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From: MRE Chap. 8, and ETCUS Chap. 19-20: In his Comparative Advantage example British Political Economist David Ricardo described the following example. Two countries, England

From: MRE Chap. 8, and ETCUS Chap. 19-20:

  1. In his "Comparative Advantage" example British Political Economist David Ricardo described the following example. Two countries, England and Portugal fully employ all of their workers producing cloth and wine. It takes England 120 million worker years to produce the 1 billion barrels of wine it needs for domestic consumption and 100 million worker years to produce the 1 billion square yards of cloth it needs for domestic consumption. It takes Portugal 80 million worker to produce its 1 billion barrels of wine needs and 90 million workers to produce its 1 billion square yards of cloth needs. (This is far in the future. Both England and Portugal are much more populous than today.).

  1. Graph the production possibilities confronting each country.

  1. What are the opportunity cost ratios in each country before trade?

  1. Assuming initial international price ratios are equal to domestic labor cost ratios in each country, would it make sense for Portuguese traders to buy English cloth or wine?

  1. Assume that "Hume's species flow mechanism" works so that Portuguese prices eventual rise (in terms of international trading prices) so that 1 barrel of Porto wine trades for 1 square yard of English cloth, what are the consumption possibility curves facing each country after trade?

  1. Ricardo ssumes that the end result of "free trade" will be that Portugal will specialize in wine, England in cloth, and that both countries will continue to fully employ all their workers and enjoy balanced trade with each other (i.e. they will not experience trade deficits or surpluses), and be able to consume more than they had before trade. Was Ricardo correct?

  1. Why does the "deficit linkage identity" show that reducing the U.S. federal deficit will increase unemployment if the (full employment) trade deficit is not reduced or private deficit is not increased (in the absence of other major changes in the U.S economy)?

  1. The following schedules summarize the supply and demand for trifflings, the national currency

of Tricoli:

US dollars per triffling

$0

$4

$8

$12

$16

$20

$24

Quantity demanded

40

36

32

28

24

20

16

Quantity supplied

1

5

9

13

17

20

25

  1. Graph the supply and demand curves on the next page.

  1. Determine the equilibrium exchange rate.

  1. If Tricoli was running a persistent and significant increase in imports (but no change in exports) over a long period of time, how would this be likely to impact the supply curve for trifling (assume no significant "Capital Account" flows other than those needed to finance the trade deficits)?

  1. What is likely to happen to the (international currency) dollar value of triffling as a result of these persistent trade deficits?

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