Deck 18: Economic Institutions

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Question
The story in which the American businessman E. L. Winthrop wanted the Indian to weave a large number of baskets illustrates:

A) a failure of communication
B) cultural relativism
C) differences between the institutions of folk and industrial societies
D) ethnocentrism
Use Space or
up arrow
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to flip the card.
Question
The institutions that are concerned with production and distribution of goods and services constitute a society's:

A) economic institutions
B) family institutions
C) political institutions
D) religious institutions
Question
The idea that people will attempt to maximize their pleasure or profit in any situation and will also try to minimize their loss or pain is referred to as the:

A) capitalist theory of economics
B) central theory of economics
C) maximization principle
D) theory of contingency
Question
Among the hallmarks of industrial society is the production of all of the following EXCEPT:

A) commodities
B) information
C) professions
D) services
Question
Which of the following is characteristic of subsistence economies?

A) complex division of labor
B) family as basic production unit
C) highly developed markets
D) production of surplus commodities
Question
Economic institutions that regulate exchange behavior are

A) markets
B) exchange mediums
C) divisions of labor
D) networks
Question
The sociologist who applied the economic rational choice approach to group behavior was

A) Karl Marx
B) Gary Becker
C) Peter Berger
D) Robert Merton
Question
In a market, prices for various goods and services are established based on:

A) changing levels of supply and demand
B) governmental policy
C) how buyers and sellers are related
D) the cost of producing them
Question
Which of the following is NOT essential to a market?

A) a medium of exchange
B) a place to hold exchanges
C) government support
D) use of contracts
Question
In market transactions, impersonal relations are possible because other roles of the participants are neutralized through the use of:

A) contracts
B) currency
C) division of labor
D) networking
Question
Market transactions are governed by

A) bureaucracies
B) contracts
C) mercantile associations
D) markets
Question
An economy in which producers try to meet the needs of their immediate and extended families and do not produce goods for export is known as:

A) basic economy
B) market economy
C) subsistence economy
D) contract economy
Question
Which of the following are economic institutions that regulate exchange behavior?

A) bureaucracies
B) markets
C) mercantile associations
D) soviets
Question
All of the following have accelerated the spread of markets into nonmarket societies EXCEPT:

A) colonialism
B) desire for goods produced by industrial societies
C) political conquest
D) the emergence of new technologies
Question
Immanuel Wallerstein argues that the new type of social organization that emerged in the later fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries was based on:

A) economic relationships
B) political empires
C) religious fragmentation
D) war and conquest
Question
According to Immanuel Wallerstein, political empires can be seen as a form of:

A) economic domination
B) economic innovation
C) economic production
D) economic redistribution
Question
Immanuel Wallerstein argues that the major drawback of political empires was their:

A) lack of economic productivity
B) lack of political stability
C) need for a huge military and civil bureaucracy
D) need to continually find new peoples to conquer
Question
An economic enterprise that has headquarters in one country and conducts business activities in one or more other countries is called:

A) a conglomerate
B) a monopoly
C) a multinational corporation
D) an oligopoly
Question
An example of an early multinational corporation was

A) International Business Machines
B) U.S. Steel
C) Hudson's Bay Company
D) all of the above
Question
The first of many substances for which huge markets emerged in developed nations was:

A) cocaine
B) chocolate
C) sugar
D) poppies
Question
All of the following are included in underdevelopment except:

A) poverty
B) hunger
C) overpopulation
D) dependency
Question
The Byrne Corporation has headquarters in Chicago and manufacturing plants in Korea, Brazil, and Australia. It sells its products in 47 countries. The Byrne Corporation may be classified as:

A) a conglomerate
B) a monopoly
C) a multinational corporation
D) an oligopoly
Question
A major difference between the modern multinational corporation and seventeenth-century trading firms like the Dutch East India Company is that:

A) early trading firms had access to more capital
B) early trading firms were much more powerful corporations
C) modern corporations are not granted exclusive rights to trade with other nations
D) modern corporations are likely to rely on military conquest to achieve their goals
Question
When sociologists speak of the "development of underdevelopment," they are referring to the fact that:

A) economic development in industrial nations produces poverty and dependency in third world nations
B) underdeveloped countries are unable to compete in the world economy
C) underdeveloped countries benefit from underdevelopment
D) underdeveloped countries no longer have natural resources to export to developed nations
Question
In the modern world, economic resources are increasingly controlled by:

A) colonial powers
B) government agencies
C) great empires
D) multinational corporations
Question
Which of the following is based on the belief that the wealth of a nation can be measured by its holdings of gold or other precious metals?

