Answer: True
Explanation: this is what I found
International trade is the cross-border exchange of commodities and services between nations. A country sells those commodities to the rest of the world in which it incurs the lowest cost and thereby enjoys a comparative advantage. On the other hand, it purchases those goods from the rest of the world that are produced at a relatively higher cost in the domestic country. The sale of goods to foreign countries is called exports while the purchase of cheaper foreign goods is called imports.
When a country enters international trade, it increases production in the export sector and as such, workers in the export sector are in high demand. This raises the wages of the workers who are employed in the export sector of the country and therefore benefits them. On the other hand, the production of those goods which are imported from the rest of the world gets stopped and the workers employed there become unemployed. This adversely affects the workers employed in the production of goods imported from abroad. However, the imports of cheaper products from the rest of the world benefit domestic consumers since they consume a greater variety of goods at lower than domestic prices. As such, even though the country can derive benefits from international trade, some individuals (in the form of unemployed workers) necessarily become worse off.