COMPREHENSIVE WGU C211 Global Economics for
Managers OA EXAM with Questions and Answers/Plus a
Rationale Updated 2026 A+/Instant Download PDF
Table of Contents
1. Supply and Demand Analysis
2. Macroeconomic Indicators (GDP, Inflation, Unemployment)
3. International Trade and Comparative Advantage
4. Exchange Rates and Monetary Policy
5. Market Structures and Firm Behavior
6. Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth
1. A multinational firm is operating in a country where the domestic currency has sharply
depreciated against the US Dollar. How should the firm adjust its global strategy if it primarily
imports raw materials from the US and sells finished goods domestically?
A. Increase domestic prices to maintain the same profit margin, regardless of demand elasticity.
B. Shift sourcing to local suppliers or hedge currency risk using financial derivatives to
mitigate cost-push inflation.
C. Reduce production immediately, as depreciation always signals an economic recession.
D. Increase dividends to shareholders to signal financial health despite the unfavorable exchange
rate.
Answer: B
Rationale: When the local currency depreciates, the cost of imported inputs increases, creating
cost-push pressure. Hedging or local sourcing effectively manages this input cost volatility.
, Option A ignores demand elasticity, while C and D are not strategic responses to exchange rate
exposure.
2. A country experiences an increase in its long-run aggregate supply (LRAS). According to the
Solow Growth Model, which factor is most likely to be the primary driver of this shift?
A. An increase in the short-term money supply by the central bank.
B. A sustained increase in the total factor productivity through technological innovation.
C. A temporary increase in government deficit spending to boost aggregate demand.
D. A decrease in the nominal interest rate to encourage consumer borrowing.
Answer: B
Rationale: In the Solow model, long-run economic growth and shifts in LRAS are primarily
driven by technological progress and improvements in productivity. Monetary and fiscal policies
(A, C, D) generally affect the short-run business cycle rather than the long-run productive
capacity of the economy.
3. If the marginal cost (MC) of producing an additional unit of software is near zero, but the firm
faces significant fixed costs for research and development, what market structure does this firm
likely operate in?
A. Perfect Competition.
B. Natural Monopoly or Monopolistic Competition.
C. Oligopoly with perfect collusion.
D. Commodity-based market.
Answer: B
Rationale: Industries with high fixed costs and near-zero marginal costs often exhibit economies
of scale that lead to natural monopolies or monopolistic competition. Perfect competition
requires zero fixed costs in the long run, and commodities (D) do not have high R&D entry
barriers.
4. A manager observes that the price elasticity of demand for their product is -0.5. How should they
interpret this value for revenue management?
A. The product is highly elastic; a price decrease will increase total revenue.
B. The product is inelastic; a price increase will increase total revenue.
, C. The product has unitary elasticity; price changes will not affect total revenue.
D. The product is a luxury good with many close substitutes.
Answer: B
Rationale: When elasticity is between 0 and -1 (in absolute terms), demand is inelastic. In this
range, the percentage decrease in quantity demanded is smaller than the percentage increase in
price, leading to higher total revenue. Elastic goods (A) would see revenue fall with a price
increase.
5. A government imposes a tariff on imported steel. How does this impact the domestic economy in
the standard trade model?
A. It increases total consumer surplus by protecting local jobs.
B. It creates a deadweight loss, as domestic production increases at an inefficiently high
cost.
C. It decreases the domestic price of steel due to the competitive effect.
D. It improves the balance of trade by eliminating all imports.
Answer: B
Rationale: Tariffs protect less-efficient domestic producers, leading to higher domestic prices
and lost consumer surplus, which creates deadweight loss. Option A is false because consumer
surplus loss exceeds producer surplus gain. C is false because prices rise, and D is false as it
rarely eliminates all imports.
6. What is the primary impact of a "beggar-thy-neighbor" devaluation policy on a country's trading
partners?