A) laissez-faire capitalism
B) mercantilism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
The economic philosophy known as mercantilism held that a nation's wealth could be measured by:

A) its capacity to produce goods and services
B) its holdings of gold and other precious metals
C) the average income of its working class
D) the literacy level of its citizens
Question
Which of the following was NOT an element of mercantilism?

A) A nation's wealth could be measured by the amount of gold held by the royal court.
B) Economic growth depended on increasing the nation's exports.
C) Production must be controlled by guilds.
D) There should be unrestrained competition in the marketplace.
Question
Which of the following is NOT an element of laissez-faire capitalism?

A) A society's wealth may be measured only by its capacity to produce goods and services.
B) Economic decisions should be controlled by the workers.
C) The production of goods and services is regulated by free trade.
D) Workers should be freed from the restrictions imposed by feudalism.
Question
Malcolm Chan believes that owners of property should be free to do almost anything they like with it in order to make profits. In addition, he feels that when an individual makes a profit in a business venture the entire society benefits. Chan's beliefs represent the economic philosophy known as:

A) laissez-faire capitalism
B) mercantilism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
The economic philosophy based on public ownership of property is

A) mercantilism
B) capitalism
C) democratic socialism
D) socialism
Question
All of the following are elements of laissez-faire capitalism EXCEPT:

A) Free markets provide better products at lower prices than other producers could offer.
B) Markets should determine what goods will be produced, but the government should regulate competition.
C) Owners of property should be free to do almost anything they like with it in order to make profits.
D) Workers should be free from the restraints imposed by guilds.
Question
Laissez-faire capitalism arose as a reaction to which of the following economic philosophies?

A) mercantilism
B) socialism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Adam Smith's concept of the "invisible hand" refers to the belief that:

A) competitive markets improve the quality of life for everyone
B) God influences all economic matters
C) people are not aware of their own economic interests
D) there is a limit to economic growth
Question
Laissez-faire economists believe that human life would be best improved by:

A) a guaranteed minimum income for all citizens
B) allowing unrestrained competition in the marketplace
C) increasing a nation's holdings of gold and other precious metals
D) public ownership of property and the sharing of profits
Question
Which of the following is an economic philosophy based on public ownership of property and sharing of profits?

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Early socialists called economics the "dismal science" because it:

A) destroyed the guild system
B) inevitably led to war
C) justified the exploitation of the masses
D) undermined the philosophy of mercantilism
Question
All of the following are elements of a socialist economic system EXCEPT:

A) centralized planning
B) public ownership of property and the sharing of profits
C) several political parties competing for power
D) worker participation in production decisions
Question
Sam Greene believes that laissez-faire capitalism exploits workers and increases human misery. He advocates a system of centralized planning in which workers determine what is to be produced and how it is to be distributed. Greene supports the economic philosophy known as:

A) democratic socialism
B) socialism
C) utopianism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
An economic system in which demand and supply are regulated by government agencies is a:

A) market economy
B) centralized economy
C) command economy
D) commodity economy
Question
Command economies have had all of the following results EXCEPT:

A) efficient planning and distribution systems
B) overdeveloped industrial infrastructures
C) public dissatisfaction with available goods
D) limited capability to compete in world markets
Question
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of a command economy?

A) centralized planning
B) government control of supply and demand
C) efficiency in the allocation of goods and services
D) public ownership of the means of production
Question
Which of the following is an economic philosophy based on the belief that private property may exist at the same time that large corporations are owned by the state and run for the benefit of all citizens?

A) democratic socialism
B) mercantilism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Which of the following is a central element of democratic socialism?

A) elimination of competitive markets
B) elimination of private property
C) promotion of exports
D) state ownership of large corporations
Question
Although John Dombec believes that large corporations should be owned by the nation and run For the benefit of all citizens, he does not favor the elimination of the institutions of private property or competitive markets. Dombec's beliefs represent the economic philosophy known as:

A) communism
B) democratic socialism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Worker control of the production and distribution of goods is an element of which of the following economic philosophies?

