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1. award: 10.00 points Greater regulation to correct the imbalances in the economy, as well government intervention to maintain full employment, was associated primarily with the work of → John Maynard Keynes. Adam Smith. Karl Marx. Ronald Reagan. This forms the basis of the Keynesian school of economics. Multiple Choice 2. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0104 How market and government approaches to economic problems differ. award: 10.00 points Which of the following is true when an economy is producing efficiently? → The economy is producing on the production possibilities curve. The economy is producing outside the production possibilities curve. The economy is getting the fewest goods and services from the available resources. Everyone in the economy is happy. Being inside the production possibilities curve is inefficient, being on it is efficient, and being outside the curve is impossible, ceteris paribus. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0102 What the productionpossibilities curve represents. 3. award: 10.00 points Capital, as economists use the term, refers to The money needed to start a new business. The costs of operating a business. Shares of stock issued by businesses. → Final goods that are used to produce other goods and services. Physical capital is used to produce other goods and services, including other capital goods. Hammers produce houses. Forklifts move forklift parts around a forklift factory. Money is financial capital, which is a throughput. It is used to acquire a hammer or physical capital. Multiple Choice 4. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0101 How scarcity creates opportunity costs. award: 10.00 points Which of the following can be used to correct market failure? The market mechanism. → Laws and regulations. Laissez faire price policies. Government failure. Laws and regulations can align the interests of individuals with society at large. Multiple Choice 5. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0104 How market and government approaches to economic problems differ. award: 10.00 points The slope of a curve at any point is given by this formula: → The change in y coordinates between two points divided by the change in their x coordinates. The change in x coordinates between two points divided by the change in their y coordinates. The percentage change in y coordinates between two points divided by the percentage change in their x coordinates. The percentage change in x coordinates between two points divided by the percentage change in their y coordinates. This is the equivalent of rise over run, where the change in y is the rise and the change in x is the run. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0101 How scarcity creates opportunity costs. 6. award: 10.00 points Which of the following will increase the level of human capital in an economy? An increase in land mass. → An increase in literacy rates. An increase in factory capacity. A decrease in the population. Education, training, and skills count as human capital. Multiple Choice 7. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0203 How the U.S. is able to produce so much output. award: 10.00 points How will a decrease in technology from a natural disaster such as a hurricane, ceteris paribus, affect an economy's production possibilities curve? → Shift the curve inward. Result in a movement from inside the curve to a point on the curve. Shift the curve outward. Result in a movement along the curve. Ceteris paribus, if there is a power outage or infrastructure decay, the production possibilities curve will shift inward. Multiple Choice 8. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0203 How the U.S. is able to produce so much output. award: 10.00 points A laissez faire economy Relies predominantly on government policy rather than free market action. → Relies predominantly on free market action rather than government policy. Relies equally on government policy and free market action. None of the choices are correct. A laissez faire economy has a minimum of government influence. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0204 How incomes are distributed in the United States and elsewhere. 9. award: 10.00 points Which of the following will contribute to accelerated growth for the U.S. economy? A decrease in factor mobility. A decrease in the number of governmentsponsored student loans. → Increased use of outsourcing for inputs and increased use of comparative advantage for trade in final goods and services. A decrease in tax credits for research and development. Outsourcing of inputs, as well as comparative advantage in selection of productive output, make a country more efficient in production and able to enjoy a higher standard of living. Multiple Choice 10. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0203 How the U.S. is able to produce so much output. award: 10.00 points A capitalintensive production process is one that Has a high ratio of labor to capital. → Has a high ratio of capital to labor. Is used only in the United States. All of the choices are correct. Ceteris paribus, the greater the amount of physical capital employed in the production process, the greater the productivity of the workers up to the point of diminishing returns. Multiple Choice 11. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0203 How the U.S. is able to produce so much output. award: 10.00 points An example of human capital would be A computer. → Carpentry skills. A carpenter's saw. All of the choices are correct. Human capital represents the quality of labor, including skills and abilities. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0203 How the U.S. is able to produce so much output. 12. award: 10.00 points If output growth exceeds population growth for a country, → Average living standards will increase. GDP must have fallen at a very rapid rate. Per capita GDP will decrease. This country must have overcome the problem of scarcity. Growth in output is important for economic growth. Multiple Choice 13. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0201 The relative size of the U.S. economy. award: 10.00 points Those who are interested in assessing the relative standard of living of different countries over a given time period are most likely to look at GDP. Percentage change in GDP. Population. → Per capita GDP. Comparing living standards between countries allows us to see which countries are more or less prosperous per person. Multiple Choice 14. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0201 The relative size of the U.S. economy. award: 10.00 points Individual consumers supply ____ and purchase ____. → factors of production; final goods and services intermediate goods; final goods and services final goods and services; factors of production national goods and services; factors of production Individual consumers supply factors of production such as their own labor and purchase final goods and services such as groceries. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0303 How market prices and quantities are established. 