When goods in a domestic market are sold at a high price and in the foreign market at a low price, it is a situation of

Dumping
Perfect competition
Oligopoly
Duopoly

The correct answer is A. Dumping.

Dumping is the practice of selling goods in a foreign market at a price below their cost of production. This can be done to gain market share, drive competitors out of business, or to retaliate against trade barriers.

Perfect competition is a market structure in which there are many buyers and sellers of a homogeneous product, and no one buyer or seller has a significant amount of market power. In a perfectly competitive market, prices are determined by the forces of supply and demand, and firms earn zero economic profit in the long run.

Oligopoly is a market structure in which there are a small number of large firms that dominate the market. In an oligopolistic market, firms have a significant amount of market power, and they can influence prices.

Duopoly is a market structure in which there are only two firms that dominate the market. In a duopolistic market, firms have a great deal of market power, and they can influence prices significantly.

In the case of dumping, the firm is selling goods in a foreign market at a price below their cost of production. This is not a situation of perfect competition, oligopoly, or duopoly, because in these market structures, firms would not be able to sell goods at a price below their cost of production.