Classic Trade Theories
Modern Factor Endowments
The Toolkit of Protectionism
Economic Consequences
True or False
100

This 1776 book by Adam Smith challenged mercantilism and laid the foundation for modern trade theory.

The Wealth of Nations

100

The H-O model shifts the focus of trade from labor productivity to these, which include land, labor, and capital.  

Factor Endowments

100

This price-based tool is a tax levied specifically on imported or exported goods.  

 a Tariff

100

In a "Small Country" model, a tariff always raises the domestic price by this specific amount.

What is the full amount of the tariff?

100

True or False: Trade is a "zero-sum game" where one country must lose for another to gain.  

False (It is mutually beneficial).

200

Adam Smith’s theory states a country should export goods where it has lower labor requirements than any other country, known as this.

 Absolute Advantage

200

According to the H-O Theorem, a country with a high labor-to-capital ratio is considered to be this.  

Labor-abundant

200

These government payments to domestic producers are designed to lower production costs and encourage selling abroad.

Export Subsidies

200

 This group is the primary "loser" of trade protection, as they must pay higher prices for goods.  

Who are Consumers?

200

 True or False: For a 10% reduction in trade costs, the welfare gain to low-income consumers is more than four times that of the highest-income group.

True. Low-income households benefit more because price reductions provide higher value to those with tighter budgets.  

300

This revolutionary 1817 concept explains why a country should trade even if it is less productive in every single industry than its neighbor.

Comparative Advantage

300

This theorem suggests that free trade leads to the leveling of wages and returns to capital across different countries.  

Factor-Price Equalization

300

This quantitative limit on trade is "negotiated" between the importing and exporting countries to avoid harsher barriers.

What is a Voluntary Export Restraint (VER)?

300

This term describes the pure efficiency loss (areas b + d) that occurs because a tariff distorts production and consumption.  

What is Deadweight Loss?

300

True or False: The Multi-Fibre Arrangement (MFA) was a multilateral system of Voluntary Export Restraints (VERs) that covered approximately 50% of the world textile trade

 True. It was a significant historical example of VER usage.

400

In Ricardo's theory, the decision to specialize is based on this "cost"—defined as what you sacrifice to produce one good over another.

 Opportunity Cost

400

 If a product like "Cloth" uses more labor per unit of capital than "Wine" does, it is described as having this.

Labor Intensity

400

Standards, licensing, and other administrative hurdles that restrict trade without using taxes are known by this collective term.  

What are Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs)?

400

 Unlike a tariff, where the government gains revenue, a VER is unique because this "rent" is captured by foreigners.  

What is Quota Rent?

400

In the "Small Country" model, a tariff results in a net national welfare gain because the government revenue collected is always larger than the deadweight loss

False. For a small country, tariffs always reduce national welfare as the deadweight losses represent pure efficiency losses with no offsetting gains.

500

According to the numerical example provided, if England needs 100 hours for cloth and 120 for wine, its opportunity cost for 1 unit of cloth is this much wine.

 0.83 units of wine

500

 The H-O model argues that trade acts as a substitute for this, allowing countries to "import" scarce factors indirectly.  

Factor Mobility

500

Governments often use tariffs to shield these "young" domestic industries that are not yet ready for global competition.

What are Infant Industries?

500

Open trade is especially helpful for this group, whose welfare gains can be 4× higher than those of high-income groups.  

Who are Low-income consumers?

500

True or False: Empirical evidence shows that developing countries experience average welfare gains of 58% from open trade, which is more than triple the static gains.  

 True. Historical data consistently supports that open trade policies correlate with these higher growth rates and gains.