Exam 38: Macro Policy in Developing Countries
Exam 1: Economics and Economic Reasoning112 Questions
Exam 2: The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization109 Questions
Exam 3: Economic Institutions142 Questions
Exam 4: Supply and Demand125 Questions
Exam 5: Using Supply and Demand101 Questions
Exam 9: Comparative Advantage, Exchange Rates, and Globalization107 Questions
Exam 10: International Trade Policy79 Questions
Exam 24: Economic Growth, Business Cycles, and Unemployment96 Questions
Exam 25: Measuring and Describing the Aggregate Economy176 Questions
Exam 26: The Keynesian Short-Run Policy Model: Demand-Side Policies163 Questions
Exam 27: The Classical Long-Run Policy Model: Growth and Supply-Side Policies110 Questions
Exam 28: The Financial Sector and the Economy174 Questions
Exam 29: Monetary Policy188 Questions
Exam 30: Financial Crises, Panics, and Unconventional Monetary Policy95 Questions
Exam 31: Deficits and Debt: the Austerity Debate111 Questions
Exam 32: The Fiscal Policy Dilemma100 Questions
Exam 33: Jobs and Unemployment53 Questions
Exam 34: Inflation, Deflation, and Macro Policy126 Questions
Exam 35: International Financial Policy164 Questions
Exam 36: Macro Policy in a Global Setting110 Questions
Exam 37: Structural Stagnation and Globalization97 Questions
Exam 38: Macro Policy in Developing Countries120 Questions
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Inadequate healthcare and disease treatment impede development for all of the following reasons except:
(Multiple Choice)
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If a currency is convertible for the current account, then it is fully convertible.
(True/False)
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If political instability and corruption could be eliminated, economic growth would increase in most developing countries.
(True/False)
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In the early 1990s, Serbia, a developing country, experienced hyperinflation because its central bank increased the money supply too rapidly.Serbia's central bank most likely adopted this monetary policy because:
(Multiple Choice)
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According to Hernando De Soto, a Peruvian economist, it takes 13 to 25 years and 168 steps in order to have a house registered in the Philippines.In Haiti, it takes around 12 years and 111 visits to officials to formalize a business.The costs in terms of time and financial resources to have the property right over a home or a business have promoted the development of informal sectors or "extra-legal" sectors in various developing countries.The existence of a large informal sector in numerous developing countries is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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The expectation of greater inflation resulting from the government's creation of money to finance budget deficits often results in a:
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Political instability is an impediment to development mainly because it:
(Multiple Choice)
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At the end of the Korean War, South Korea was one of the poorest countries in the world.Fifty years later, it is now considered a developed country.Which of the following phenomena is most likely to explain South Korea's development over the last 50 years?
(Multiple Choice)
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On January 1, 2001, El Salvador "dollarized" its economy.The U.S.dollar circulated throughout the country along with the Salvadoran colon for the first year.By the end of 2002 the official currency circulating in this economy was the U.S.dollar.El Salvador abandoned its own currency and adopted the currency of the United States because:
(Multiple Choice)
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Developing countries, like many developed countries, have a dual economy.
(True/False)
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Developing countries tend to focus more on the goal of economic growth than developed countries.
(True/False)
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Educational policy in most developing countries focuses too much on primary and secondary education and not enough on higher education.
(True/False)
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