Deck 1: What Is Economics?

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Question
Marginal analysis involves looking at the extra costs involved in a decision.
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Government controls over market prices frequently "backfire."
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In economics the t cost of making a choice is the value of what must be given up.
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Opportunity cost is the highest possible price you can receive when you sell an object.
Question
As a student,one of the costs of sleeping in rather than going to class is likely to be a lower grade in the class.
Question
Externalities are created when parties not involved in an economic transaction are affected by it.
Question
In her calculation of the cost of going to college,an economist would include the amount of forgone earnings over the years spent at college.
Question
Even though international trade in undertaken voluntarily,a country that engages in trade may not benefit from it.
Question
Externalities affect only the buyer and seller involved in an exchange.
Question
It is impossible for both nations to gain when trading with one other.
Question
Externalities are social costs that affect parties external to a particular economic transaction.
Question
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative to a given choice.
Question
There are never any adverse consequences of government attempts to modify the laws of supply and demand.
Question
Comparative advantage explains how two nations can benefit from trade.
Question
All economic transactions involve only buyers and sellers; no third parties are involved.
Question
In international trade,one country's gain is another country's loss.
Question
The marginal cost of an airline ticket is the total cost of flying the plane divided by the number of passengers.
Question
Both parties gain in a voluntary exchange.
Question
If Japan is twice as good at producing cameras and three times as good at producing TV sets as the United States,Japan is said to have a comparative advantage in TV sets and the United States has a comparative advantage in cameras.
Question
There are frequently market solutions that the government can use to deal with externalities.
Question
Greater economic efficiency often leads to greater economic inequality.
Question
The concept of economic efficiency refers to the size of the "economic pie" whereas the concept of equality refers to how the "pie" is distributed.
Question
One problem with the European Union's choice regarding equality versus efficiency is that it may inadvertently shrink the size of its "economic pie".
Question
The achievement of greater efficiency in the United States has been at the expense of growing inequality.
Question
The United States has chosen to balance the competing claims of efficiency versus equality by emphasizing greater efficiency over greater equality.
Question
One of the consequences of preventing wages from falling in the European Union has been growing unemployment.
Question
One of the consequences of allowing wages to fall in the United States has been growing wage inequality.
Question
Attempts by the government to reduce the rate of inflation often result in higher unemployment in the short run.
Question
Lower inflation rates are usually correlated with lower unemployment rates.
Question
The growth rate of productivity is the most important determinant of material well-being in the short run.
Question
Over the past century,the main factor responsible for rising living standards in the United States has been productivity growth.
Question
The high unemployment of 2008-2010 caused a substantial decrease in inflation which created fears of deflation.
Question
A small increase in productivity growth can have a huge impact on a country's standard of living.
Question
In both the 1970s and the 1990s,extreme economic events caused unemployment to move in the same direction as inflation.
Question
Economic efficiency and income equality are often conflicting goals in an economy.
Question
The market mechanism provides a financial incentive for firms to minimize the pollution they create.
Question
The relatively low rate of inflation coupled with a low unemployment rate that occurred in the 1990s represented a "normal" economic situation.
Question
Productivity growth is the main cause of rising living standards.
Question
There is no trade-off between efficiency and equality.
Question
The United States has been willing to trade off greater efficiency for greater wage equality.
Question
A theory is an explanation of the causal mechanism behind observed phenomena.
Question
In economics,abstraction from reality is necessary because of the complexity of the real world.
Question
Abstraction is used in economics to omit unnecessary details and focus on the essence of the problem being studied.
Question
Abstraction ignores many details in order to focus on the most important elements of a problem.
Question
The use of abstraction in economics is analogous to the use of a road map providing directions to a location.
Question
A theory is a deliberate simplification or abstraction of factual relationships.
Question
Economists are often required to make unrealistic assumptions concerning the problems they are investigating.
Question
The statement "saccharine causes cancer" is not a theory; it is a hypothesis.
Question
Unemployment and inflation are important determinants of short-run material welfare,whereas productivity growth is an important determinant of long-run material well-being.
Question
A theory is an untested assertion of alleged fact.
