Deck 6: Political and Trade Forces

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Question
Kidnap, ransom, and extortion are techniques often used by terrorists against which no insurance is available.
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Question
When government-owned companies compete with private companies, the private companies have the advantage.
Question
The only reason firms are nationalized is to spread a socialist-communist ideology.
Question
The practice of country risk assessment is an exercise in xenophobic and ethnocentric thinking.
Question
Country risk assessment is a measure of the threat of nationalization.
Question
Paying ransom makes sense because a life is saved and the payments can be traced.
Question
Terrorists avoid kidnapping because the repercussions can be harmful to their movement.
Question
Only in communist countries do governments own the factors of production.
Question
Country risk assessment is an evaluation that assesses a country's political situation and policies to determine how much risk exists of a change in that country's government.
Question
Country risks are increasingly political in nature.
Question
When people are kidnapped for ransom, the right response is to pay the ransom, get the hostages released, and then retaliate.
Question
Policy continuity and government stability are more important to a business than the type of political system.
Question
A historical function of capitalist-but not communist-governments has been the protection of the economic activities within their geographic area of control.
Question
Former British prime minister Tony Blair led the privatization movement.
Question
When the U.S. military contracts out security details in war zones, it is engaged in privatization.
Question
Zimbabwe's government offers an example of government instability.
Question
One example of nationalization of private companies is the nationalization of French-owned firms in Europe after World War II.
Question
To hedge the terrorism risk, there are insurance, antiterrorist schools, and even companies to handle negotiations.
Question
Businesses favor unstable governments because they present more profit opportunities.
Question
Unlike the topography, the political climate of a country has relatively little influence on its exports.
Question
Subsidies from the United States to its sugar industry have been critical in helping to prevent a loss of jobs from American companies that are high users of sugar.
Question
New types of dumping include concession dumping.
Question
The national defense argument for trade restrictions is based on the development level of the country.
Question
Sanctions are a trade restriction that is effective in forcing change.
Question
To protect an infant industry, trade restrictions might be effective.
Question
A comparison based on hourly wages is a reasonable guide to a need to protect domestic jobs.
Question
Tariff barriers may be used to protect domestic industry from foreign, lower-cost producers.
Question
Trade restrictions violate the spirit of the WTO.
Question
U.S. ocean shipping companies are benefiting from U.S. government subsidies.
Question
Subsidies that confer a benefit may well evoke countervailing duties.
Question
The types of information a firm will need to judge country risks vary according to the nature of its business and the amount of money invested.
Question
The government officials who make decisions about import restrictions are particularly sensitive to their country's broad population of consumers, who will be hurt by international competition.
Question
The length of the investment in a foreign country has no impact on the risk assessment for that investment. What matters is the economic and political situations in the country.
Question
A compound duty is a combination of specific and variable duties.
Question
Protection of infant industries through trade restrictions is used only in developing nations.
Question
The utility of risk analyses of social, political, and economic factors increases rapidly over longer time spans.
Question
One way that the WTO defines dumping is the selling of a product abroad for less than the average cost of production in the importing nation.
Question
Fair competition is a strong rationale for trade barriers.
Question
Retaliatory trade restrictions are not made for dumping because price competition is protected by the WTO.
Question
New types of dumping include tax dumping.
Question
Voluntary export restraints are imposed by the importing nation to avoid violating WTO rules.
Question
Privately owned companies sometimes complain that government-owned companies have the following unfair advantages:

A) higher-cost financing.
B) ability to charge higher prices.
C) access to government contracts.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
Duties may be used to encourage local input.
Question
Zimbabwe is an example of:

A) a richly endowed country that has suffered because of government instability.
B) a government that expropriated private property, that is, nationalized it, and then redistributed it.
C) a country whose leadership stole the 2008 election.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
The reasons a government may nationalize a firm include:

A) to get government contracts.
B) to promote the ideology of capitalism.
C) to preserve jobs.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
The national defense argument for trade restrictions suggests that some industries, even if they are not competitive, need protection from imports.
Question
Kidnapping:

A) two of B, C, andD
B) is a weapon used by some terrorists to extract ransom.
C) can result in counterproductive results if ransom is paid for hostages.
D) Both B and C are correct, so A is the appropriate response. KRE insurance refers to kidnapping, ransom, and extortion.
E) all of B, C, and D.
Question
Nationalization and privatization are:

A) similar trends.
B) opposing trends.
C) both risks faced by privately held firms.
D) both risks not encountered in capitalist democracies.
E) two of the above.
Question
Nuisance tariffs require importers to go through the administrative paperwork connected to paying tariffs, even though the payment itself might be quite small.
Question
Voluntary export restraints are imposed by the importing nation to avoid violating WTO rules.
Question
Nontariff barriers that are not quantitative can be divided into two groups, those that are established by the government participation in trade and those that are administrative.
Question
With privatization:

A) assets are transferred from the public sector to the private sector.
B) stock is bought back so that the company no longer has public shareholders.
C) state activities are moved into private management through contracts.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
Sanctions against nations are not a form of trade restriction because the motivation is political.
Question
Government stability is a characteristic of a government that:

A) makes sudden radical policy changes.
B) readily shifts alliances to maintain power.
C) maintains predictability in fiscal, monetary and political policies.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
Government protection of economic activities is:

A) two of the following.
B) a historical function of government.
C) a recent responsibility of government.
D) a socialist characteristic.
E) stronger in democracies.
Question
Trade barriers create costs that are paid by the government erecting the barrier.
Question
Government stability is understood to refer to a government's:

A) policies-their ability to endure over time.
B) ability to keep itself in power.
C) two of A, B, andD
D) Both A and B are described by the term government stability, so C is the appropriate response.
E) all of A, B, and D.
Question
The reasons a government may nationalize a firm include:

A) to extract more money from the firm.
B) to increase the firm's profitability.
C) to preserve jobs.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
The Multi-Fiber Arrangement (MFA) was an orderly marketing arrangement to regulate textiles and clothing exports.
Question
A variable levy confers benefit on the domestic producer, as with the EU variable levy on grain.
Question
Counterarguments to the "protect domestic jobs from cheap foreign labor" argument include:

A) the labor rate is not all of the labor cost or the production cost.
B) productivity per worker is what matters.
C) cheap foreign labor is a natural occurrence.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
In the United States, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act:

A) outlawed tariffs for U.S. imports.
B) led to the Wall Street crash of 1929.
C) established some of the highest tariffs the United States has known.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
According to the text, the type of information a firm will need to judge country risks:

A) none of B, C, and
B) varies according to the nature of its business.
C) varies according to its size.
D) The type of information a firm will need to judge country risks varies according to the nature of its business and the length of time required for the investment, loan, or other involvement to yield a satisfactory return.
E) two of B, C, and D.
Question
The national defense argument for trade restrictions has been used in the United States to argue for restriction on imports of:

A) munitions.
B) uniforms.
C) The U.S. shoe industry is mentioned in the text.
C) shoes.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
Social dumping occurs when an exporting country:

A) imposes an export tax on domestic businesses that export, to compensate for the opportunity cost to the domestic market.
B) creates unfair competition based on lower costs, which undermines social support systems to the worker.
C) target-markets to specific vulnerable groups in the importing country.
D) exports goods that are not sellable in the domestic environment due to hazards and safety issues.
E) two of the above.
Question
The trend for firms in regard to country risk assessment (CRA) is to:

A) avoid it as an added cost in competitive markets.
B) concentrate much more on CRA in making decisions about foreign activities.
C) use CRA in obviously dangerous locations, but only in those situations.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
Among the external businesses that conduct country risk assessment are:

A) the Economist Intelligence Unit, Euromoney, the Harvard Business Review
B) Moody's, Standard and Poor's, STRATFOR
C) The organizations listed in A and B are mentioned as the leading external firms in CRA, so D is the correct response.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
What is the role of the home country in risk assessment?

A) It has no role.
B) It is a significant consideration.
C) The home country of the parent company is thought to play a significant role in CRA.
D) None of the above.
E) Two of A, B, and C.
Question
Dumping is:

A) selling a product abroad for less than its production cost in the importing nation.
B) selling a product abroad for less than the market price in the export nation.
C) exporting a product to a third country without correct documentation.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
Cultural dumping is found in:

A) Japan's past refusal to import American skis because Japanese snow is different, so the skis should meet different standards.
B) Saudi Arabia's refusal to import Playboy magazine.
C) The small town of Orleans, Massachusetts, decision to prohibit franchised stores from operating in the town.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
New types of dumping include:

A) cultural, social, financial services, and tax dumping.
B) truck, financial services, and black-market dumping.
C) gray-market, subsidiary, and transfer-pricing dumping.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Question
Arguments for trade restrictions include:

