Exam 14: Dealing With Financial Crises: Does the World Need a New International Financial Architecture
Exam 1: Understanding the Global Economy24 Questions
Exam 2: Comparative Advantage: How Nations Can Gain From International Trade24 Questions
Exam 3: Sources of Comparative Advantage23 Questions
Exam 4: Regulating International Trade: Trade Policies and Their Effects22 Questions
Exam 5: Regionalism and Multilateralism19 Questions
Exam 6: Balance of Payments and Foreign Exchange Markets23 Questions
Exam 7: Exchange Rate Systems: Past to Present24 Questions
Exam 8: The Power of Arbitrage: Purchasing Power and Interest Rate Parities21 Questions
Exam 9: Global Money and Banking: Where Central Banks Fit Into the World Economy21 Questions
Exam 10: Contemporary Global Economic Issues and Policies22 Questions
Exam 11: Economic Development24 Questions
Exam 12: Industrial Structure and Trade in the Global Economy: Businesses Without Borders24 Questions
Exam 13: The Public Sector in the Global Economy25 Questions
Exam 14: Dealing With Financial Crises: Does the World Need a New International Financial Architecture24 Questions
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Multinational organizations such as the IMF have "early warning systems" that enable them to anticipate financial crises.
Free
(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
____________________ refers to a situation in which the financial sector is unable to allocate funds to the most productive projects.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
Because of the financial crises that began in the mid-1990s, developing and emerging economies are unable to attract private capital flows.
Free
(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
_________________ is the potential for those who want funds for unworthy projects to be the most likely to want to borrow.
(Multiple Choice)
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International FDI flows go mainly from developed nations to developed nations, not from developed nations to developing and emerging nations.
(True/False)
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Allowing relatively open issuance and competition in stock and bond markets is called:
(Multiple Choice)
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Herding behavior is when domestic institutions locate abroad, or conduct certain types of operations abroad, in order to avoid domestic regulation.
(True/False)
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Most economists oppose capital controls on the inflows of foreign capital.
(True/False)
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If a government requires domestic banks to lend to certain industries, creating a situation in which the firms know they will receive funding no matter how they use the funds, then the government has created a problem called:
(Multiple Choice)
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Member countries- voting share in the International Monetary Fund is determined by how much money they provide through their quota subscription.
(True/False)
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Even when economic fundamentals are consistent with the official exchange rate regime, a widespread perception that policymakers face internal costs that are too high to maintain the regime can lead to a crisis.
(True/False)
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The imposition of lending conditions by the IMF before a loan is granted is called:
(Multiple Choice)
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Over the past 30 years, nearly every country that liberalized capital flows experienced a financial crisis.
(True/False)
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International FDI flows consist mainly of the combining of firms in different nations.
(True/False)
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New investments into emerging economies are the driving force behind increases and declines in foreign direct investment.
(True/False)
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Ex post conditionality is the imposition of IMF lending conditions after a loan has already been granted.
(True/False)
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_______________ is the strengthening and growth of a nation-s financial sector institutions, payments systems, and regulatory agencies.
(Multiple Choice)
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The composite currency of the International Monetary Fund is called:
(Multiple Choice)
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