Deck 1: Introduction

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Question
All natural resources are nonrenewable.
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Question
Economics is similar to other social science disciplines in that it examines individual and social behavior.
Question
Consumer sovereignty refers to a situation in which there is only one "sovereign"consumer deciding what is to be produced in the market.
Question
In the circular flow model, resources flow from the households to the firms.
Question
Economic models are abstractions from reality.
Question
The circular flow model shows the government purchasing goods and services with tax dollars.
Question
The statement that a monopoly raises the price of its product is an example of positive economics.
Question
Economic forecasting has improved tremendously in the last 20 years with the development of computers.
Question
Econometrics is the use of statistics to quantify and test economic models.
Question
Economic models have become much simpler in recent years.
Question
Economic forecasting has proven no better than the flipping of coins.
Question
An economic forecast will always yield an accurate forecast.
Question
To be useful, a resource must be renewable.
Question
Only the very selfish have insatiable wants.
Question
We wouldn't have to make choices if wants were not insatiable.
Question
Natural resources include both plants and animals.
Question
Human societies have typically run out of resources before substitutes have been discovered or developed.
Question
Stanley Jevons accurately predicted the inevitable bankruptcy of England's coal industry.
Question
Scarcity is a temporary state of insufficiency that ends with new innovation.
Question
The circular flow model shows how households and firms compete with each other.
Question
The circular flow model shows what households buy and sell in the resource market.
Question
Economics is the social science that describes the way individuals and societies allocate resources to satisfy human wants.
Question
"The unemployment rate is five percent" is an example of a normative statement.
Question
"Unemployment will decrease because the economy is growing" is anexample of a positive statement.
Question
To state that the resources of the economy are finite implies that

A) we cannot live without them
B) we always want more of them
C) they are nonrenewable
D) at least some of them are renewable
E) there is a fixed quantity of them at any point in time
Question
The finite nature of the economy's resource base

A) is managed by careful planning
B) arises out of people's insatiable appetite for goods
C) is only a problem in developing countries
D) will disappear as technology advances
E) will persist indefinitely
Question
If a resource is nonrenewable and we use 2 percent of its supply per year,

A) then the resource is being depleted
B) its supply will be constant regardless of use because of conservation efforts
C) it will become renewable as its supply approaches zero
D) it could never be depleted because 2 percent of a diminishing supply is an increasing amount
E) it will decrease at a diminishing rate so that its supply will approach its initial quantity
Question
Which of the following would not be a central issue in economics?

A) Who produces the goods?
B) How is production carried out?
C) Who consumes what?
D) What goods are produced?
E) When are goods consumed and produced?
Question
Consumer sovereignty implies that

A) producers determine what goods will be produced and consumers are free to choose from among them
B) consumers choose the composition of our economy's output
C) goods are produced on the basis of need
D) the government directs the production of consumer goods in the economy
E) a committee of consumers determines the key issues in the economy
Question
Consumer sovereignty answers which central issue in economics?

A) How will goods be produced?
B) Who will produce the goods?
C) What goods will be produced?
D) For whom will the goods be produced?
E) By what method will the goods be produced?
Question
For which of the following questions would consumer sovereignty provide an answer?

A) Will a shovel or bulldozer be used to excavate the ground?
B) Should the government provide trash collection services in the community?
C) Should we have universal health coverage provided by the government?
D) Will large or small cars sell the most this year?
E) Should there be numerous competitors offering long-distance phone service to the consumer?
Question
To be valid, an economic model must

A) include every activity that occurs in the real world
B) include every economic activity that occurs in the real world
C) be useful in explaining cause-and-effect relationships in the real world
D) exclude any link to the real world
E) not be based on an abstraction of the real world
Question
The term ceteris paribus means that

A) all important variables in the real world are considered
B) all factors that influence the event are changing at the same time
C) everything else is being held constant
D) everything, except one influence, is changing
E) the consumer is king
Question
Resources are scarce

A) because there is always a greater demand for them than there is a supply of them
B) only if the resources are nonrenewable
C) only if the resources are renewable
D) because all resources are nonrenewable
E) because all resources are renewable
Question
Scarcity is a problem in economics because it means that

A) all economies will be poor
B) we cannot produce all the goods we want
C) consumers will not be able to consume all of the goods that producers have the capacity to produce
D) we cannot produce all the food we would want
E) the economy cannot improve its peoples' standard of living
Question
"John buys more of good X as his income increases, ceteris paribus," means

A) there is no cause-and-effect relationship between John's income and the quantity of good X he purchases if ceteris paribus applies
B) John's demand for good X depends exclusively on income
C) John's income and purchases of this good are being held constant
D) the change in John's income is the only factor being considered in explaining the change in his purchase of good X
E) the price of this good must have decreased in order for John to buy more of the good, regardless of changes in his income
Question
If all prices fall and it is observed that Betty purchases more bananas, which of thefollowing statements can be made?

