Exam 16: Macroeconomics: The Birds Eye View of the Economy
Exam 1: Thinking Like an Economist142 Questions
Exam 2: Comparative Advantage163 Questions
Exam 3: Supply and Demand181 Questions
Exam 4: Elasticity154 Questions
Exam 5: Demand144 Questions
Exam 6: Perfectly Competitive Supply159 Questions
Exam 7: Efficiency, Exchange, and the Invisible Hand in Action159 Questions
Exam 8: Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Monopolistic Competition147 Questions
Exam 9: Games and Strategic Behavior150 Questions
Exam 10: An Introduction to Behavioral Economics111 Questions
Exam 11: Externalities, Property Rights, and the Environment184 Questions
Exam 12: The Economics of Information127 Questions
Exam 13: Labor Markets, Poverty, and Income Distribution138 Questions
Exam 14: Public Goods and Tax Policy142 Questions
Exam 15: International Trade and Trade Policy164 Questions
Exam 16: Macroeconomics: The Birds Eye View of the Economy154 Questions
Exam 17: Measuring Economic Activity: GDP and Unemployment210 Questions
Exam 18: Measuring the Price Level and Inflation160 Questions
Exam 19: Economic Growth, Productivity, and Living Standards158 Questions
Exam 20: The Labor Market: Workers, Wages, and Unemployment121 Questions
Exam 21: Saving and Capital Formation144 Questions
Exam 22: Money Prices and the Federal Reserve107 Questions
Exam 23: Financial Markets and International Capital Flows104 Questions
Exam 24: Short-Term Economic Fluctuations: An Introduction124 Questions
Exam 25: Spending and Output in the Short Run146 Questions
Exam 26: Stabilizing the Economy: The Role of the Fed162 Questions
Exam 27: Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Inflation159 Questions
Exam 28: Exchange Rates and the Open Economy157 Questions
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The process of steady increase in the quantity and quality of goods and services the economy can produce is called:
(Multiple Choice)
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If Country A and Country B have the same total output, then the standard of living in these two countries can be different depending on:
(Multiple Choice)
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If living standards in a country, as measured by output per person, decrease, then total output must have:
(Multiple Choice)
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Macroeconomists would be most likely to study which of the following?
(Multiple Choice)
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The growth of total output in the United States since 1929 has been:
(Multiple Choice)
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________ policy focuses on the nation's money supply, while ________ policy focuses on the government's budget.
(Multiple Choice)
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Macroeconomists are more likely than microeconomists to deal with:
(Multiple Choice)
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The country of Southland produced $2,000 billion of output in one year. The population of Southland was 100 million, of whom 60 million were employed. What was average labor productivity in Southland?
(Multiple Choice)
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In 2016 the United States exported approximately ________ percent of all goods and services produced in the country.
(Multiple Choice)
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The country of Northland produced $1,000 billion of output in one year. The population of Northland was 50 million, of whom 30 million were employed. What was average labor productivity in Northland?
(Multiple Choice)
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All of the following are examples of positive statements EXCEPT:
(Multiple Choice)
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In Econland total output is $6 billion, population equals 250,000 people, and, of these, 200,000 are employed workers. Output per person in Econland equals ________ and average labor productivity equals ________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Government actions designed to affect the performance of the economy as a whole are called ________ policies.
(Multiple Choice)
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If tax revenues equal 20 percent of total output and government expenditures equal 25 percent of total output, then there is a:
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