Navigation » List of Schools » Prince George Community College » Economics » Econ 1030 – Principles of Microeconomics » Summer 2021 » Test 4
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A increase the price level by more than real output.
B reduce real output by more than the price level.
C increase real output by more than the price level.
D reduce the price level by more than real output.
Question #2
A rightward shift of the aggregate demand curve and a rightward shift of the aggregate supply curve.
B rightward shift of the aggregate supply curve along a fixed aggregate demand curve.
C leftward shift of the aggregate demand curve and a leftward shift of the aggregate supply curve.
D rightward shift of the aggregate demand curve along a fixed aggregate supply curve.
Question #3
A leftward shift of the AS curve.
B rightward shift of the AD curve.
C leftward shift of the AD curve.
D rightward shift of the AS curve.
Question #4
A leftward shift of the AS curve along an upsloping AD curve.
B rightward shift of the AD curve along an upsloping AS curve.
C leftward shift of the AS curve along a downsloping AD curve.
D rightward shift of the AD curve along a downsloping AS curve.
Question #5
A slopes downward and to the right.
B is horizontal.
C is vertical.
D slopes upward and to the right.
Question #6
A the amount of capital goods used per worker.
B real output per unit of input
C the changes in real wealth caused by price level changes.
D per-unit production costs.
Question #7
A A reduction in business taxes.
B An increase in the price of imported resources.
C Production bottlenecks occurring when producers near full plant capacity.
D Deregulation of industry.
Question #8
A 85
B 40
C 60
D 75
Question #9
A Increased consumer optimism regarding future economic conditions.
B A reduced amount of excess capacity.
C Increased government spending on military equipment.
D An appreciation of the U.S. dollar.
Question #10
A An increase in personal income tax rates.
B Increased fear that a recession will cause workers to lose their jobs.
C An increase in stock prices that increases consumer wealth.
D A reduction in household borrowing because of tighter lending practices.
Question #11
A An increase in personal income tax rates.
B A change in the price level.
C A decline in the interest rate at each possible price level.
D Depreciation of the international value of the dollar.
Question #12
A explain why the aggregate demand curve is downsloping.
B explain shifts in the aggregate demand curve.
C demonstrate why real output and the price level are inversely related.
D include input prices and resource productivity.
Question #13
A increase the amount of U.S. real output purchased.
B increase U.S. imports and decrease U.S. exports.
C increase both U.S. imports and U.S. exports.
D decrease both U.S. imports and U.S. exports.
Question #14
A a higher price level will increase the real value of many financial assets and therefore increase spending.
B an increase in the price level will increase the demand for money, increase interest rates, and reduce consumption and investment spending.
C a higher price level will decrease the real value of many financial assets and therefore reduce spending.
D a lower price level will decrease the real value of many financial assets and therefore reduce spending.
Question #15
A an increase in the price level will increase the demand for money, reduce interest rates, and decrease consumption and investment spending.
B an increase in the price level will decrease the demand for money, reduce interest rates, and increase consumption and investment spending.
C a decrease in the supply of money will increase interest rates and reduce interest-sensitive consumption and investment spending.
D an increase in the price level will increase the demand for money, increase interest rates, and decrease consumption and investment spending.
Question #16
A downsloping because of the interest-rate, real-balances, and foreign purchases effects.
B vertical under conditions of full employment.
C horizontal when there is considerable unemployment in the economy.
D downsloping because production costs decrease as real output rises.
Question #17
A stimulate real output and employment in the U.S. economy.
B cause inflation in the U.S. economy.
C have no perceptible impact on the U.S. economy.
D depress real output and employment in the U.S. economy.
Question #18
A the multiplier to decrease.
B a country’s net exports to fall.
C a country’s exports and imports to both fall
D a country’s net exports to rise.
Question #19
A investment.
B consumption.
C saving.
D exports.
Question #20
A upward and increase aggregate expenditures.
B upward and decrease aggregate expenditures.
C downward and increase aggregate expenditures.
D downward and decrease aggregate expenditures.
Question #21
A the price level will fall.
B the aggregate level of saving will decline.
C domestic output will increase.
D the business sector will lay off workers.
Question #22
A does not respond to changes in interest rates.
B changes by less in percentage terms than changes in real GDP.
C does not change when real GDP changes.
D automatically changes in response to changes in real GDP.