A) Betty purchases more bananas as the price of bananas falls, ceteris paribus.
B) Betty purchases more of all goods as their prices fall, ceteris paribus.
C) Betty prefers bananas to all other fruits, ceteris paribus.
D) There is no ceteris paribus condition in this statement.
E) Betty will always buy more bananas when all prices fall, ceteris paribus.
Question
The circular flow model of the economy shows

A) the flow of money, goods, and services between households and firms
B) why specific flows occur
C) the relationship between money and goods within households
D) the relationship between resources and the prices of resources
E) the flow of resources from households to firms
Question
In the circular flow model of the economy, the resource market is where

A) consumers purchase consumer goods and services
B) firms purchase goods and services
C) consumers supply goods and services
D) firms purchase labor, land, and capital
E) consumers purchase labor and capital
Question
Which of the following activities would occur in a resource market?

A) Reesa buys a new computer to help balance her personal checkbook.
B) Randy pays a speeding ticket.
C) Ian mows his grass.
D) Pam buys a ticket to the ball game.
E) General Motors hires additional workers to run a third shift at its Flint, Michigan, factory.
Question
Which of the following activities would occur in the product market?

A) Harry mows his grass.
B) General Motors hires additional workers to run a third shift at the factory.
C) Sam pays a speeding ticket.
D) Dolly buys a ticket to the ball game.
E) Jane bakes a pie for Thanksgiving dinner.
Question
The four sources of income for the household are

A) taxes, subsidies, imports, interest
B) taxes, interest, rent, rebates
C) interest, rebates, rent, taxes
D) wages, taxes, imports, interest
E) wages, rent, interest, profits
Question
Which of the following correctly matches the income payment with the resource?

A) rent-land; wages-labor; interest-capital; profits-entrepreneurship
B) profits-land; wages-labor; rent-capital; interest-entrepreneurship
C) taxes-land; interest-labor; rent-capital; profits-entrepreneurship
D) interest-land; taxes-labor; interest-capital; rent-entrepreneurship
E) rent-capital; profits-labor; wages-land; interest-entrepreneurship
Question
Households purchase goods and services in the

A) market resource
B) labor market
C) capital market
D) product market
E) circular market
Question
A firm is an organization that produces

A) only goods for sale to households
B) only services for sale to households
C) goods and services for sale to households and businesses
D) only goods for sale to other businesses
E) only resources
Question
The basic difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics is that

A) microeconomics is concerned with the domestic economy, while macroeconomics is concerned only with the international economy
B) microeconomics examines the individual units of the economy, while macroeconomics studies the whole economy
C) microeconomics studies the actions of households, while macroeconomics studies the actions of business firms
D) microeconomics studies the economy in terms of private individuals and firms, while macroeconomics includes the effect of government
E) microeconomics examines the whole economy, while macroeconomics studies the individual units of the economy
Question
A positive economic statement concerns

A) an opinion on an economic issue that should be taken
B) an economic activity that has a positive effect on the economy
C) a statement of fact
D) a macroeconomic issue or position
E) a microeconomic issue or position
Question
If John says the price of gasoline is too high and Paul says prices are determined by the action of the marketplace, then John has made a(n):

A) positive economic statement, and Paul has made a normative economic statement
B) positive economic statement, and Paul has made a positive economic statement
C) normative economic statement, and Paul has made a normative economic statement
D) normative economic statement, and Paul has made a positive economic statement
E) improper economic statement, and Paul has made a proper economic statement
Question
Which of the following questions would not be posed in the context of microeconomics?

