictable.
B) It accurately reflects the health of a nation's economy.
C) It prevents states from pursuing harmful economic policies.
D) It allows currency values to fluctuate according to their true value.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
A restaurant owner in the United States purchases five crates of wine from a French wine maker for $500 in May. In June, the same five crates of wine cost $700. The international system is operating under a

A) Fixed exchange rate.
B) Floating exchange rate.
C) Modified exchange rate.
D) Final exchange rate.
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Raising interest rates in an attempt to help the domestic economy under a fixed exchange rate system

A) Makes borrowing money more expensive.
B) Reduces the number of domestic purchases.
C) Increases the demand for domestic investments by foreign investors.
D) All of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
When domestic investments become more attractive because of higher interest rates, investors will demand more of the domestic (or local) currency. The effect is

A) An increase in the value of the domestic currency.
B) A decrease in the value of the domestic currency.
C) The local government will impose quotas on domestic investment.
D) Foreign investors become increasingly wary of the domestic currency.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
All of the following cities are major centers for foreign exchange markets except

A) London.
B) Hong Kong.
C) Tokyo.
D) Berlin.
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The currency market is considered unstable and unpredictable because of

A) The various factors that influence the appeal of any particular state's money.
B) The number of investors looking for a quick trade.
C) The level of government intervention in the currency market.
D) Both a and b
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The foreign exchange market has a unique appeal in that

A) Traders can participate 24 hours per day.
B) Traders must do business through a major investment firm.
C) Traders can set up online trading accounts.
D) Both a and c
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
The fixed rate exchange system was abandoned in

A) 1970.
B) 1973.
C) 1977.
D) 1983.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Speculation in currency markets in 1997-1998 contributed to the collapse of all but which of the following nation's currencies?

A) The Philippines
B) China
C) Thailand
D) Indonesia
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40
Capital markets include all of the following except

A) Banks.
B) Stock and bond exchanges.
C) Commodities exchanges.
D) Foreign direct investment.
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41
________________ bonds are considered one of the most secure investments in the world because the government is unlikely to default.

A) U.S. Treasury
B) Russian Treasury
C) British Treasury
D) Canadian Treasury
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42
Since 2001, the United States has relied on which two countries to purchase U.S. Treasury bonds to avoid raising interest rates?

A) Canada and Great Britain
B) Great Britain and Germany
C) Germany and Japan
D) Japan and China
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43
One of the effects of the Japanese and Chinese purchases of U.S. Treasury bonds is that

A) The American real estate business is protected from a collapse that would occur if interest rates were to be raised.
B) The American consumer continues to spend rather than save.
C) Japanese and Chinese exports to the United States continue to benefit.
D) All of the above.
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44
The process of buying an existing business in a foreign country as opposed to merely investing in the business is referred to as a

A) Cash buyout.
B) Merger and acquisition.
C) Foreign direct investment.
D) Domestic direct investment.
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45
Most foreign direct investment takes place

A) Between developed countries.
B) Between developed and developing countries.
C) Between developing countries.
D) Between the United States and China.
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46
Patents, copyrights, trademarks, industrial design rights, and trade secrets are all covered under

A) Research and development rights.
B) Foreign direct investment.
C) Intellectual property rights.
D) Mergers and acquisitions
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47
Which of the following do multinational corporations look at when considering investing in foreign country?

A) Incentive packages put together by host states
B) Levels of local development
C) The level of corruption within a state
D) Both b and c
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48
Currently, the most popular FDI destination is

A) The United States.
B) Hong Kong.
C) China.
D) India.
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49
The Number One Oil Company in Country A is up for sale and has several foreign bidders as well as a domestic bidder. One of the foreign bidders, Country B, has failed to address immigration issues that negatively influence Country A. As a result, the domestic bidder is awarded the sale. This is an example of

A) Nationalist pressure to resist foreign investment.
B) International pressure to resist foreign investment.
C) The natural state of international investment.
D) None of the above.
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50
According to the text, all of the following factor into a state's economic strengths as well as vulnerabilities except

A) A state's raw materials.
B) A state's population.
C) A state's industrial capacity.
D) A state's political institutional structure.
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51
The three categories of economic power are

A) Territory, population, and trade and industry.
B) Territory, population, and geography.
C) Population, geography, and trade and industry.
D) Population, geography, and technology.
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52
Gross national income measures

A) How much money a nation has.
B) The market value of goods and services a nation produces.
C) The market value of exports a nation sells.
D) A nation's expenditures on goods and services.
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53
Gross national income differs from gross domestic product in that

A) The former does not take into account the amount of income earned by a nation's citizens operating outside its borders.
B) The latter does not take into account the amount of income earned by a nation's citizens operating outside its borders.
C) The former looks only at the total value of goods and services produced within a country.
D) None of the above.
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54
Which of the following best characterizes U.S. economic performance during the 1980s?