A. It increases the partners' export volumes by lowering their currency value.
B. It reduces the partners' net exports, potentially leading to retaliatory trade policies.
C. It has no effect, as all currencies adjust to equilibrium automatically.
D. It forces the partners to adopt the same fiscal policy.
Answer: B
Rationale: Devaluation makes a country's exports cheaper and imports more expensive. Trading
partners suffer reduced export demand, which often leads to trade wars and protectionist
Managers OA EXAM with Questions and Answers/Plus a
Rationale Updated 2026 A+/Instant Download PDF
Table of Contents
1. Supply and Demand Analysis
2. Macroeconomic Indicators (GDP, Inflation, Unemployment)
3. International Trade and Comparative Advantage
4. Exchange Rates and Monetary Policy
5. Market Structures and Firm Behavior
6. Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth
1. A multinational firm is operating in a country where the domestic currency has sharply
depreciated against the US Dollar. How should the firm adjust its global strategy if it primarily
imports raw materials from the US and sells finished goods domestically?
A. Increase domestic prices to maintain the same profit margin, regardless of demand elasticity.
B. Shift sourcing to local suppliers or hedge currency risk using financial derivatives to
mitigate cost-push inflation.
C. Reduce production immediately, as depreciation always signals an economic recession.
D. Increase dividends to shareholders to signal financial health despite the unfavorable exchange
rate.
Answer: B
Rationale: When the local currency depreciates, the cost of imported inputs increases, creating
cost-push pressure. Hedging or local sourcing effectively manages this input cost volatility.
, Option A ignores demand elasticity, while C and D are not strategic responses to exchange rate
exposure.
2. A country experiences an increase in its long-run aggregate supply (LRAS). According to the
Solow Growth Model, which factor is most likely to be the primary driver of this shift?
A. An increase in the short-term money supply by the central bank.
B. A sustained increase in the total factor productivity through technological innovation.
C. A temporary increase in government deficit spending to boost aggregate demand.
D. A decrease in the nominal interest rate to encourage consumer borrowing.
Answer: B
Rationale: In the Solow model, long-run economic growth and shifts in LRAS are primarily
driven by technological progress and improvements in productivity. Monetary and fiscal policies
(A, C, D) generally affect the short-run business cycle rather than the long-run productive
capacity of the economy.
3. If the marginal cost (MC) of producing an additional unit of software is near zero, but the firm
faces significant fixed costs for research and development, what market structure does this firm
likely operate in?
A. Perfect Competition.
B. Natural Monopoly or Monopolistic Competition.
C. Oligopoly with perfect collusion.
D. Commodity-based market.
Answer: B
Rationale: Industries with high fixed costs and near-zero marginal costs often exhibit economies
of scale that lead to natural monopolies or monopolistic competition. Perfect competition
requires zero fixed costs in the long run, and commodities (D) do not have high R&D entry
barriers.
4. A manager observes that the price elasticity of demand for their product is -0.5. How should they
interpret this value for revenue management?
A. The product is highly elastic; a price decrease will increase total revenue.
B. The product is inelastic; a price increase will increase total revenue.
, C. The product has unitary elasticity; price changes will not affect total revenue.
D. The product is a luxury good with many close substitutes.
Answer: B
Rationale: When elasticity is between 0 and -1 (in absolute terms), demand is inelastic. In this
range, the percentage decrease in quantity demanded is smaller than the percentage increase in
price, leading to higher total revenue. Elastic goods (A) would see revenue fall with a price
increase.
5. A government imposes a tariff on imported steel. How does this impact the domestic economy in
the standard trade model?
A. It increases total consumer surplus by protecting local jobs.
B. It creates a deadweight loss, as domestic production increases at an inefficiently high
cost.
C. It decreases the domestic price of steel due to the competitive effect.
D. It improves the balance of trade by eliminating all imports.
Answer: B
Rationale: Tariffs protect less-efficient domestic producers, leading to higher domestic prices
and lost consumer surplus, which creates deadweight loss. Option A is false because consumer
surplus loss exceeds producer surplus gain. C is false because prices rise, and D is false as it
rarely eliminates all imports.
6. What is the primary impact of a "beggar-thy-neighbor" devaluation policy on a country's trading
partners?
A. It increases the partners' export volumes by lowering their currency value.
B. It reduces the partners' net exports, potentially leading to retaliatory trade policies.
C. It has no effect, as all currencies adjust to equilibrium automatically.
D. It forces the partners to adopt the same fiscal policy.
Answer: B
Rationale: Devaluation makes a country's exports cheaper and imports more expensive. Trading
partners suffer reduced export demand, which often leads to trade wars and protectionist