A) Why do national economies grow?
B) What percentage of consumer income is spent on entertainment?
C) Why do workers prefer the 4-day workweek?
D) What happens to worker productivity when the job shifts to a 4-day workweek?
E) How is the electric industry harmed by the passage of new clean air legislation?
Question
The circular flow diagram is

A) an accurate description of reality
B) an economic model
C) not expected to explain reality
D) a road map explaining all money flows in the economy
E) a road map explaining all product flows in the economy
Question
Most economic forecasts

A) are accurate
B) are more reliable than weather forecasts
C) rely on mathematical models
D) are totally unreliable because economic changes upset outcomes
E) are based on ceteris paribus assumptions
Question
Finite resources

A) must be renewable
B) must be nonrenewable
C) can be renewable or nonrenewable
D) are only nature-made resources
E) can be expanded in a short period of time
Question
An example of a nonrenewable resource is

A) labor
B) capital
C) entrepreneurship
D) iron ore
E) automobiles
Question
Gold is

A) not a resource in the economy
B) an example of a renewable resource for the economy
C) an example of a nonrenewable resource for the economy
D) part of the capital resources of the economy
E) part of the entrepreneurial resources of the economy
Question
Economics is considered to be one of ______________ disciplines.

A) natural science
B) mathematical
C) hard science
D) social science
E) graphical
Question
Land, water, metals, and minerals are considered to be

A) non-scarce resources because they are "gifts of nature"
B) free resources because they are "gifts of nature"
C) manufactured resources because no resource is useable without labor
D) natural resources that are "gifts of nature"
E) renewable resources that are "gifts of nature"
Question
Which of the following is an example of a renewable resource?

A) gold
B) forests
C) minerals
D) coal
E) land
Question
Which of the following is an example of a nonrenewable resource?

A) iron
B) cotton
C) labor
D) fish
E) electricity
Question
Which of the following statements is true with respect to renewable natural resources?

A) There are infinite quantities of renewable resources.
B) Proper management can only protect, not increase, the supply.
C) Conservation and proper use can protect and even increase the supply of renewable resources.
D) They cannot be completely destroyed since they can always regenerate.
E) They cannot exist since this would violate the scarcity principle.
Question
Which of the following statements is true regarding nonrenewable natural resources?

A) With proper management, more natural resources can be created.
B) The economy will never run out of the resource since it can always find new supplies as the price rises.
C) Economists can predict with reasonable accuracy when the supply will be depleted.
D) Before the last unit is taken from the earth, the economy is likely to already have abandoned it and switched to another.
E) Water is an example of a nonrenewable natural resource.
Question
In 1865 Jevons wrote a book, The Coal Question, in which he predicted that England would soon

A) switch from coal to alternative sources of energy
B) discover new sources of coal that would create a glut
C) go to war with Spain over access to coal deposits
D) increase its productivity and become a greater economic power
E) run out of coal
Question
Economists believe that people's wants are

A) limited by their incomes
B) insatiable
C) scarce
D) mostly irrational
E) mostly psychological
Question
The perpetual state of insufficiency of resources to satisfy people's unlimited wants is

A) apparent only in poor countries
B) a contradiction that cannot be resolved
C) completely unrealistic
D) present in modern economies, but not in the past
E) the definition of scarcity
Question
The study of how people work together to transform resources into goods and services to satisfy their most pressing wants is

A) sociology
B) economics
C) psychology
D) anthropology
E) management
Question
Economics is considered to be part of the field of

A) management science
B) mathematical sciences
C) actuarial science
D) social sciences
E) natural sciences
Question
The four central issues in economics include all of the following questions except

A) who produces what
B) how are goods produced
C) when are goods produced
D) who consumes what
E) who decides about production and consumption
Question
When consumers decide what goods and services the economy produces, they are said to exercise

A) control over production of resources
B) control over all economic activity
C) the direction of the circular flow
D) consumer sovereignty
E) control over nonrenewable resources
Question
Because consumers want more Baby Bigfeet dolls, more Baby Bigfeet dolls will be produced and brought to the market. This is an example of

A) consumer sovereignty
B) resources not being scarce
C) ceteris paribus
D) a natural resource
E) macroeconomic activity
Question
When consumers decide that they do not want virtual pets anymore, and this drives all the virtual pet producers out of business, this is a reflection of

A) an outrage
B) not related to issues of freedom
C) consumer sovereignty
D) an inefficient use of resources
E) a circular flow model
Question
Most economic model builders would claim that their models

A) include all real-world economic activities
B) portray how the real economy works
C) take into account all the complexities of how people behave
D) contradict the ceteris paribus assumption
E) consider all the important pressing issues people confront
Question
The Latin expression ceteris paribus means

