Exam 2: Confronting Scarcity: Choices in Production
Exam 1: Economics: The Study of Choice145 Questions
Exam 2: Confronting Scarcity: Choices in Production198 Questions
Exam 3: Demand and Supply251 Questions
Exam 4: Applications of Supply and Demand113 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity: a Measure of Response255 Questions
Exam 6: Markets, Maximizers, and Efficiency239 Questions
Exam 7: The Analysis of Consumer Choice244 Questions
Exam 8: Production and Cost227 Questions
Exam 9: Competitive Markets for Goods and Services265 Questions
Exam 10: Monopoly234 Questions
Exam 11: The World of Imperfect Competition237 Questions
Exam 12: Wages and Employment in Perfect Competition189 Questions
Exam 13: Interest Rates and the Markets for Capital and Natural Resources170 Questions
Exam 14: Imperfectly Competitive Markets for Factors of Production183 Questions
Exam 15: Public Finance and Public Choice188 Questions
Exam 16: Antitrust Policy and Business Regulation137 Questions
Exam 17: International Trade186 Questions
Exam 18: The Economics of the Environment148 Questions
Exam 19: Inequality, Poverty, and Discrimination140 Questions
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A production possibilities curve measures cost in terms of dollars spent, not in terms of sacrificed alternatives.
(True/False)
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There is no role for government in a market capitalist economy.
(True/False)
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A production possibilities curve measures opportunity cost in dollar terms.
(True/False)
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The slope of a production possibilities curve is based on opportunity cost.
(True/False)
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One of the two criteria for a resource to be considered capital is that it must:
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the following to answer question(s):
Exhibit: Production Possibilities Curve 2
-(Exhibit: Production Possibilities Curve 2) The point representing a combination of consumer goods and capital goods that can be attained only by economic growth is point:

(Multiple Choice)
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If an economy is producing a level of output that is on its production possibilities curve, the economy
(Multiple Choice)
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Improvements in technology will shift the production possibilities curve outward.
(True/False)
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If an economy has to sacrifice only one unit of good X for each unit of good Y produced throughout the relevant range, then its production possibilities curve has a(n):
(Multiple Choice)
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If the U.S. economy adds to the capital stock, this may require a temporary decrease in the amount of present consumption.
(True/False)
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A student receives a bachelor's degree in economics and then achieves gainful employment as an economic analyst with a Fortune 500 company. This new worker is likely to enhance the economy's productivity through:
(Multiple Choice)
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If Farmer Sam MacDonald can produce 200 pounds of cabbages and 0 pounds of potatoes or 0 pounds of cabbages and 100 pounds of potatoes and faces a linear production possibilities curve for his farm, the opportunity cost of producing an additional pound of potatoes is _____ _ pound(s) of cabbage.
(Multiple Choice)
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The three broad types of resources used to produce goods and services are also known as:
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the following to answer question(s):
Exhibit: Strawberries and Submarines
-(Exhibit: Strawberries and Submarines) Suppose the economy is now operating at point A. The first submarine, which is achieved at point B, would have an opportunity cost of _______ million tons of strawberries.

(Multiple Choice)
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