A) national defense, infant industry, and job protection.
B) punishment of offending nations.
C) fair competition and retaliation.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
The primary motivation of tariffs is to:

A) raise government revenue at the cost of importers.
B) raise the price of imports, to protect domestic goods.
C) punish countries over political issues.
D) encourage foreign consumption.
E) none of the above.
Question
The United States became one of the first countries to prohibit dumping into its own market, in:

A) 2006.
B) 1856.
C) 1916.
D) 1776.
E) none of the above.
Question
Financial dumping is:

A) sending excess financial resources to other nations.
B) a government's decision to subsidize low interest rates for purchases of its exports.
C) allowing a bank to have a low level of capital to total assets.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
Subsidies are problematic because they:

A) are administered as a form of political patronage.
B) aid export businesses or protect domestic businesses from imports.
C) encourage nationalization.
D) violate UN agreements.
E) two of the above.
Question
International business can be a powerful political force, in part because:

A) a recent Supreme Court ruling in the United States allows corporate contributions to political races.
B) many top management team members are willing to accept roles with national security agencies.
C) about half the world's 100 largest economic units are firms.
D) business is all about achieving political goals.
E) two of the above.
Question
An example of environmental dumping can be found in the:

A) maquiladora plants of Mexico, located near the U.S. border and operating at lower environmental standards than would be required in the United States.
B) nuclear waste shipments to developing nations.
C) garbage shipments from New Jersey to developing nations.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Question
An argument against the protection of an infant industry is that:

A) in the long run the industry will have a competitive advantage.
B) firms need protection from imports until the required investment capital is obtained.
C) protection of emerging industries occurs only in developing nations.
D) there can be high costs from subsidizing infant industries.
E) Two of the above.
Question
An argument against using trade restrictions to punish an offending nation is that:

A) sanctions seldom achieve their goal of forcing change in the offending country.
B) sanctions are relatively harmful to the citizens of the offending country.
C) sanctions are not condoned by the UN.
D) sanctions decrease the cost of doing business.
E) two of the above.
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Deck 6: Political and Trade Forces
1
Kidnap, ransom, and extortion are techniques often used by terrorists against which no insurance is available.
False
2
When government-owned companies compete with private companies, the private companies have the advantage.
False
3
The only reason firms are nationalized is to spread a socialist-communist ideology.
False
4
The practice of country risk assessment is an exercise in xenophobic and ethnocentric thinking.
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k this deck
5
Country risk assessment is a measure of the threat of nationalization.
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k this deck
6
Paying ransom makes sense because a life is saved and the payments can be traced.
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k this deck
7
Terrorists avoid kidnapping because the repercussions can be harmful to their movement.
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k this deck
8
Only in communist countries do governments own the factors of production.
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k this deck
9
Country risk assessment is an evaluation that assesses a country's political situation and policies to determine how much risk exists of a change in that country's government.
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k this deck
10
Country risks are increasingly political in nature.
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11
When people are kidnapped for ransom, the right response is to pay the ransom, get the hostages released, and then retaliate.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Policy continuity and government stability are more important to a business than the type of political system.
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k this deck
13
A historical function of capitalist-but not communist-governments has been the protection of the economic activities within their geographic area of control.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Former British prime minister Tony Blair led the privatization movement.
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k this deck
15
When the U.S. military contracts out security details in war zones, it is engaged in privatization.
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k this deck
16
Zimbabwe's government offers an example of government instability.
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k this deck
17
One example of nationalization of private companies is the nationalization of French-owned firms in Europe after World War II.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
To hedge the terrorism risk, there are insurance, antiterrorist schools, and even companies to handle negotiations.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Businesses favor unstable governments because they present more profit opportunities.
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k this deck
20
Unlike the topography, the political climate of a country has relatively little influence on its exports.
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k this deck
21
Subsidies from the United States to its sugar industry have been critical in helping to prevent a loss of jobs from American companies that are high users of sugar.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
New types of dumping include concession dumping.
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k this deck
23
The national defense argument for trade restrictions is based on the development level of the country.
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k this deck
24
Sanctions are a trade restriction that is effective in forcing change.
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k this deck
25
To protect an infant industry, trade restrictions might be effective.
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k this deck
26
A comparison based on hourly wages is a reasonable guide to a need to protect domestic jobs.
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k this deck
27
Tariff barriers may be used to protect domestic industry from foreign, lower-cost producers.
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k this deck
28
Trade restrictions violate the spirit of the WTO.
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k this deck
29
U.S. ocean shipping companies are benefiting from U.S. government subsidies.
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k this deck
30
Subsidies that confer a benefit may well evoke countervailing duties.
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k this deck
31
The types of information a firm will need to judge country risks vary according to the nature of its business and the amount of money invested.
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k this deck
32
The government officials who make decisions about import restrictions are particularly sensitive to their country's broad population of consumers, who will be hurt by international competition.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The length of the investment in a foreign country has no impact on the risk assessment for that investment. What matters is the economic and political situations in the country.
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k this deck
34
A compound duty is a combination of specific and variable duties.
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k this deck
35
Protection of infant industries through trade restrictions is used only in developing nations.
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k this deck
36
The utility of risk analyses of social, political, and economic factors increases rapidly over longer time spans.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
One way that the WTO defines dumping is the selling of a product abroad for less than the average cost of production in the importing nation.
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k this deck
38
Fair competition is a strong rationale for trade barriers.
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k this deck
39
Retaliatory trade restrictions are not made for dumping because price competition is protected by the WTO.
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k this deck
40
New types of dumping include tax dumping.
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k this deck
41
Voluntary export restraints are imposed by the importing nation to avoid violating WTO rules.
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k this deck
42
Privately owned companies sometimes complain that government-owned companies have the following unfair advantages:

A) higher-cost financing.
B) ability to charge higher prices.
C) access to government contracts.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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k this deck
43
Duties may be used to encourage local input.
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k this deck
44
Zimbabwe is an example of:

A) a richly endowed country that has suffered because of government instability.
B) a government that expropriated private property, that is, nationalized it, and then redistributed it.
C) a country whose leadership stole the 2008 election.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
45
The reasons a government may nationalize a firm include:

A) to get government contracts.
B) to promote the ideology of capitalism.
C) to preserve jobs.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The national defense argument for trade restrictions suggests that some industries, even if they are not competitive, need protection from imports.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
Kidnapping:

A) two of B, C, andD
B) is a weapon used by some terrorists to extract ransom.
C) can result in counterproductive results if ransom is paid for hostages.
D) Both B and C are correct, so A is the appropriate response. KRE insurance refers to kidnapping, ransom, and extortion.
E) all of B, C, and D.
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k this deck
48
Nationalization and privatization are:

A) similar trends.
B) opposing trends.
C) both risks faced by privately held firms.
D) both risks not encountered in capitalist democracies.
E) two of the above.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Nuisance tariffs require importers to go through the administrative paperwork connected to paying tariffs, even though the payment itself might be quite small.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Voluntary export restraints are imposed by the importing nation to avoid violating WTO rules.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Nontariff barriers that are not quantitative can be divided into two groups, those that are established by the government participation in trade and those that are administrative.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
With privatization:

A) assets are transferred from the public sector to the private sector.
B) stock is bought back so that the company no longer has public shareholders.
C) state activities are moved into private management through contracts.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Sanctions against nations are not a form of trade restriction because the motivation is political.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Government stability is a characteristic of a government that:

A) makes sudden radical policy changes.
B) readily shifts alliances to maintain power.
C) maintains predictability in fiscal, monetary and political policies.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Government protection of economic activities is:

A) two of the following.
B) a historical function of government.
C) a recent responsibility of government.
D) a socialist characteristic.
E) stronger in democracies.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Trade barriers create costs that are paid by the government erecting the barrier.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Government stability is understood to refer to a government's:

A) policies-their ability to endure over time.
B) ability to keep itself in power.
C) two of A, B, andD
D) Both A and B are described by the term government stability, so C is the appropriate response.
E) all of A, B, and D.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
The reasons a government may nationalize a firm include:

A) to extract more money from the firm.
B) to increase the firm's profitability.
C) to preserve jobs.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
The Multi-Fiber Arrangement (MFA) was an orderly marketing arrangement to regulate textiles and clothing exports.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
A variable levy confers benefit on the domestic producer, as with the EU variable levy on grain.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Counterarguments to the "protect domestic jobs from cheap foreign labor" argument include:

A) the labor rate is not all of the labor cost or the production cost.
B) productivity per worker is what matters.
C) cheap foreign labor is a natural occurrence.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
In the United States, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act:

A) outlawed tariffs for U.S. imports.
B) led to the Wall Street crash of 1929.
C) established some of the highest tariffs the United States has known.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
According to the text, the type of information a firm will need to judge country risks:

A) none of B, C, and
B) varies according to the nature of its business.
C) varies according to its size.
D) The type of information a firm will need to judge country risks varies according to the nature of its business and the length of time required for the investment, loan, or other involvement to yield a satisfactory return.
E) two of B, C, and D.
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Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
The national defense argument for trade restrictions has been used in the United States to argue for restriction on imports of:

A) munitions.
B) uniforms.
C) The U.S. shoe industry is mentioned in the text.
C) shoes.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Social dumping occurs when an exporting country:

A) imposes an export tax on domestic businesses that export, to compensate for the opportunity cost to the domestic market.
B) creates unfair competition based on lower costs, which undermines social support systems to the worker.
C) target-markets to specific vulnerable groups in the importing country.
D) exports goods that are not sellable in the domestic environment due to hazards and safety issues.
E) two of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
The trend for firms in regard to country risk assessment (CRA) is to:

A) avoid it as an added cost in competitive markets.
B) concentrate much more on CRA in making decisions about foreign activities.
C) use CRA in obviously dangerous locations, but only in those situations.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Among the external businesses that conduct country risk assessment are:

A) the Economist Intelligence Unit, Euromoney, the Harvard Business Review
B) Moody's, Standard and Poor's, STRATFOR
C) The organizations listed in A and B are mentioned as the leading external firms in CRA, so D is the correct response.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
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68
What is the role of the home country in risk assessment?

A) It has no role.
B) It is a significant consideration.
C) The home country of the parent company is thought to play a significant role in CRA.
D) None of the above.
E) Two of A, B, and C.
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69
Dumping is:

A) selling a product abroad for less than its production cost in the importing nation.
B) selling a product abroad for less than the market price in the export nation.
C) exporting a product to a third country without correct documentation.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
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70
Cultural dumping is found in:

A) Japan's past refusal to import American skis because Japanese snow is different, so the skis should meet different standards.
B) Saudi Arabia's refusal to import Playboy magazine.
C) The small town of Orleans, Massachusetts, decision to prohibit franchised stores from operating in the town.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
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71
New types of dumping include:

A) cultural, social, financial services, and tax dumping.
B) truck, financial services, and black-market dumping.
C) gray-market, subsidiary, and transfer-pricing dumping.
D) two of the above.
E) all of A, B, and C.
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72
Arguments for trade restrictions include:

A) national defense, infant industry, and job protection.
B) punishment of offending nations.
C) fair competition and retaliation.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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73
The primary motivation of tariffs is to:

A) raise government revenue at the cost of importers.
B) raise the price of imports, to protect domestic goods.
C) punish countries over political issues.
D) encourage foreign consumption.
E) none of the above.
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74
The United States became one of the first countries to prohibit dumping into its own market, in:

A) 2006.
B) 1856.
C) 1916.
D) 1776.
E) none of the above.
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75
Financial dumping is:

A) sending excess financial resources to other nations.
B) a government's decision to subsidize low interest rates for purchases of its exports.
C) allowing a bank to have a low level of capital to total assets.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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76
Subsidies are problematic because they:

A) are administered as a form of political patronage.
B) aid export businesses or protect domestic businesses from imports.
C) encourage nationalization.
D) violate UN agreements.
E) two of the above.
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77
International business can be a powerful political force, in part because:

A) a recent Supreme Court ruling in the United States allows corporate contributions to political races.
B) many top management team members are willing to accept roles with national security agencies.
C) about half the world's 100 largest economic units are firms.
D) business is all about achieving political goals.
E) two of the above.
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78
An example of environmental dumping can be found in the:

A) maquiladora plants of Mexico, located near the U.S. border and operating at lower environmental standards than would be required in the United States.
B) nuclear waste shipments to developing nations.
C) garbage shipments from New Jersey to developing nations.
D) all of the above.
E) two of A, B, and C.
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79
An argument against the protection of an infant industry is that:

A) in the long run the industry will have a competitive advantage.
B) firms need protection from imports until the required investment capital is obtained.
C) protection of emerging industries occurs only in developing nations.
D) there can be high costs from subsidizing infant industries.
E) Two of the above.
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80
An argument against using trade restrictions to punish an offending nation is that:

A) sanctions seldom achieve their goal of forcing change in the offending country.
B) sanctions are relatively harmful to the citizens of the offending country.
C) sanctions are not condoned by the UN.
D) sanctions decrease the cost of doing business.
E) two of the above.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 100 flashcards in this deck.