A) everything else being equal
B) economic model
C) partially correct
D) certainty
E) certain particulars
Question
When economists hold factors other than the one they are analyzing constant, they are demonstrating the principle of

A) circular flow analysis
B) consumer sovereignty
C) ceteris paribus
D) normative economics
E) scarcity modification
Question
Economists argue that when the price of a textbook rises, students reduce their quantity demanded of textbooks. This cause-and-effect relationship holds only under conditions of

A) moderate price increases
B) market flexibility
C) complete information
D) ceteris paribus
E) consumer sovereignty
Question
A simple model used in your textbook to show how an economy works is the

A) renewable resources model
B) normative economic model
C) insatiable wants model
D) econometric model
E) circular flow model
Question
In the circular flow model, households provide all of the following resources to firmsexcept

A) labor
B) money
C) capital
D) entrepreneurship
E) land
Question
In the circular flow model, for every flow of goods, services, and resources there is acounter-flow of

A) more goods, services, and resources
B) people from firms to households
C) people from households to firms
D) money
E) land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship
Question
In what market are goods and services sold?

A) money market
B) household market
C) product market
D) resource market
E) consumer market
Question
Are we running out of natural resources?

A) No, because we may abandon the use of a particular resource before we exhaust its supply.
B) Yes, because some resources are nonrenewable.
C) Yes, because all resources are eventually nonrenewable.
D) Yes, because we live in a finite world.
E) No, because all resources are in infinite supply.
Question
According to the textbook, what was Adam and Eve's economy like?

A) primitive, because technology in the Garden of Eden was non-existent
B) wasteful, because Adam and Eve did not know how to use the abundant resources available
C) underemployed, because there were only two workers
D) there was no economy because there was no reason to economize
E) the same as ours because the law of scarcity is universal
Question
In the circular flow model, households derive income from all of the following categories except

A) wages earned by labor
B) revenue earned by firms
C) profit earned by entrepreneurs
D) rent earned by people providing land resources
E) interest earned by people providing capital resources
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Deck 1: Introduction
1
All natural resources are nonrenewable.
False
2
Economics is similar to other social science disciplines in that it examines individual and social behavior.
True
3
Consumer sovereignty refers to a situation in which there is only one "sovereign"consumer deciding what is to be produced in the market.
False
4
In the circular flow model, resources flow from the households to the firms.
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k this deck
5
Economic models are abstractions from reality.
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k this deck
6
The circular flow model shows the government purchasing goods and services with tax dollars.
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7
The statement that a monopoly raises the price of its product is an example of positive economics.
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8
Economic forecasting has improved tremendously in the last 20 years with the development of computers.
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9
Econometrics is the use of statistics to quantify and test economic models.
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10
Economic models have become much simpler in recent years.
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11
Economic forecasting has proven no better than the flipping of coins.
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12
An economic forecast will always yield an accurate forecast.
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13
To be useful, a resource must be renewable.
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14
Only the very selfish have insatiable wants.
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15
We wouldn't have to make choices if wants were not insatiable.
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16
Natural resources include both plants and animals.
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17
Human societies have typically run out of resources before substitutes have been discovered or developed.
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18
Stanley Jevons accurately predicted the inevitable bankruptcy of England's coal industry.
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19
Scarcity is a temporary state of insufficiency that ends with new innovation.
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20
The circular flow model shows how households and firms compete with each other.
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21
The circular flow model shows what households buy and sell in the resource market.
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22
Economics is the social science that describes the way individuals and societies allocate resources to satisfy human wants.
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23
"The unemployment rate is five percent" is an example of a normative statement.
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24
"Unemployment will decrease because the economy is growing" is anexample of a positive statement.
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25
To state that the resources of the economy are finite implies that

A) we cannot live without them
B) we always want more of them
C) they are nonrenewable
D) at least some of them are renewable
E) there is a fixed quantity of them at any point in time
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
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26
The finite nature of the economy's resource base

A) is managed by careful planning
B) arises out of people's insatiable appetite for goods
C) is only a problem in developing countries
D) will disappear as technology advances
E) will persist indefinitely
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
If a resource is nonrenewable and we use 2 percent of its supply per year,

A) then the resource is being depleted
B) its supply will be constant regardless of use because of conservation efforts
C) it will become renewable as its supply approaches zero
D) it could never be depleted because 2 percent of a diminishing supply is an increasing amount
E) it will decrease at a diminishing rate so that its supply will approach its initial quantity
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28
Which of the following would not be a central issue in economics?