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Which of the following economic philosophies allows markets to determine what goods will be produced, but allows the government to regulate economic competition?

A) democratic socialism
B) socialism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Which of the following is NOT an element of welfare capitalism?

A) formation of unions by workers
B) free competition in the marketplace
C) government ownership of large corporations
D) government regulation of competition
Question
John Davis believes that markets should determine what goods will be produced but also that the government should take a strong role in preventing unfair competition. Davis is advocating an economic philosophy known as:

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Question
Which of the following is NOT a basic human right under welfare capitalism?

A) a guaranteed minimum income
B) a minimum level of health care
C) Social Security and pension rights
D) the right to engage in collective bargaining
Question
Which of the following terms is used by Daniel Bell to refer to a society that emphasizes theoretical knowledge as the axis around which new technology, economic growth, and stratification will be organized?

A) global society
B) postindustrial society
C) socialist society
D) urban-industrial society
Question
The major characteristic of postindustrial society is:

A) a guaranteed minimum income
B) intellectual technology
C) machine technology
D) the absence of conflict
Question
In a postindustrial society, economic growth comes from:

A) higher levels of international trade
B) higher levels of productivity on the part of factory workers
C) knowledge and information
D) the emergence of multinational corporations
Question
Which of the following statements about the transition from industrial to postindustrial society is NOT true?

A) It demands lower educational levels on the part of workers.
B) It forces skilled workers into lower-paid jobs in the service sector.
C) It has erased many of the gains made by blacks since World War II.
D) It produces high unemployment in a period of relative prosperity.
Question
All of the following are among the criticisms of postindustrial society EXCEPT:

A) A new working class will emerge to demand a more equal distribution of wealth.
B) Increasing demands for educational qualifications will solidify the position of the black underclass.
C) Industrial production is the central feature of the postindustrial economy.
D) Technologies permit business owners to exert far more control over workers than was possible before.
Question
The social contract, as defined by Daniel Bell in his analysis of the post industrial society,
Provided that in exchange for hard work, saving, and skill improvement, citizens could expect from the government all of the following EXCEPT:

A) adequate healthcare
B) a guaranteed job
C) decent education for their children
D) increasing standard of living
Question
The presidential administration of the 1980s and the congress of the 1990s have held the view that the benefits of the "social contract" should be provided by:

A) individuals themselves
B) the economy
C) the family
D) the government
Question
The feeling of being powerless to control one's own destiny is termed:

A) abandonment
B) alienation
C) anomie
D) disillusionment
Question
In which of the following situations is a worker most likely to feel alienated?

A) building a cabinet
B) designing a building
C) performing highly repetitive tasks on an assembly line
D) working in groups whose tasks involve teamwork
Question
Japanese firms tend to avoid worker alienation by:

A) instituting flexible work schedules
B) paying workers more
C) rewarding individual initiative
D) strengthening the role of the small group
Question
Maquilladora industries on the Mexican border have working conditions that

A) promote good community relationships
B) are exclusively male dominated.
C) are illegal in the United States
D) are increasing the demand for full time employees
Question
A mentor is one who will do all of the following except

A) prevent burnout.
B) teach employees how to deal with supervisors
C) how to work effectively.
D) work to increase employee alienation.
Question
Union-management negotiating that occurs after management agrees to sign a union contract is:

A) collective negotiating
B) collective bargaining
C) union bargaining
D) union negotiating
Question
Union contracts provide for which of the following:

A) power to influence decisions
B) the right to set their wages
C) some measure of justice and due process at work
D) a grievance system that gives the power to management
Question
The term "free rider" refers to:

A) union member who benefits from the work of the union leaders
B) employees who are paid less than union members
C) striking union members who continue to receive their pay
D) employees who are non union members receiving benefits of union members
Question
Since the 1950s union membership in the United States:

A) has risen slightly
B) has been increasing dramatically
C) has seen a decline
D) has not changed
Question
Compared to employers in Europe, employers in the United States are:

A) more likely to accept unions
B) less tolerant of unions
C) working quietly to change the power of the unions
D) are extremely anti-union
Question
When workers are aware of their lower status and inequality and feel there is little they can do about it, this is:

A) false perception
B) affective status
C) poor workplace relations
D) false consciousness
Question
In the work environment, the function of a manager is to:

A) change levels of production
B) reduce interpersonal relations
C) motivate employees to work effectively
D) groom employees for other jobs in industries
Question
The process of collective bargaining can include discussions on all of the following EXCEPT:

A) pay
B) employment for spouses
C) benefits
D) working conditions
Question
Which of the following is responsible for the reforms in American capitalism?

