Exam 18: Public Choice, Taxes, and the Distribution of Income
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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Figure 18-3
-Refer to Figure 18-3. The figure above shows a demand curve and two supply curves, one more elastic than the other. Use Figure 18-3 to answer the following questions.
a. Suppose the government imposes an excise tax of $1.00 on every unit sold. Use the graph to illustrate the impact of this tax.
b. If the government imposes an excise tax of $1.00 on every unit sold, will the consumer pay more of the tax if the supply curve is S1 or S2? Refer to the graphs in your answer.
c. If an excise tax of $1.00 on every unit sold is imposed, will the revenue collected by the government be greater if the supply curve is S1 or S2?
d. If the government imposes an excise tax of $1.00 on every unit sold, will the deadweight loss be greater if the supply curve is S1 or S2?

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If the Gini coefficient for Cartland is 1, it means that income distribution is perfectly equal in this society.
(True/False)
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If voters lack an economic incentive to become informed about pending legislation, then their preferences become a constraint on legislators voting for rent-seeking legislation.
(True/False)
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Explain why it is more difficult to determine the incidence of the corporate income tax than it is to determine the incidence of the tax on gasoline.
(Essay)
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Horizontal equity is achieved when taxes are collected from those who benefit from the government expenditure of the tax revenue.
(True/False)
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What is the difference between the poverty line and the poverty rate?
(Essay)
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A regressive tax is a tax for which people with lower incomes
(Multiple Choice)
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Table 18-9
Table 18-9 shows the income tax brackets and tax rates for single taxpayers in Monrovia.
-Refer to Table 18-9. Sylvia is a single taxpayer with an income of $70,000. What is her marginal tax rate and what is her average tax rate?

(Multiple Choice)
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The horizontal-equity principle of taxation is not easy to use in practice because
(Multiple Choice)
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In 2012, over 75 percent of the revenue of the U.S. federal government was raised through
(Multiple Choice)
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If your income is $92,000 and you pay taxes of $19,475, what is your average tax rate? Show your work.
(Essay)
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If the marginal tax rate is equal to the average tax rate as taxable income increases, the tax structure is
(Multiple Choice)
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If you pay $14,000 in taxes on an income of $125,000, and $17,400 in taxes on an income of $144,000, what is your marginal tax rate? Show your work.
(Essay)
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Describe the main factors economists believe cause inequality of income.
(Essay)
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The political process is more likely to serve the interests of individuals whose preferences are in the middle, rather than individuals with preferences that are much to the left or right of the political center. This statement is best explained by which of the following?
(Multiple Choice)
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The public choice model asserts that the self-interest of policymakers is likely to cause them to take actions that are inconsistent with the preferences of voters, even where those preferences are clear.
(True/False)
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Figure 18-2
Figure 18-2 shows a demand curve and two sets of supply curves, one set more elastic than the other.
-Refer to Figure 18-2. If the government imposes an excise tax of $1.00 on every unit sold, the producer's burden of the tax

(Multiple Choice)
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