A) Who produces the goods?
B) How is production carried out?
C) Who consumes what?
D) What goods are produced?
E) When are goods consumed and produced?
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k this deck
29
Consumer sovereignty implies that

A) producers determine what goods will be produced and consumers are free to choose from among them
B) consumers choose the composition of our economy's output
C) goods are produced on the basis of need
D) the government directs the production of consumer goods in the economy
E) a committee of consumers determines the key issues in the economy
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Consumer sovereignty answers which central issue in economics?

A) How will goods be produced?
B) Who will produce the goods?
C) What goods will be produced?
D) For whom will the goods be produced?
E) By what method will the goods be produced?
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31
For which of the following questions would consumer sovereignty provide an answer?

A) Will a shovel or bulldozer be used to excavate the ground?
B) Should the government provide trash collection services in the community?
C) Should we have universal health coverage provided by the government?
D) Will large or small cars sell the most this year?
E) Should there be numerous competitors offering long-distance phone service to the consumer?
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
32
To be valid, an economic model must

A) include every activity that occurs in the real world
B) include every economic activity that occurs in the real world
C) be useful in explaining cause-and-effect relationships in the real world
D) exclude any link to the real world
E) not be based on an abstraction of the real world
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33
The term ceteris paribus means that

A) all important variables in the real world are considered
B) all factors that influence the event are changing at the same time
C) everything else is being held constant
D) everything, except one influence, is changing
E) the consumer is king
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34
Resources are scarce

A) because there is always a greater demand for them than there is a supply of them
B) only if the resources are nonrenewable
C) only if the resources are renewable
D) because all resources are nonrenewable
E) because all resources are renewable
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35
Scarcity is a problem in economics because it means that

A) all economies will be poor
B) we cannot produce all the goods we want
C) consumers will not be able to consume all of the goods that producers have the capacity to produce
D) we cannot produce all the food we would want
E) the economy cannot improve its peoples' standard of living
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36
"John buys more of good X as his income increases, ceteris paribus," means

A) there is no cause-and-effect relationship between John's income and the quantity of good X he purchases if ceteris paribus applies
B) John's demand for good X depends exclusively on income
C) John's income and purchases of this good are being held constant
D) the change in John's income is the only factor being considered in explaining the change in his purchase of good X
E) the price of this good must have decreased in order for John to buy more of the good, regardless of changes in his income
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37
If all prices fall and it is observed that Betty purchases more bananas, which of thefollowing statements can be made?

A) Betty purchases more bananas as the price of bananas falls, ceteris paribus.
B) Betty purchases more of all goods as their prices fall, ceteris paribus.
C) Betty prefers bananas to all other fruits, ceteris paribus.
D) There is no ceteris paribus condition in this statement.
E) Betty will always buy more bananas when all prices fall, ceteris paribus.
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38
The circular flow model of the economy shows

A) the flow of money, goods, and services between households and firms
B) why specific flows occur
C) the relationship between money and goods within households
D) the relationship between resources and the prices of resources
E) the flow of resources from households to firms
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
39
In the circular flow model of the economy, the resource market is where

A) consumers purchase consumer goods and services
B) firms purchase goods and services
C) consumers supply goods and services
D) firms purchase labor, land, and capital
E) consumers purchase labor and capital
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40
Which of the following activities would occur in a resource market?

A) Reesa buys a new computer to help balance her personal checkbook.
B) Randy pays a speeding ticket.
C) Ian mows his grass.
D) Pam buys a ticket to the ball game.
E) General Motors hires additional workers to run a third shift at its Flint, Michigan, factory.
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Which of the following activities would occur in the product market?

A) Harry mows his grass.
B) General Motors hires additional workers to run a third shift at the factory.
C) Sam pays a speeding ticket.
D) Dolly buys a ticket to the ball game.
E) Jane bakes a pie for Thanksgiving dinner.
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
The four sources of income for the household are

A) taxes, subsidies, imports, interest
B) taxes, interest, rent, rebates
C) interest, rebates, rent, taxes
D) wages, taxes, imports, interest
E) wages, rent, interest, profits
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Unlock for access to all 150 flashcards in this deck.
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43
Which of the following correctly matches the income payment with the resource?