Question
In scientific language,a theory is an untested assertion of alleged fact.
Question
Eliminating important details in economic analysis is necessary to understand the complexity of the economy.
Question
Abstraction can lead to gross distortions of pertinent facts.
Question
A model that is an oversimplification for one purpose will likely be an oversimplification for other purposes as well.
Question
Economic theory is necessary and extremely important because of its relationship to economic policy.
Question
Inaccurate prediction generally invalidates the use of theory in economics.
Question
The word "theory" means the same to the scientist as it does to the man on the street.
Question
Economic problems are made manageable by stripping away some of the unnecessary details.
Question
The optimal degree of abstraction depends on the objective of the analysis.
Question
Economic analysis requires both mathematical reasoning and historical study.
Question
In economic theorizing,common sense will always lead to the correct answer.
Question
A horizontal line always has a slope of one.
Question
An economic model is a realistic depiction of the operation of the economy.
Question
Models are used to describe cause-and-effect relationships.
Question
"Correlation" is a measure of how one variable causes another to change.
Question
All two-dimensional graphs must have an origin,a horizontal axis,and a vertical axis.
Question
Value judgments are based on people's tastes,preferences,and ethical opinions.
Question
Individuals will have different value judgments about the appropriate rate of unemployment and the appropriate rate of inflation.
Question
Economic theory simplifies relationships to explain how the relationships interact.
Question
Graphs are valuable because they facilitate interpretation of data.
Question
A vertical line always has a slope of one.
Question
A graph's origin is the point of intersection of all lines or curves in the graph.
Question
Models are simplifications that are used to observe the workings of a system.
Question
Two variables that systematically change together are correlated.
Question
Economists disagree on most economic issues facing an economy.
Question
The terms "correlation" and "causation" are synonymous.
Question
Economists probably agree more often than they disagree.
Question
Only economists and other "social" scientists have areas of dispute within their disciplines.
Question
A graph conveys information about a cause-and-effect relationship.
Question
The lower left-hand corner of a graph where the two axes meet is called the graph's origin.
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Deck 1: What Is Economics?
1
Marginal analysis involves looking at the extra costs involved in a decision.
True
2
Government controls over market prices frequently "backfire."
True
3
In economics the t cost of making a choice is the value of what must be given up.
True
4
Opportunity cost is the highest possible price you can receive when you sell an object.
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5
As a student,one of the costs of sleeping in rather than going to class is likely to be a lower grade in the class.
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6
Externalities are created when parties not involved in an economic transaction are affected by it.
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7
In her calculation of the cost of going to college,an economist would include the amount of forgone earnings over the years spent at college.
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8
Even though international trade in undertaken voluntarily,a country that engages in trade may not benefit from it.
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9
Externalities affect only the buyer and seller involved in an exchange.
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10
It is impossible for both nations to gain when trading with one other.
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11
Externalities are social costs that affect parties external to a particular economic transaction.
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12
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative to a given choice.
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13
There are never any adverse consequences of government attempts to modify the laws of supply and demand.
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14
Comparative advantage explains how two nations can benefit from trade.
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15
All economic transactions involve only buyers and sellers; no third parties are involved.
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16
In international trade,one country's gain is another country's loss.
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17
The marginal cost of an airline ticket is the total cost of flying the plane divided by the number of passengers.
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18
Both parties gain in a voluntary exchange.
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19
If Japan is twice as good at producing cameras and three times as good at producing TV sets as the United States,Japan is said to have a comparative advantage in TV sets and the United States has a comparative advantage in cameras.
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20
There are frequently market solutions that the government can use to deal with externalities.
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21
Greater economic efficiency often leads to greater economic inequality.
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22
The concept of economic efficiency refers to the size of the "economic pie" whereas the concept of equality refers to how the "pie" is distributed.
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23
One problem with the European Union's choice regarding equality versus efficiency is that it may inadvertently shrink the size of its "economic pie".
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24
The achievement of greater efficiency in the United States has been at the expense of growing inequality.
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25
The United States has chosen to balance the competing claims of efficiency versus equality by emphasizing greater efficiency over greater equality.
