Exam 2: The Key Principles of Economics
Exam 1: Introduction: What Is Economics?118 Questions
Exam 2: The Key Principles of Economics144 Questions
Exam 3: Exchange and Markets111 Questions
Exam 4: Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium172 Questions
Exam 5: Measuring a Nation's Production and Income152 Questions
Exam 6:Unemployment and Inflation155 Questions
Exam 7:The Economy at Full Employment148 Questions
Exam 8: Why Do Economies Grow?167 Questions
Exam 9: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply160 Questions
Exam 10: Fiscal Policy133 Questions
Exam 11: The Income-Expenditure Model193 Questions
Exam 12: Investment and Financial Markets150 Questions
Exam 13: Money and the Banking System170 Questions
Exam 14: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy149 Questions
Exam 15: Modern Macroeconomics: From the Short Run to the Long Run152 Questions
Exam 16: The Dynamics of Inflation and Unemployment149 Questions
Exam 17: Macroeconomic Policy Debates147 Questions
Exam 18: International Trade and Public Policy155 Questions
Exam 19: The World of International Finance150 Questions
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If real salaries increase but nominal salaries do not, this means that
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Correct Answer:
D
What is an opportunity cost?
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An opportunity cost is what you sacrifice to get something.
If an economy is fully utilizing its resources, it can produce more of one product only if it
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Correct Answer:
B
Suppose that your tuition to attend college is $14,000 per year and you spend $5,000 per year on room and board. If you were working full time, you could earn $26,000 per year. What is your opportunity cost of attending college?
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Different people eat different amounts of food when they go to buffet restaurants, even though they all pay the same price. Explain how this relates to the marginal principle.
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The marginal principle implies that an individual should produce or consume where
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Recall the Application about running a lawn-cutting business using solar-powered equipment to answer the following question(s).
-The current income you would sacrifice to start your own lawn-cutting business is part of the
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The additional cost resulting from a small increase in some activity is called the
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Figure 2.1
-Refer to Figure 2.1. What is the opportunity cost of increasing production of manufactured products from 500 tons to 600 tons per year?

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Table 2.5
-Comparing the minimum wages between 1974 and 2011 addresses the economic concept of

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Table 2.2
-Krystal runs a nail salon and needs to decide how many hours to stay open. Table 2.2 illustrates her marginal costs of staying open for each additional hour. Suppose that we observe Krystal staying open 5 hours and her marginal benefit of staying open per hour is $36. If she is following the marginal principle, Krystal should

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Table 2.2
-Krystal runs a nail salon and needs to decide how many hours to stay open. Table 2.2 illustrates her marginal costs of staying open for each additional hour. Suppose that Krystal's marginal benefit of staying open per hour is $30. If she is following the marginal principle, how many hours should Krystal stay open?

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When Lonnie produces 1 pair of cowboy boots his costs total $300. When he produces 2 pairs of cowboy boots his total costs are $500. This means that Lonnie's marginal cost of producing the second pair of cowboy boots is $200.
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Suppose your bank pays you 5 percent interest per year on your savings account. If prices increase by 5 percent per year over that time, approximately how much real value do you gain by keeping $100 in the bank for a year?
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Table 2.4
-Refer to Table 2.4. The principle of diminishing returns sets in with the addition of the ________ tank of fertilizer.

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Table 2.4
-Refer to Table 2.4. Increasing the tanks of fertilizer from 3 to 4 will increase the truckloads of potatoes by

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Tradeoffs involve an exchange of one thing for another because resources are limited and can be used in different ways.
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