A
B
C
D
E
1

fall in the price of a currency through the action of supply and demand

depreciation

1

agency whose member governments offer monetary advice and provide loans to developing nations

IMF (International Monetary Fund)

1

good bought from companies in other countries for domestic use

imports

1

lowering a currency's value in relation to other currencies by government order

devaluation
1

restriction imposed on the number of units of a particular good that can be brought into the country

import quota

2

people who argue for trade restrictions to protect domestic industries

protectionists

2

tax on imports used primarily to raise government revenue without restricting imports

revenue tariff

2

tax placed on an imported product

tariff

2

system under which a national government sets the value of its currency in relation to a single standard

fixed rate of exchange

2

markets dealing in buying and selling foreign currency for businesses that want to import goods from other countries

foreign exchange markets

3

ability of a country to produce a product at a lower opportunity cost than another country

comparative advantage

3

difference between the value of a nation's exports and its imports

balance of trade

3

arrangement in which the forces of supply and demand are allowed to set the price of various currencies

flexible exchange rate

3

tax on imports used to raise the cost of imported goods and thereby protect domestic producers

protective tariff

3

complete restriction on the import or export of goods

embargo

4

the price of one nation's currency in terms of another nation's currency

exchange rate

4

ability of one country, using the same quantity of resources as a another, to produce a particular product at a lower absolute cost

absolute advantage

4

concept that a nation should produce and export a limited assortment of goods for which it is particularly suited in order to remain profitable

specialization