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Web-Based Questions
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1
TRADE BALANCES WITH PARTNER COUNTRIES
The U.S. Census Bureau, at www.census.gov/foreign-trade/statistics, lists the top trading partners of the United States (imports and exports added together) as well as the top 10 countries with which the United States has a trade surplus and a trade deficit. Using the current year-to-date data, compare the top 10 deficit and surplus countries with the top 10 trading partners. Are deficit and surplus countries equally represented in the top 10 trading partners list, or does one group dominate the list? The top 10 trading partners represent what percent of U.S. imports and what percent of U.S. exports?
2
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES—THE YEN FOR DOLLARS
The Federal Reserve System Web site, http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/H10/hist/, provides historical foreign-exchange-rate data for a wide variety of currencies. Look at the data for the Japanese yen from 1995 to the present. Assume that you were in Tokyo every New Year's from January 1, 2000, to this year and bought a bento (box lunch) for 1000 yen each year. Convert this amount to dollars using the yen-dollar exchange rate for each January since 2000, and plot the dollar price of the bento over time. Has the dollar appreciated or depreciated against the yen? What was the least amount in dollars that your box lunch cost? The most?
3
THE DOHA ROUND—WHAT IS THE CURRENT STATUS?
Determine and briefly summarize the current status of the Doha Round of trade negotiations by accessing the World Trade Organization site, http://www.wto.org. Is the round still in progress or has it been concluded with an agreement? If the former, when and where was the latest ministerial meeting? If the latter, what are the main features of the agreement?







McConnell, Macro 17e OLCOnline Learning Center

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