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University of Michigan
Industry: Education
Number of terms: 31274
Number of blossaries: 0
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1. A government-imposed restriction on quantity, or sometimes on total value. 2. An import quota specifies the maximum amount of an import per year, typically administered with import licenses that may be sold or directly allocated, to individuals or firms, domestic or foreign. May be global, bilateral, or by country. 3. An IMF quota.
Industry:Economy
A quota that specifies the total amount to be imported (or exported) and also assigns specific amounts to each exporting (or importing) country.
Industry:Economy
A growth model in which savings is determined endogenously to be optimal, in contrast to the Solow Model in which the savings propensity was a parameter.
Industry:Economy
1. In the presence of excess demand (for a good, etc. ), to allocate among demanders by some means other than the price they are willing to pay. 2. The quantity of a rationed good allocated to one demander.
Industry:Economy
A good that has not been transformed by production; a primary product.
Industry:Economy
A straight line drawn from the origin of a diagram. In the Heckscher-Ohlin Model, two rays are used to define a diversification cone.
Industry:Economy
1. Expressed in terms of the amounts of goods and services that something is worth at market prices. 2. Adjusted for inflation. 3. Referring only to real economic variables as opposed to nominal, or monetary ones, as in real models. 4. Used with "appreciation" or "depreciation," refers to the real exchange rate. Thus a real appreciation means that the nominal value of a country's currency has increased by more than its relative price level may have decreased, so that the prices of its goods relative to foreign goods have increased. 5. The name of one unit of the Brazilian currency. One real equals 100 centavos. Pronounced "ray-all'".
Industry:Economy
1. The nominal exchange rate adjusted for inflation. Unlike most other real variables, this adjustment requires accounting for price levels in two currencies. The real exchange rate is: ''R'' = ''EP*/P'' where ''E'' is the nominal domestic-currency price of foreign currency, ''P'' is the domestic price level, and ''P*'' is the foreign price level. 2. The real price of foreign goods; i. E. , the quantity of domestic goods needed to purchase a unit of foreign goods. Equals the reciprocal of the terms of trade. Equivalent to definition 1. 3. The relative price of traded goods in terms of nontraded goods.
Industry:Economy
A shorthand term for most of the theory of international trade, which consists largely of real models. Contrasts with international finance.
Industry:Economy
A change in allocation, as of factors of production across industries: e. G. , a rise in the relative price of the capital-intensive good causes reallocation of factors into the capital-intensive sector.
Industry:Economy
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