15. award: 10.00 points If a price is below equilibrium, A shortage will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to decrease. → A shortage will cause the price to rise and the quantity supplied to increase. A surplus will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to decrease. A surplus will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to increase. A price below equilibrium causes a shortage. This puts upward pressure on both price and quantity. Multiple Choice 16. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0304 What causes market prices to change. award: 10.00 points According to the law of demand, a demand curve → Has a negative slope. Is a horizontal or flat line. Has a positive slope. Exceeds the economy's ability to produce. Because price and quantity demanded are inversely related, the demand curve is downwardsloping (has a negative slope). Multiple Choice 17. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0301 The nature and determinants of market demand. award: 10.00 points Ceteris paribus, a consumer that purchases a sports car must consider the price of gasoline because these goods are Substitutes in production. Complements in production; byproducts. Substitutes in consumption. → Complements in consumption. If you buy a car, in order to drive it you must buy gas, which is a complement in consumption. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0301 The nature and determinants of market demand. 18. award: 10.00 points To calculate market supply, we → Add the quantities supplied for each individual supply schedule horizontally. Add the quantities supplied for each individual supply schedule vertically. Find the average quantity supplied at each price. Find the difference between the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded at each price. Market supply represents the combined supply quantities of all market participants. Multiple Choice 19. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0302 The nature and determinants of market supply. award: 10.00 points Which of the following is not held constant along a given supply curve for a good? The cost of factors of production. → Price. Technology. Taxes. If the price of a product is the only variable changing, then we can track changes in quantity supplied along the supply curve. Multiple Choice 20. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0302 The nature and determinants of market supply. award: 10.00 points Which of the following is a market transaction? A stock increases in value over the 30 years that it is owned. → A college student purchases a laptop computer. Weather destroys a farmer's crops, leaving the farmer unable to buy groceries. A radio station changes its programming from classical to rock. A market transaction involves an exchange of either barter or currency for goods or resources. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0303 How market prices and quantities are established. 21. award: 10.00 points The federal government placed an upper limit on human organ prices, which is called a Price floor. → Price ceiling. Price support. None of the choices are correct. A price ceiling is an upper limit imposed on the price of a good. Multiple Choice 22. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0305 How government price controls affect market outcomes. award: 10.00 points In a market economy, which of the following is an incentive for producers to produce efficiently? Government laws and regulations. → Profits. The production possibilities curve. The public's welfare. Profitmotivated producers will strive to produce goods and services in the most efficient way in order to maximize profits. Multiple Choice 23. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0303 How market prices and quantities are established. award: 10.00 points If a price is above equilibrium, A shortage will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to decrease. A shortage will cause the price to rise and the quantity supplied to increase. → A surplus will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to decrease. A surplus will cause the price to fall and the quantity supplied to increase. A price above equilibrium causes a surplus. This puts downward pressure on both price and quantity. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0304 What causes market prices to change. 24. award: 10.00 points A factor market is any place or process where Finished goods are bought and sold. → Land, labor, or capital is bought and sold. Finished services are bought and sold. None of the choices are correct. A factor market is where the factors of production (land, labor, or capital) are bought and sold. Multiple Choice 25. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0303 How market prices and quantities are established. award: 10.00 points If the quantity demanded of a good is greater than the quantity supplied of the good at the current price, then → Price will increase until it reaches the equilibrium price. The demand curve will shift to the left to create equilibrium. The supply curve will shift to the right to create equilibrium. There is a surplus of the good. If a shortage exists, buyers will compete for goods by offering to pay higher prices. Multiple Choice 26. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0304 What causes market prices to change. award: 10.00 points Which of the following can change without shifting either demand or supply, ceteris paribus? → The price of the good itself. The prices of other goods. Incomes. Expectations. A change in the price of a good causes a movement along the demand and the supply curves. It will not cause the demand or supply to shift. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0302 The nature and determinants of market supply. 27. award: 10.00 points Which of the following is a determinant of market supply? Consumer expectations. Consumers' income. Consumers' desire for the good. → Available technology. The determinants of market supply include technology, factor costs, taxes and subsidies, producer expectations, prices of related goods, and number of sellers. Multiple Choice 28. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0302 The nature and determinants of market supply. award: 10.00 points Which panel of Figure 3.3 represents the changes in the market for beef when the price of corn (cattle feed) rises and the people become more fearful of mad cow disease? Figure 3.3 Shifts of Supply and Demand A. B. C. → D. An increase in costs causes supply to decrease, and the fear of disease will cause the demand to decrease. Multiple Choice 29. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0304 What causes market prices to change. award: 10.00 points Market failure leads to An equitable distribution of goods and services. → Public goods being underproduced. The absence of externalities. Production possibilities. Consumers will wait for someone else to buy a public good; thus too few will be demanded. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0401 The nature and causes of market failure. 