10.2 National Welfare Arguments Against Free Trade
1) The optimum tariff is
A) the best tariff a country can obtain via a WTO negotiated round of compromises.
B) the tariff, which maximizes the terms of trade gains.
C) the tariff, which maximizes the difference between terms of trade gains and terms of trade
loses.
D) not practical for a small country due to the likelihood of retaliation.
E) not practical for a large country due to the likelihood of retaliation.
2) The optimum tariff is most likely to apply to
A) a small tariff imposed by a small country.
B) a small tariff imposed by a large country.
C) a large tariff imposed by a small country.
D) a large tariff imposed by a large country.
E) an ad valorem tariff on a small country.
3) The prohibitive tariff is a tariff that
A) is so high that it eliminates imports.
B) is so high that it causes undue harm to trade-partner economies.
C) is so high that it causes undue harm to import competing sectors.
D) is so low that the government prohibits its use since it would lose an important revenue
source.
E) is so low that it causes domestic producers to leave the industry.
4) The existence of marginal social benefits which are not marginal benefits for the industry
producing the import substitutes
A) is an argument supporting free trade and non-governmental involvement.
B) is an argument supporting the use of an optimum tariff.
C) is an argument supporting the use of market failures as a trade-policy strategy.
D) is an argument rejecting free trade and supporting governmental involvement.
E) is an argument rejecting the domestic market failure concept.