A) anti-union employers
B) unions
C) deregulation of certain industries
D) the environmental protection movement
Question
Industrial sociology is concerned with:

A) devising techniques to increase worker productivity
B) discovering factors that motivate workers
C) increasing worker morale
D) the social organization of work
Question
Taylorism and human relations management are examples of which of the following perspectives in industrial sociology?

A) conflict theory
B) functionalism
C) interactionism
D) socialism
Question
The goal of Elton Mayo's study of Western Electric's Hawthorne plant was to:

A) bring unions into the decision-making process
B) find ways to introduce technological innovations into the workplace
C) reduce tensions between workers and managers
D) understand the effect of informal organization on the factory's formal organization and goals
Question
Frederick W. Taylor is associated with the approach to industrial relations known as:

A) conflict theory
B) human relations
C) industrial ecology
D) scientific management
Question
Scientific management is most concerned with:

A) decreasing absenteeism
B) increasing productivity
C) increasing worker commitment to the organization
D) raising worker morale
Question
Which of the following is NOT associated with the approach to industrial relations known as scientific management?

A) hiring inexperienced workers
B) piecework payment systems
C) teamwork between workers and management
D) time and motion studies
Question
On the basis of his Hawthorne Plant studies, Elton Mayo concluded that worker productivity could be increased by:

A) emphasizing teamwork among workers and managers
B) improving lighting
C) increasing the number of rest periods
D) using pay incentives
Question
The managers of the Conrad Corporation believe that workers are basically lazy and lack initiative. They have decided that the best way to increase productivity is to reorganize work and increase the division of labor. Since the only reason people come to work is for a paycheck, workers' salaries will be tied to their productivity. This approach represents what industrial sociologists call the:

A) conflict approach
B) human relations approach
C) industrial ecology approach
D) scientific management approach
Question
Efforts to improve cooperation between workers and managers in order to achieve the organization's goals are characteristic of:

A) conflict-oriented approach to management
B) professionalization
C) scientific management
D) the human-relations approach to management
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Deck 18: Economic Institutions
1
The story in which the American businessman E. L. Winthrop wanted the Indian to weave a large number of baskets illustrates:

A) a failure of communication
B) cultural relativism
C) differences between the institutions of folk and industrial societies
D) ethnocentrism
differences between the institutions of folk and industrial societies
2
The institutions that are concerned with production and distribution of goods and services constitute a society's:

A) economic institutions
B) family institutions
C) political institutions
D) religious institutions
economic institutions
3
The idea that people will attempt to maximize their pleasure or profit in any situation and will also try to minimize their loss or pain is referred to as the:

A) capitalist theory of economics
B) central theory of economics
C) maximization principle
D) theory of contingency
central theory of economics
4
Among the hallmarks of industrial society is the production of all of the following EXCEPT:

A) commodities
B) information
C) professions
D) services
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is characteristic of subsistence economies?

A) complex division of labor
B) family as basic production unit
C) highly developed markets
D) production of surplus commodities
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Economic institutions that regulate exchange behavior are

A) markets
B) exchange mediums
C) divisions of labor
D) networks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The sociologist who applied the economic rational choice approach to group behavior was

A) Karl Marx
B) Gary Becker
C) Peter Berger
D) Robert Merton
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In a market, prices for various goods and services are established based on:

A) changing levels of supply and demand
B) governmental policy
C) how buyers and sellers are related
D) the cost of producing them
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following is NOT essential to a market?

A) a medium of exchange
B) a place to hold exchanges
C) government support
D) use of contracts
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In market transactions, impersonal relations are possible because other roles of the participants are neutralized through the use of:

A) contracts
B) currency
C) division of labor
D) networking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Market transactions are governed by

A) bureaucracies
B) contracts
C) mercantile associations
D) markets
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
An economy in which producers try to meet the needs of their immediate and extended families and do not produce goods for export is known as:

A) basic economy
B) market economy
C) subsistence economy
D) contract economy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following are economic institutions that regulate exchange behavior?