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26
One of the consequences of preventing wages from falling in the European Union has been growing unemployment.
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27
One of the consequences of allowing wages to fall in the United States has been growing wage inequality.
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28
Attempts by the government to reduce the rate of inflation often result in higher unemployment in the short run.
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29
Lower inflation rates are usually correlated with lower unemployment rates.
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30
The growth rate of productivity is the most important determinant of material well-being in the short run.
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31
Over the past century,the main factor responsible for rising living standards in the United States has been productivity growth.
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32
The high unemployment of 2008-2010 caused a substantial decrease in inflation which created fears of deflation.
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33
A small increase in productivity growth can have a huge impact on a country's standard of living.
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34
In both the 1970s and the 1990s,extreme economic events caused unemployment to move in the same direction as inflation.
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35
Economic efficiency and income equality are often conflicting goals in an economy.
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36
The market mechanism provides a financial incentive for firms to minimize the pollution they create.
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37
The relatively low rate of inflation coupled with a low unemployment rate that occurred in the 1990s represented a "normal" economic situation.
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38
Productivity growth is the main cause of rising living standards.
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39
There is no trade-off between efficiency and equality.
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40
The United States has been willing to trade off greater efficiency for greater wage equality.
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41
A theory is an explanation of the causal mechanism behind observed phenomena.
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42
In economics,abstraction from reality is necessary because of the complexity of the real world.
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43
Abstraction is used in economics to omit unnecessary details and focus on the essence of the problem being studied.
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44
Abstraction ignores many details in order to focus on the most important elements of a problem.
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45
The use of abstraction in economics is analogous to the use of a road map providing directions to a location.
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46
A theory is a deliberate simplification or abstraction of factual relationships.
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47
Economists are often required to make unrealistic assumptions concerning the problems they are investigating.
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48
The statement "saccharine causes cancer" is not a theory; it is a hypothesis.
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49
Unemployment and inflation are important determinants of short-run material welfare,whereas productivity growth is an important determinant of long-run material well-being.
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k this deck
50
A theory is an untested assertion of alleged fact.
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51
In scientific language,a theory is an untested assertion of alleged fact.
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52
Eliminating important details in economic analysis is necessary to understand the complexity of the economy.
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53
Abstraction can lead to gross distortions of pertinent facts.
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54
A model that is an oversimplification for one purpose will likely be an oversimplification for other purposes as well.
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55
Economic theory is necessary and extremely important because of its relationship to economic policy.
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k this deck
56
Inaccurate prediction generally invalidates the use of theory in economics.
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57
The word "theory" means the same to the scientist as it does to the man on the street.
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58
Economic problems are made manageable by stripping away some of the unnecessary details.
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59
The optimal degree of abstraction depends on the objective of the analysis.
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60
Economic analysis requires both mathematical reasoning and historical study.
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61
In economic theorizing,common sense will always lead to the correct answer.
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62
A horizontal line always has a slope of one.
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63
An economic model is a realistic depiction of the operation of the economy.
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64
Models are used to describe cause-and-effect relationships.
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65
"Correlation" is a measure of how one variable causes another to change.
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66
All two-dimensional graphs must have an origin,a horizontal axis,and a vertical axis.
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67
Value judgments are based on people's tastes,preferences,and ethical opinions.
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68
Individuals will have different value judgments about the appropriate rate of unemployment and the appropriate rate of inflation.
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69
Economic theory simplifies relationships to explain how the relationships interact.
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70
Graphs are valuable because they facilitate interpretation of data.
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71
A vertical line always has a slope of one.
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72
A graph's origin is the point of intersection of all lines or curves in the graph.
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73
Models are simplifications that are used to observe the workings of a system.
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74
Two variables that systematically change together are correlated.
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75
Economists disagree on most economic issues facing an economy.
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76
The terms "correlation" and "causation" are synonymous.
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77
Economists probably agree more often than they disagree.
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78
Only economists and other "social" scientists have areas of dispute within their disciplines.
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79
A graph conveys information about a cause-and-effect relationship.
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80
The lower left-hand corner of a graph where the two axes meet is called the graph's origin.
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