A) The U.S. economy was declining in absolute terms.
B) The relative size of the U.S. economy increased in comparison with that of Japan and Germany.
C) The U.S. economy was growing in absolute terms.
D) The U.S. share of world production was increasing both absolutely and relatively.
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55
In 2002, ______________ suffered from the lowest growth rate in the European Union.

A) France
B) Germany
C) Italy
D) Great Britain
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56
Which of the following resulted in a dampening of economic growth of the German economy?

A) The end of the Cold War
B) The Gulf War
C) The Iran-Iraq War
D) None of the above
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57
Which country moved from a budget surplus in 2001 to a budget deficit by 2005?

A) The United Kingdom
B) France
C) Japan
D) The United States
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58
In the information age, which of the following will become increasingly important?

A) Knowledge
B) Information
C) Communication
D) All of the above
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59
Which nation dominates in the realm of information technology?

A) Japan
B) South Korea
C) Germany
D) The United States
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60
What percentage of U.S. companies sell their products online?

A) 25 percent
B) 35 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 60 percent
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61
As of 2011, more than ____________ percent of the world's population has Internet access.

A) 50
B) 32
C) 70
D) None of the above
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62
Technology has allowed for all of the following except

A) Globalization of the job market.
B) Spread of economic gains from the wealthiest countries to developing states.
C) The shift in developing countries from producing textiles to producing computer chips.
D) The shift in developed countries from exporter to importer.
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63
Which philosopher wrote Leviathan, which describes the natural states of humankind as a "war of all against all"?

A) Niccolò Machiavelli
B) Thomas Hobbes
C) John Locke
D) Hans Morgenthau
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64
States may refuse to cooperate because

A) They distrust one another.
B) They fear that other states will gain relatively more than they will.
C) They fear that other states will benefit disproportionately from cooperation.
D) All of the above.
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65
Realists believe that

A) Nation-states are the principal actors in economics.
B) Economic factors are more important than military power.
C) Individuals are the principal actors in economics.
D) Free trade is always the best policy.
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66
The extreme approach to trade that emphasizes that a state exports more than it imports is referred to as

A) Mercantilism.
B) Marxism.
C) Materialism.
D) Massive retaliation.
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67
Liberals believe that which of the following is beneficial for international economics?

A) Tariffs
B) Free markets
C) Government intervention
D) Voluntary export restrictions
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68
__________ wrote about the "unseen hand" in his 1776 book The Wealth of Nations.

A) Thomas Jefferson
B) Adam Smith
C) David Ricardo
D) Karl Marx
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69
Economic liberals believe that

A) Individuals are irrational in their economic decision making.
B) States are the principal actors in economics.
C) Government intervention is beneficial to the individual and international economy.
D) Individuals' self-interest not only increases their own wealth but also unintentionally improves the general public good.
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70
Trade liberals argue that cooperation is both

A) Possible and beneficial.
B) Impossible and useless.
C) Unfavorable and unachievable.
D) Feasible and improbable.
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71
The purpose of the tit-for-tat strategy is to

A) Demonstrate your willingness to cooperate with your opponent.
B) Establish international regimes.
C) Create prisoner's dilemmas in international relations.
D) Provide for economic interdependence.
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72
Regimes do which of the following?

A) They reduce the attractiveness of cheating.
B) They establish norms that facilitate cooperation.
C) They possess multiple and effective mechanisms and institutions to enforce agreements.
D) Both a and b
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73
Hegemons are often responsible for

A) Providing loans to countries in need.
B) Providing markets for commodities.
C) Making the seas safe for international commerce.
D) All of the above.
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74
Decline of the hegemon is inevitable because

A) There are no long-term benefits of hegemony.
B) The costs of hegemony tend to grow over time.
C) No state wants to be the hegemon for a prolonged period of time.
D) All of the above.
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75
Define the concepts of capital abundant, land abundant, and labor abundant and explain why they are important.
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76
Define comparative advantage, and briefly explain its importance to trade theory.
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77
Define trade barriers, and list three different types.
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78
Define VER and give an example.
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79
Differentiate between tariffs and NTBs.
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80
What is dumping, why do states do it, and what can be done about it?
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