A) bureaucracies
B) markets
C) mercantile associations
D) soviets
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
All of the following have accelerated the spread of markets into nonmarket societies EXCEPT:

A) colonialism
B) desire for goods produced by industrial societies
C) political conquest
D) the emergence of new technologies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Immanuel Wallerstein argues that the new type of social organization that emerged in the later fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries was based on:

A) economic relationships
B) political empires
C) religious fragmentation
D) war and conquest
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
According to Immanuel Wallerstein, political empires can be seen as a form of:

A) economic domination
B) economic innovation
C) economic production
D) economic redistribution
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Immanuel Wallerstein argues that the major drawback of political empires was their:

A) lack of economic productivity
B) lack of political stability
C) need for a huge military and civil bureaucracy
D) need to continually find new peoples to conquer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
An economic enterprise that has headquarters in one country and conducts business activities in one or more other countries is called:

A) a conglomerate
B) a monopoly
C) a multinational corporation
D) an oligopoly
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
An example of an early multinational corporation was

A) International Business Machines
B) U.S. Steel
C) Hudson's Bay Company
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The first of many substances for which huge markets emerged in developed nations was:

A) cocaine
B) chocolate
C) sugar
D) poppies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
All of the following are included in underdevelopment except:

A) poverty
B) hunger
C) overpopulation
D) dependency
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The Byrne Corporation has headquarters in Chicago and manufacturing plants in Korea, Brazil, and Australia. It sells its products in 47 countries. The Byrne Corporation may be classified as:

A) a conglomerate
B) a monopoly
C) a multinational corporation
D) an oligopoly
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
A major difference between the modern multinational corporation and seventeenth-century trading firms like the Dutch East India Company is that:

A) early trading firms had access to more capital
B) early trading firms were much more powerful corporations
C) modern corporations are not granted exclusive rights to trade with other nations
D) modern corporations are likely to rely on military conquest to achieve their goals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
When sociologists speak of the "development of underdevelopment," they are referring to the fact that:

A) economic development in industrial nations produces poverty and dependency in third world nations
B) underdeveloped countries are unable to compete in the world economy
C) underdeveloped countries benefit from underdevelopment
D) underdeveloped countries no longer have natural resources to export to developed nations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In the modern world, economic resources are increasingly controlled by:

A) colonial powers
B) government agencies
C) great empires
D) multinational corporations
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which of the following is based on the belief that the wealth of a nation can be measured by its holdings of gold or other precious metals?

A) laissez-faire capitalism
B) mercantilism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The economic philosophy known as mercantilism held that a nation's wealth could be measured by:

A) its capacity to produce goods and services
B) its holdings of gold and other precious metals
C) the average income of its working class
D) the literacy level of its citizens
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following was NOT an element of mercantilism?

A) A nation's wealth could be measured by the amount of gold held by the royal court.
B) Economic growth depended on increasing the nation's exports.
C) Production must be controlled by guilds.
D) There should be unrestrained competition in the marketplace.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following is NOT an element of laissez-faire capitalism?

A) A society's wealth may be measured only by its capacity to produce goods and services.
B) Economic decisions should be controlled by the workers.
C) The production of goods and services is regulated by free trade.
D) Workers should be freed from the restrictions imposed by feudalism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Malcolm Chan believes that owners of property should be free to do almost anything they like with it in order to make profits. In addition, he feels that when an individual makes a profit in a business venture the entire society benefits. Chan's beliefs represent the economic philosophy known as:

A) laissez-faire capitalism
B) mercantilism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The economic philosophy based on public ownership of property is

A) mercantilism
B) capitalism
C) democratic socialism
D) socialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
All of the following are elements of laissez-faire capitalism EXCEPT:

A) Free markets provide better products at lower prices than other producers could offer.
B) Markets should determine what goods will be produced, but the government should regulate competition.
C) Owners of property should be free to do almost anything they like with it in order to make profits.
D) Workers should be free from the restraints imposed by guilds.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Laissez-faire capitalism arose as a reaction to which of the following economic philosophies?