A) rent-land; wages-labor; interest-capital; profits-entrepreneurship
B) profits-land; wages-labor; rent-capital; interest-entrepreneurship
C) taxes-land; interest-labor; rent-capital; profits-entrepreneurship
D) interest-land; taxes-labor; interest-capital; rent-entrepreneurship
E) rent-capital; profits-labor; wages-land; interest-entrepreneurship
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44
Households purchase goods and services in the

A) market resource
B) labor market
C) capital market
D) product market
E) circular market
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45
A firm is an organization that produces

A) only goods for sale to households
B) only services for sale to households
C) goods and services for sale to households and businesses
D) only goods for sale to other businesses
E) only resources
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46
The basic difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics is that

A) microeconomics is concerned with the domestic economy, while macroeconomics is concerned only with the international economy
B) microeconomics examines the individual units of the economy, while macroeconomics studies the whole economy
C) microeconomics studies the actions of households, while macroeconomics studies the actions of business firms
D) microeconomics studies the economy in terms of private individuals and firms, while macroeconomics includes the effect of government
E) microeconomics examines the whole economy, while macroeconomics studies the individual units of the economy
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47
A positive economic statement concerns

A) an opinion on an economic issue that should be taken
B) an economic activity that has a positive effect on the economy
C) a statement of fact
D) a macroeconomic issue or position
E) a microeconomic issue or position
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48
If John says the price of gasoline is too high and Paul says prices are determined by the action of the marketplace, then John has made a(n):

A) positive economic statement, and Paul has made a normative economic statement
B) positive economic statement, and Paul has made a positive economic statement
C) normative economic statement, and Paul has made a normative economic statement
D) normative economic statement, and Paul has made a positive economic statement
E) improper economic statement, and Paul has made a proper economic statement
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49
Which of the following questions would not be posed in the context of microeconomics?

A) Why do national economies grow?
B) What percentage of consumer income is spent on entertainment?
C) Why do workers prefer the 4-day workweek?
D) What happens to worker productivity when the job shifts to a 4-day workweek?
E) How is the electric industry harmed by the passage of new clean air legislation?
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50
The circular flow diagram is

A) an accurate description of reality
B) an economic model
C) not expected to explain reality
D) a road map explaining all money flows in the economy
E) a road map explaining all product flows in the economy
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51
Most economic forecasts

A) are accurate
B) are more reliable than weather forecasts
C) rely on mathematical models
D) are totally unreliable because economic changes upset outcomes
E) are based on ceteris paribus assumptions
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52
Finite resources

A) must be renewable
B) must be nonrenewable
C) can be renewable or nonrenewable
D) are only nature-made resources
E) can be expanded in a short period of time
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53
An example of a nonrenewable resource is

A) labor
B) capital
C) entrepreneurship
D) iron ore
E) automobiles
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54
Gold is

A) not a resource in the economy
B) an example of a renewable resource for the economy
C) an example of a nonrenewable resource for the economy
D) part of the capital resources of the economy
E) part of the entrepreneurial resources of the economy
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55
Economics is considered to be one of ______________ disciplines.

A) natural science
B) mathematical
C) hard science
D) social science
E) graphical
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56
Land, water, metals, and minerals are considered to be

A) non-scarce resources because they are "gifts of nature"
B) free resources because they are "gifts of nature"
C) manufactured resources because no resource is useable without labor
D) natural resources that are "gifts of nature"
E) renewable resources that are "gifts of nature"
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57
Which of the following is an example of a renewable resource?

A) gold
B) forests
C) minerals
D) coal
E) land
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58
Which of the following is an example of a nonrenewable resource?

A) iron
B) cotton
C) labor
D) fish
E) electricity
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59
Which of the following statements is true with respect to renewable natural resources?

A) There are infinite quantities of renewable resources.
B) Proper management can only protect, not increase, the supply.
C) Conservation and proper use can protect and even increase the supply of renewable resources.
D) They cannot be completely destroyed since they can always regenerate.
E) They cannot exist since this would violate the scarcity principle.
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60
Which of the following statements is true regarding nonrenewable natural resources?

