18. By establishing transplant factories in the United States, Japanese automakers were able to avoid
export restrictions imposed by the Japanese government, but not import restrictions imposed by the
U.S. government.
19. Mergers differ from joint ventures in that they involve the creation of a new business firm, rather than
the union of two existing companies.
20. Developing countries, such as Mexico and India, often close their borders to foreign companies unless
they are willing to take on partner companies in developing countries.
21. In natural-resource oriented industries, such as oil and copper, joint ventures have often been formed
by several companies since the cost of resource-extraction may be prohibitively large for a particular
company.
22. International joint ventures tend to yield a welfare increasing market-power effect and a welfare
decreasing cost-reduction effect.
23. A joint venture leads to increases in national welfare if the cost-reduction effect is due to wage
concessions and if it more than offsets the market-power effect.
24. A joint venture leads to increases in national welfare if its cost-reduction effect is due to productivity
gains and if it more than offsets the market-power effect.
25. Joint ventures lead to losses in national welfare when the newly established business adds to
pre-existing production capacity and fosters additional competition.