A) mercantilism
B) socialism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Adam Smith's concept of the "invisible hand" refers to the belief that:

A) competitive markets improve the quality of life for everyone
B) God influences all economic matters
C) people are not aware of their own economic interests
D) there is a limit to economic growth
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Laissez-faire economists believe that human life would be best improved by:

A) a guaranteed minimum income for all citizens
B) allowing unrestrained competition in the marketplace
C) increasing a nation's holdings of gold and other precious metals
D) public ownership of property and the sharing of profits
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following is an economic philosophy based on public ownership of property and sharing of profits?

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Early socialists called economics the "dismal science" because it:

A) destroyed the guild system
B) inevitably led to war
C) justified the exploitation of the masses
D) undermined the philosophy of mercantilism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
All of the following are elements of a socialist economic system EXCEPT:

A) centralized planning
B) public ownership of property and the sharing of profits
C) several political parties competing for power
D) worker participation in production decisions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Sam Greene believes that laissez-faire capitalism exploits workers and increases human misery. He advocates a system of centralized planning in which workers determine what is to be produced and how it is to be distributed. Greene supports the economic philosophy known as:

A) democratic socialism
B) socialism
C) utopianism
D) welfare capitalism
Unlock Deck
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40
An economic system in which demand and supply are regulated by government agencies is a:

A) market economy
B) centralized economy
C) command economy
D) commodity economy
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41
Command economies have had all of the following results EXCEPT:

A) efficient planning and distribution systems
B) overdeveloped industrial infrastructures
C) public dissatisfaction with available goods
D) limited capability to compete in world markets
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42
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of a command economy?

A) centralized planning
B) government control of supply and demand
C) efficiency in the allocation of goods and services
D) public ownership of the means of production
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43
Which of the following is an economic philosophy based on the belief that private property may exist at the same time that large corporations are owned by the state and run for the benefit of all citizens?

A) democratic socialism
B) mercantilism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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44
Which of the following is a central element of democratic socialism?

A) elimination of competitive markets
B) elimination of private property
C) promotion of exports
D) state ownership of large corporations
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45
Although John Dombec believes that large corporations should be owned by the nation and run For the benefit of all citizens, he does not favor the elimination of the institutions of private property or competitive markets. Dombec's beliefs represent the economic philosophy known as:

A) communism
B) democratic socialism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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46
Worker control of the production and distribution of goods is an element of which of the following economic philosophies?

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
47
Which of the following economic philosophies allows markets to determine what goods will be produced, but allows the government to regulate economic competition?

A) democratic socialism
B) socialism
C) venture capitalism
D) welfare capitalism
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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48
Which of the following is NOT an element of welfare capitalism?

A) formation of unions by workers
B) free competition in the marketplace
C) government ownership of large corporations
D) government regulation of competition
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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49
John Davis believes that markets should determine what goods will be produced but also that the government should take a strong role in preventing unfair competition. Davis is advocating an economic philosophy known as:

A) democratic socialism
B) laissez-faire capitalism
C) socialism
D) welfare capitalism
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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50
Which of the following is NOT a basic human right under welfare capitalism?

A) a guaranteed minimum income
B) a minimum level of health care
C) Social Security and pension rights
D) the right to engage in collective bargaining
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Which of the following terms is used by Daniel Bell to refer to a society that emphasizes theoretical knowledge as the axis around which new technology, economic growth, and stratification will be organized?

A) global society
B) postindustrial society
C) socialist society
D) urban-industrial society
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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52
The major characteristic of postindustrial society is:

A) a guaranteed minimum income
B) intellectual technology
C) machine technology
D) the absence of conflict
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
53
In a postindustrial society, economic growth comes from:

A) higher levels of international trade
B) higher levels of productivity on the part of factory workers
C) knowledge and information
D) the emergence of multinational corporations
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
Which of the following statements about the transition from industrial to postindustrial society is NOT true?

