Exam 29: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy
Exam 1: Economics: Foundations and Models444 Questions
Exam 2: Trade-Offs, Comparative Advantage, and the Market System498 Questions
Exam 3: Where Prices Come From: the Interaction of Demand and Supply475 Questions
Exam 4: Economic Efficiency, Government Price Setting, and Taxes419 Questions
Exam 5: Externalities, Environmental Policy, and Public Goods266 Questions
Exam 6: Elasticity: the Responsiveness of Demand and Supply295 Questions
Exam 7: The Economics of Health Care334 Questions
Exam 8: Firms, the Stock Market, and Corporate Governance278 Questions
Exam 9: Comparative Advantage and the Gains From International Trade379 Questions
Exam 10: Consumer Choice and Behavioral Economics302 Questions
Exam 11: Technology, Production, and Costs330 Questions
Exam 12: Firms in Perfectly Competitive Markets298 Questions
Exam 13: Monopolistic Competition: the Competitive Model in a More Realistic Setting276 Questions
Exam 14: Oligopoly: Firms in Less Competitive Markets262 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly and Antitrust Policy271 Questions
Exam 16: Pricing Strategy263 Questions
Exam 17: The Markets for Labor and Other Factors of Production286 Questions
Exam 18: Public Choice, Taxes, and the Distribution of Income258 Questions
Exam 19: GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income266 Questions
Exam 20: Unemployment and Inflation292 Questions
Exam 21: Economic Growth, the Financial System, and Business Cycles257 Questions
Exam 22: Long-Run Economic Growth: Sources and Policies268 Questions
Exam 23: Aggregate Expenditure and Output in the Short Run306 Questions
Exam 24: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis284 Questions
Exam 25: Money, Banks, and the Federal Reserve System280 Questions
Exam 26: Monetary Policy277 Questions
Exam 27: Fiscal Policy303 Questions
Exam 28: Inflation, Unemployment, and Federal Reserve Policy257 Questions
Exam 29: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy278 Questions
Exam 30: The International Financial System262 Questions
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Use the saving and investment equation to explain why the United States experienced large current account deficits in the late 1990s.
(Essay)
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If the United States has a net export surplus, which of the following must be true?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following would cause the dollar to depreciate?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is true about the occurrence of the twin deficits?
(Multiple Choice)
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How might a U.S. federal budget surplus affect the balance of trade? (Assume exchange rates are stated in terms of foreign currency per U.S. dollar.)
(Multiple Choice)
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What effect does a depreciation of the dollar have on real GDP in the United States in the short run?
(Multiple Choice)
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How will contractionary monetary policy in Japan affect the demand and supply of the yen in the foreign exchange market?
(Multiple Choice)
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If the exchange rate changes from $1.45 = 1 euro to $1.37 = 1 euro, then
(Multiple Choice)
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Net foreign investment minus net foreign portfolio investment is equal to
(Multiple Choice)
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What impact might an increase in the budget deficit have on interest rates and exchange rates?
(Multiple Choice)
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If American demand for purchases of British goods has decreased, how would you expect the equilibrium exchange rate in the market for dollars to respond? Support your answer graphically.
(Essay)
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An increase in United States net foreign direct investment would occur if
(Multiple Choice)
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If national saving increases, ________. (Assume that the capital account is zero and net transfers are zero.)
(Multiple Choice)
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The saving and investment equation holds only when the federal budget is balanced.
(True/False)
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Following a tax cut by government, domestic investment will ________ and net exports will ________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following would increase the balance on the current account?
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose the U.S. Congress is successful in enacting tariffs large enough to eliminate the current account deficit. What would happen to the level of domestic investment?
(Multiple Choice)
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