Question #23
A declined by 21 percent; rose to 27 percent
B declined by 27 percent; rose to 25 percent
C declined by 40 percent; rose to 50 percent
D increased by 21 percent; fell to 2 percent
Question #24
A Government spending policy has no ability to affect the level of output.
B Prices are fixed.
C Prices are fully flexible.
D The economy is at full employment.
Question #25
A Economic expansion of the 1920s
B Spectacular economic growth during World War II.
C Great Depression.
D Bank panic of 1907
Question #26
A purchases of capital from abroad increased, and these were not reflected in investment spending figures for that period.
B the investment demand curve shifted inward.
C firms were optimistic about future sales.
D the investment demand curve was positively sloped during this period.
Question #27
A level of business inventories.
B change in GDP resulting from a change in spending.
C full-employment unemployment rate
D change in the rate of inflation from a change in the interest rate.
Question #28
A a change in consumption can cause a larger increase in investment.
B consumption is typically several times as large as saving.
C a decline in the MPC can cause GDP to rise by several times that amount.
D an increase in investment can cause GDP to change by a larger amount.
Question #29
A innovation occurs at an irregular pace.
B capital goods are durable, expected profits are highly variable, and innovation occurs at an irregular pace.
C expected profits are highly variable.
D capital goods are durable.
Question #30
A decrease in nominal wages.
B high nominal interest rate.
C low rate of growth of nominal GDP.
D low nominal interest rate.
Question #31
A 12 percent.
B 6 percent.
C 24 percent.
D 18 percent.
Question #32
A usually higher than the nominal interest rate.
B the percentage increase in purchasing power that the lender receives on a loan.
C also called the after-tax interest rate.
D the percentage increase in money that the lender receives on a loan.
Question #33
A shift the investment-demand curve to the right.
B decrease the market price of real capital goods.
C shift the investment-demand curve to the left.
D have no effect on the location of the investment-demand curve.
Question #34
A interest rate and the expected price level.
B level of saving and the real interest rate.
C expected rate of return on capital goods and the real interest rate.
D marginal propensity to consume and the real interest rate.
Question #35
A shift the investment schedule downward.
B shift the investment demand curve to the right.
C shift the investment demand curve to the left.
D increase the amount of investment spending.
Question #36
A 20 percent.
B 2 percent.
C 80 percent.
D 8 percent.
Question #37
A the level of investment spending and real GDP..
B the real interest rate and the level of investment spending..
C the price level and the level of investment spending..
D the nominal interest rate and the level of investment spending..
Question #38
A a movement down along a stable consumption function.
B an upward shift of the consumption schedule.
C a downshift of the saving schedule.
D an upward shift of the saving schedule.
Question #39
A The expectation of future shortages of essential consumer goods.
B The expectation of a future decline in the consumer price index.
C A currently low level of household debt.
D A currently small stock of durable goods in the possession of consumers.
Question #40
A wealth effect.
B interest-rate effect.
C multiplier effect.
D Keynes effect.
Question #41
A mone of these
B 1
C 10
D 9
Question #42
A 1
B 1.1
C -0.9
D 0.1
Question #43
A saving is zero.
B the MPC equals 1.
C saving equals income.
D the APC is zero.
Question #44
A consumption exceeds income.
B income exceeds consumption.
C saving exceeds consumption.
D saving exceeds income.
Question #45
A An increase in consumer indebtedness.
B A decrease in disposable income.
C A decrease in stock prices.
D An increase in stock prices.
Question #46
A 1 divided by the slope of the savings schedule or line.
B 1 divided by the slope of the consumption schedule or line.
C the slope of the savings schedule or line.
D the slope of the consumption schedule or line.
Question #47
A change in income/change in consumption.
B consumption/income.
C income/consumption.
D change in consumption/change in income.
Question #48
A that the MPC increases in proportion to GDP.
B the amounts households intend to consume at various possible levels of aggregate income.
C that households consume more when interest rates are low.
D that consumption depends primarily on the level of business investment.
Question #49
A all the points where the MPC is constant.
B all the points at which consumption and income are equal.
C all the points at which saving and income are equal.
D the amounts households will plan to save at each possible level of income.
Question #50
A consume is three-fifths.
B consume is two-fifths.
C save is three-fifths.
D consume is one-half.
Question #51
A level of income.
B interest rate.
C level of bank credit.
D price level.