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Tutorial 4 Questions PDF

This document discusses how free trade affects factor incomes in the short and long run according to theories of international trade. It provides explanations of the Heckscher-Ohlin and Stolper-Samuelson theorems, and how they predict the impact of trade on factor returns. Questions are provided to test understanding of how different factors such as land, labor, and capital are affected depending on whether a country is relatively abundant or scarce in those factors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
219 views4 pages

Tutorial 4 Questions PDF

This document discusses how free trade affects factor incomes in the short and long run according to theories of international trade. It provides explanations of the Heckscher-Ohlin and Stolper-Samuelson theorems, and how they predict the impact of trade on factor returns. Questions are provided to test understanding of how different factors such as land, labor, and capital are affected depending on whether a country is relatively abundant or scarce in those factors.

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Roite Betero
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Tutorial 4: Who Gains and Who Loses from Trade

Focus of Study: You should be able to explain how Free Trade Affects the Income
Distribution of Factors of Production in the Short Run and the Long Run and which
particular sector gains and which particular sector loses (i.e. exporting or importing) in the
short and long run. For your analysis you can take two goods and discuss based on domestic
market and rest of the world.
You should also be able to distinguish between the H-O theory and the Stolper-Samuelson
Theorem.
1. In the short-run, following the opening of trade:
a. workers in the country can change jobs but will receive the same wage.
b. workers will suffer from lower wages but land owners will benefit from higher rents.
c. all groups tied to declining sectors of the economy will suffer from lower returns.
d. gross output remains constant.

2. In the short-run, following the opening of trade:


a. inputs move across sectors, but input returns remain constant.
b. factor payments in the import-competing sectors will decline.
c. the supply of resources to the export-oriented sectors will decline.
d. workers in all the sectors will receive lower wages due to cheap imports.

3. The theory which predicts that trade occurs because of differences in the availability of
inputs across countries and the differences in the proportions in which the inputs are used in
producing different products is called:
a. the Stolper-Samuelson theory.
b. the Heckscher-Ohlin theory.
c. the theory of comparative advantage.
d. the theory of absolute advantage.

4. The Heckscher-Ohlin theory predicts that the opening of trade between a land-abundant
country and a labor-abundant country should result in:
a. higher rents and wages in both countries.
b. lower rents and wages in both countries.
c. higher rents in the labor-abundant country and higher wages in the land-abundant
country.
d. higher wages in the labor-abundant country and higher rents in the land-abundant
country.
5. Country A is relatively land-abundant and wheat is relatively land-intensive. Given the
assumptions of the Heckscher-Ohlin model, the opening of trade in this country will cause
the domestic price of wheat to:
a. fall.
b. rise.
c. remain unaffected.
d. at first rise but then fall back to its original level.

6. The Stolper-Samuelson theorem indicates that given certain assumptions and conditions:
a. the real return to the factor used intensively in the import-competing industry will rise in
the long-run.
b. the real return to the factor used intensively in the export industry will fall in the long-
run.
c. the real return to all the resources in an economy will increase.
d. the real return to the factor used intensively in the export industry will rise in the long-
run.

7. Let us assume that cloth-making (labor-intensive) and farming (land-intensive) are the only
two sectors of production in a country. If this country is labor-abundant, and if trade
corresponds to the Heckscher-Ohlin theory, which of the following groups will gain in the
short-run, but lose in the long-run, from the opening of trade?
a. Domestic landowners in the farming sector
b. Domestic landowners in the cloth-making sector
c. Foreign landowners in the farming sector
d. Foreign workers in the cloth-making sector

8. The Stolper-Samuelson theorem predicts that free trade between the United States, a capital-
abundant country, and Mexico, a labor-abundant country, would ultimately result in:
a. higher wages in both countries.
b. lower wages in both countries.
c. higher wages in Mexico and lower wages in the United States.
d. lower wages in Mexico and higher wages in the United States.

9. According to the factor-price-equalization theorem, free trade between any two countries
equalizes:
a. product prices as well as the prices of individual factors of production between the
countries.
b. product prices between the countries but not the prices of individual factors of
production.
c. product prices between the countries and factor prices within each country but not
between the countries.
d. product prices and factor prices within each country but not between the countries.
10. Suppose country A, a labor-abundant country, produces only wheat and cloth. The following
equations illustrate the prices and costs of wheat and cloth in the country, where the numbers
indicate the amounts of labor and land needed to produce a unit of wheat and cloth. ‘w’ is the
wage rate and ‘r’ is the rental rate of land.

Price of wheat = 1w + 2r
Price of cloth = 2w + 1r

According to this information, which of the following statements is true?


a. Labor is used relatively intensively in the production of cloth.
b. The inputs are used in the same proportion in producing both the commodities.
c. The land to labor ratio in the production of cloth is higher than that in the production of
wheat.
d. The opportunity cost of producing cloth is higher than the opportunity cost of producing
wheat in country A.

Short Answer
11. Hollywoodland, being self-sufficient in most products, trades only two goods with the Rest
of the World (ROW), movies and automobiles. Both of these goods are produced using
skilled labor (L) and capital (K) with the returns to capital being the interest rate (r) and the
returns to skilled labor being the wage rate (w). The production of automobiles is capital
intensive relative to the production of movies and Hollywoodland is skilled-labor abundant
relative to the ROW.

a. State the Heckscher-Ohlin theorem and use it to predict the pattern of trade between
Hollywoodland and the ROW.

b. If the price of Hollywoodland’s imports rises, the price of its exports remaining unchanged,
what would happen to the factor returns in Hollywoodland? State the theorem used to explain
the answer and, briefly state the intuition behind the theorem.

12. The following equations describe the prices and marginal costs of producing corn and toys in
a country. The numbers in the equations indicate the amounts of labor and land needed to
produce a unit of corn and a unit of toys. In the equations, the wage rate and the rental rate
are denoted by ‘w’ and ‘r’ respectively.
Pcorn = 80w + 40r
Ptoys = 100w + 30r
a. If the price per unit of corn and the price per unit of toys are initially $200, calculate the
wage rate and the rental rate. Calculate the labor cost per unit of corn and per unit of toys.
What is the rental cost per unit of corn and per unit of toys?

13. The following equations describe the prices and marginal costs of producing corn and toys in
a country. The numbers in the equations indicate the amounts of labor and land needed to
produce a unit of corn and a unit of toys. In the equations, the wage rate and the rental rate
are denoted by ‘w’ and ‘r’ respectively.
Pcorn = 80w + 40r
Ptoys = 100w + 30r
a. If the price per unit of corn and the price per unit of toys are initially $200, calculate the
wage rate and the rental rate. Calculate the labor cost per unit of corn and per unit of toys.
What is the rental cost per unit of corn and per unit of toys?

b. Suppose post-trade the price of corn increases to $240. However, the price of toys remains
unchanged. What are the new values for ‘w’ and ‘r’ after adjustment to the new long-run
situation?

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