A) With proper management, more natural resources can be created.
B) The economy will never run out of the resource since it can always find new supplies as the price rises.
C) Economists can predict with reasonable accuracy when the supply will be depleted.
D) Before the last unit is taken from the earth, the economy is likely to already have abandoned it and switched to another.
E) Water is an example of a nonrenewable natural resource.
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61
In 1865 Jevons wrote a book, The Coal Question, in which he predicted that England would soon

A) switch from coal to alternative sources of energy
B) discover new sources of coal that would create a glut
C) go to war with Spain over access to coal deposits
D) increase its productivity and become a greater economic power
E) run out of coal
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62
Economists believe that people's wants are

A) limited by their incomes
B) insatiable
C) scarce
D) mostly irrational
E) mostly psychological
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63
The perpetual state of insufficiency of resources to satisfy people's unlimited wants is

A) apparent only in poor countries
B) a contradiction that cannot be resolved
C) completely unrealistic
D) present in modern economies, but not in the past
E) the definition of scarcity
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64
The study of how people work together to transform resources into goods and services to satisfy their most pressing wants is

A) sociology
B) economics
C) psychology
D) anthropology
E) management
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65
Economics is considered to be part of the field of

A) management science
B) mathematical sciences
C) actuarial science
D) social sciences
E) natural sciences
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66
The four central issues in economics include all of the following questions except

A) who produces what
B) how are goods produced
C) when are goods produced
D) who consumes what
E) who decides about production and consumption
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67
When consumers decide what goods and services the economy produces, they are said to exercise

A) control over production of resources
B) control over all economic activity
C) the direction of the circular flow
D) consumer sovereignty
E) control over nonrenewable resources
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68
Because consumers want more Baby Bigfeet dolls, more Baby Bigfeet dolls will be produced and brought to the market. This is an example of

A) consumer sovereignty
B) resources not being scarce
C) ceteris paribus
D) a natural resource
E) macroeconomic activity
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69
When consumers decide that they do not want virtual pets anymore, and this drives all the virtual pet producers out of business, this is a reflection of

A) an outrage
B) not related to issues of freedom
C) consumer sovereignty
D) an inefficient use of resources
E) a circular flow model
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70
Most economic model builders would claim that their models

A) include all real-world economic activities
B) portray how the real economy works
C) take into account all the complexities of how people behave
D) contradict the ceteris paribus assumption
E) consider all the important pressing issues people confront
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71
The Latin expression ceteris paribus means

A) everything else being equal
B) economic model
C) partially correct
D) certainty
E) certain particulars
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72
When economists hold factors other than the one they are analyzing constant, they are demonstrating the principle of

A) circular flow analysis
B) consumer sovereignty
C) ceteris paribus
D) normative economics
E) scarcity modification
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73
Economists argue that when the price of a textbook rises, students reduce their quantity demanded of textbooks. This cause-and-effect relationship holds only under conditions of

A) moderate price increases
B) market flexibility
C) complete information
D) ceteris paribus
E) consumer sovereignty
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74
A simple model used in your textbook to show how an economy works is the

A) renewable resources model
B) normative economic model
C) insatiable wants model
D) econometric model
E) circular flow model
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75
In the circular flow model, households provide all of the following resources to firmsexcept

A) labor
B) money
C) capital
D) entrepreneurship
E) land
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76
In the circular flow model, for every flow of goods, services, and resources there is acounter-flow of

A) more goods, services, and resources
B) people from firms to households
C) people from households to firms
D) money
E) land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship
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77
In what market are goods and services sold?

A) money market
B) household market
C) product market
D) resource market
E) consumer market
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78
Are we running out of natural resources?

A) No, because we may abandon the use of a particular resource before we exhaust its supply.
B) Yes, because some resources are nonrenewable.
C) Yes, because all resources are eventually nonrenewable.
D) Yes, because we live in a finite world.
E) No, because all resources are in infinite supply.
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79
According to the textbook, what was Adam and Eve's economy like?

A) primitive, because technology in the Garden of Eden was non-existent
B) wasteful, because Adam and Eve did not know how to use the abundant resources available
C) underemployed, because there were only two workers
D) there was no economy because there was no reason to economize
E) the same as ours because the law of scarcity is universal
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80
In the circular flow model, households derive income from all of the following categories except

A) wages earned by labor
B) revenue earned by firms
C) profit earned by entrepreneurs
D) rent earned by people providing land resources
E) interest earned by people providing capital resources
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Unlock Deck
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