30. award: 10.00 points The most desirable combination of output attainable with existing resources, technology, and social values is known as the → Optimal mix of output. Efficient mix of output. Optimal mix of production. Efficient choice of production. The optimal mix of output maximizes collective social utility and therefore is the most desirable. Multiple Choice 31. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0401 The nature and causes of market failure. award: 10.00 points Market failure implies that the market mechanism Leads the economy to a point outside the production possibilities curve. → Leads the economy to the wrong mix of output. Causes shortages or surpluses in the market. Causes government failure. Market failure is an imperfection in the market mechanism that prevents optimal outcomes. Multiple Choice 32. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0401 The nature and causes of market failure. award: 10.00 points A merit good is Income payments for which no goods or services are exchanged. A good society holds to a higher standard in tax regulations. → A good or service that society believes everyone is entitled to a minimal quantity of. A product that serves as an incentive to produce more output. A merit good is a good or service that society deems everyone is entitled to some minimal quantity of, such as food. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0401 The nature and causes of market failure. 33. award: 10.00 points Using Figure 4.1, assume that point C represents the best possible mix or optimal level of output for this society. If the market fails and produces a suboptimal mix of output, then it could produce at → Point A, B, D, or E. Point D or F. Point A, B, D, or F. Point E or F. Market failure occurs if the market produces any possible output other than the optimal mix. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0401 The nature and causes of market failure. 34. award: 10.00 points Suppose that if your income is $20,000, your tax is $4,000, but if your income is $40,000, your tax is $8,000. Such a tax is Regressive. Progressive. → Proportional. A merit tax. At income of $20,000, 20% (4,000/20,000) is paid in taxes, and at income of $40,000, 20% (8,000/40,000) is paid in taxes. Because the percentage stays the same when income changes, this is a proportional tax. Multiple Choice 35. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0403 Which taxes finance state; local; and federal governments. award: 10.00 points Net domestic product (NDP) is determined by → Subtracting depreciation from GDP. Adding consumption, investment, government expenditures, and net exports. Adding appreciation to GDP. Subtracting consumption from GDP. NDP indicates how much the economy is producing after adjusting for all capital that is wearing out. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income. 36. award: 10.00 points According to the hypothetical economy in Figure 5.2, real GDP differs from nominal GDP from 1980 to 2000 because Price level increases caused real GDP to increase. Population growth exceeded output growth. Inflation caused the dollar value of output to decrease. → Inflation caused the dollar value of output to increase. When nominal GDP is rising faster than real GDP, the price level must be increasing. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0502 The difference between real and nominal GDP. 37. award: 10.00 points On the basis of Table 5.2, depreciation is $425 billion. $125 billion. $125 billion. → $190 billion. Gross investment minus net investment equals depreciation ($700 $510 = $190). Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income. 38. award: 10.00 points A nation's production possibilities curve should, ceteris paribus, shift Inward if gross investment exceeds depreciation. Inward if net investment is zero. → Outward if net investment is positive. Outward if gross investment is positive. As long as our gross investment is more than enough to replace wornout capital and build new capital, our production possibilities will increase. Multiple Choice 39. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income. award: 10.00 points The value of final output produced in a given period, measured in current prices, is Real GDP. → Nominal GDP. NDP. GNP. Nominal GDP tracks the value of production in a given year. Multiple Choice 40. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0502 The difference between real and nominal GDP. award: 10.00 points Which of the following is not a final good or service? A refrigerator purchased by a home owner. → Paper purchased by a textbook company. A computer purchased by a local middle school. A flu shot purchased by a teacher. The paper purchased by the textbook company is an intermediate good used in producing the textbook. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0501 What GDP measuresand what it doesn t. 41. award: 10.00 points An economy's production possibilities are most likely to expand if Net investment is negative. Net investment is zero. → Gross investment is greater than depreciation. Depreciation is greater than gross investment. Depreciation represents capital that is worn out; if it is replaced through investment, and there is additional investment above that, then our production possibilities will increase. Multiple Choice 42. Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income. award: 10.00 points A nation's GDP is → C + I + G + (X M). The sum of value added at some stages of the production process. The total market value of all intermediate goods and services. The total amount of money in circulation. GDP is a measure of the total production of a nation and an important barometer of the economy's health. Multiple Choice 43. Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0501 What GDP measuresand what it doesn t. award: 10.00 points Real GDP is the Value of output produced, including the nonmarket activities that are not counted in nominal GDP. → Value of final output produced in a given period measured in constant prices. Value of final output produced in a given period measured in current prices. Intangible quality of goods and services produced in the economy. Real GDP allows us to express production while controlling for changes to the price level. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0502 The difference between real and nominal GDP. 44. award: 10.00 points On the basis of Table 5.2, GDP is $2,090 billion. → $4,210 billion. $4,400 billion. $4,020 billion. GDP is the sum of consumption, investment, government expenditures, and net exports, which is $2,850 + $700 + $810 + ($300 $450) = $4,210. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 2 Medium Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income. 45. award: 10.00 points The measure of what households receive after personal income tax is deducted is Gross domestic product. Personal income. National income. → Disposable income. Disposable income is equal to personal income less taxes paid. Multiple Choice Difficulty: 1 Easy Learning Objective: 0504 The major submeasures of output and income.