MCQ 1) option A is correct
When PPF is tangent to relative cost line, then economy is at equilibrium in autarky
So at eqm in absence of trade, MRPT = P_phone/P_rice
Thus it produces & consumes 6 phones &312 rice units.
At point A, slope of line t1, is( 360-200)/20 = 8
Thus forego 8 bushels of rice to produce 1 phone
after trade, slope of line t2= (240-80)/(20-12) = 20
Thus now forego 20 bushels of rice to produce 1 phone,
thus relative cost of phone in terms of rice has increased.
After trade, it produces 12 phones , but consumes only 6 phones, thus gains advantage of 6 phones, which is gain from Specialization.
Thus it exports 6 phones for 20 bushels of rice each , thus gets 120 bushels of rice ,
So Consumption after trade for rice is 240+120 = 360 .
so Consumption gain of rice is 360-312 = 48 bushels of rice.
new Consumption point is at phone = 6, & rice = 360
Shown by light blue circle.
. The following graph shows the production possibilities frontier for the imaginary country of Contente under...
The following graph shows the production possibilities frontier for the imaginary country of Contente under conditions of increasing costs. In the absence of trade, the relative cost of corn in Contente in terms of phones (or the marginal rate of transformation (MRT) of corn into phones) is shown by the slope of line t1, tangent to the production possibilities frontier at point A. 300 270 Consumption After Trade 240 210 180 В с CORN (Bushels) 150 120 90 60 30...
Unsure if the options selected are correct or not. Consider two neighboring island countries called Contente and Euphoria. They each have 4 million labor hours available per month that they can use to produce corn, jeans, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of corn or jeans that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Corn (Bushels per hour of labor) Jeans (Pairs per hour of labor) Country Contente Euphoria 20 Initially, suppose Contente uses...
Consider two neighboring island countries called Contente and Felicidad. They each have 4 million labor hours available per month that they can use to produce corm, jeans, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of corn or jeans that can be produced using 1 hour of labor Corn Jeans Country (Bushels per hour of labor) (Pairs per hour of labor) Contente 8 16 Felicidad 5 20 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of labor per...
3. Gains from trade Consider two neighboring island countries called Felicidad and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per month that they can use to produce corn, jeans, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of corn or jeans that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Country Corn Jeans (Bushels per hour of labor) (Pairs per hour of labor) Felicidad 4 16 Contente 5 10 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1...
3. Gains from trade Consider two neighboring island countries called Dolorium and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce jeans, rye, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or rye that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Jeans Rye (Bushels per hour of labor) 20 16 (Pairs per hour of labor) Country Dolorium Contente Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of...
3. Gains from trade Consider two neighboring island countries called Euphoria and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce jeans, corn, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or corn that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Jeans (Pairs per hour of labor) Corn (Bushels per hour of labor) Country Euphoria Contente Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of labor per...
3. Gains from trade Consider two neighboring island countries called Euphoria and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce rye, jeans, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of rye or jeans that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Country Rye Jeans (Bushels per hour of labor) (Pairs per hour of labor) Euphoria 4 16 Contente 6 12 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million...
4. Gains from trade Consider two neighboring island countries called Contente and Euphoria. They each have 4 million labor hours available per week that they can use to produce jeans, corn, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or corn that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Jeans (Pairs per hour of labor) Corn (Bushels per hour of labor) Country Contente Euphoria 16 20 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of...
Consider two neighboring island countries called Felicidad and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per month that they can use to produce jeans, corn, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or corn that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Jeans Country(Pairs per hour of labor) Felicidad Contente Corn (Bushels per hour of labor) 16 12 4 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of labor per month to...
Consider two neighboring island countries called Euphoria and Contente. They each have 4 million labor hours available per month that they can use to produce jeans, rye, or a combination of both. The following table shows the amount of jeans or rye that can be produced using 1 hour of labor. Country Jeans Rye (Pairs per hour of labor) (Bushels per hour of labor) Euphoria 4 16 Contente 5 10 Initially, suppose Contente uses 1 million hours of labor per...