A) It demands lower educational levels on the part of workers.
B) It forces skilled workers into lower-paid jobs in the service sector.
C) It has erased many of the gains made by blacks since World War II.
D) It produces high unemployment in a period of relative prosperity.
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
All of the following are among the criticisms of postindustrial society EXCEPT:

A) A new working class will emerge to demand a more equal distribution of wealth.
B) Increasing demands for educational qualifications will solidify the position of the black underclass.
C) Industrial production is the central feature of the postindustrial economy.
D) Technologies permit business owners to exert far more control over workers than was possible before.
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
The social contract, as defined by Daniel Bell in his analysis of the post industrial society,
Provided that in exchange for hard work, saving, and skill improvement, citizens could expect from the government all of the following EXCEPT:

A) adequate healthcare
B) a guaranteed job
C) decent education for their children
D) increasing standard of living
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
The presidential administration of the 1980s and the congress of the 1990s have held the view that the benefits of the "social contract" should be provided by:

A) individuals themselves
B) the economy
C) the family
D) the government
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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58
The feeling of being powerless to control one's own destiny is termed:

A) abandonment
B) alienation
C) anomie
D) disillusionment
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
In which of the following situations is a worker most likely to feel alienated?

A) building a cabinet
B) designing a building
C) performing highly repetitive tasks on an assembly line
D) working in groups whose tasks involve teamwork
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
Japanese firms tend to avoid worker alienation by:

A) instituting flexible work schedules
B) paying workers more
C) rewarding individual initiative
D) strengthening the role of the small group
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Maquilladora industries on the Mexican border have working conditions that

A) promote good community relationships
B) are exclusively male dominated.
C) are illegal in the United States
D) are increasing the demand for full time employees
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
A mentor is one who will do all of the following except

A) prevent burnout.
B) teach employees how to deal with supervisors
C) how to work effectively.
D) work to increase employee alienation.
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Union-management negotiating that occurs after management agrees to sign a union contract is:

A) collective negotiating
B) collective bargaining
C) union bargaining
D) union negotiating
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
64
Union contracts provide for which of the following:

A) power to influence decisions
B) the right to set their wages
C) some measure of justice and due process at work
D) a grievance system that gives the power to management
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
The term "free rider" refers to:

A) union member who benefits from the work of the union leaders
B) employees who are paid less than union members
C) striking union members who continue to receive their pay
D) employees who are non union members receiving benefits of union members
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Since the 1950s union membership in the United States:

A) has risen slightly
B) has been increasing dramatically
C) has seen a decline
D) has not changed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Compared to employers in Europe, employers in the United States are:

A) more likely to accept unions
B) less tolerant of unions
C) working quietly to change the power of the unions
D) are extremely anti-union
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
When workers are aware of their lower status and inequality and feel there is little they can do about it, this is:

A) false perception
B) affective status
C) poor workplace relations
D) false consciousness
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
In the work environment, the function of a manager is to:

A) change levels of production
B) reduce interpersonal relations
C) motivate employees to work effectively
D) groom employees for other jobs in industries
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
The process of collective bargaining can include discussions on all of the following EXCEPT:

A) pay
B) employment for spouses
C) benefits
D) working conditions
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
Which of the following is responsible for the reforms in American capitalism?

A) anti-union employers
B) unions
C) deregulation of certain industries
D) the environmental protection movement
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Industrial sociology is concerned with:

A) devising techniques to increase worker productivity
B) discovering factors that motivate workers
C) increasing worker morale
D) the social organization of work
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Taylorism and human relations management are examples of which of the following perspectives in industrial sociology?

A) conflict theory
B) functionalism
C) interactionism
D) socialism
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74
The goal of Elton Mayo's study of Western Electric's Hawthorne plant was to:

A) bring unions into the decision-making process
B) find ways to introduce technological innovations into the workplace
C) reduce tensions between workers and managers
D) understand the effect of informal organization on the factory's formal organization and goals
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Frederick W. Taylor is associated with the approach to industrial relations known as:

A) conflict theory
B) human relations
C) industrial ecology
D) scientific management
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Unlock Deck
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76
Scientific management is most concerned with:

A) decreasing absenteeism
B) increasing productivity
C) increasing worker commitment to the organization
D) raising worker morale
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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77
Which of the following is NOT associated with the approach to industrial relations known as scientific management?

A) hiring inexperienced workers
B) piecework payment systems
C) teamwork between workers and management
D) time and motion studies
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
On the basis of his Hawthorne Plant studies, Elton Mayo concluded that worker productivity could be increased by:

A) emphasizing teamwork among workers and managers
B) improving lighting
C) increasing the number of rest periods
D) using pay incentives
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
The managers of the Conrad Corporation believe that workers are basically lazy and lack initiative. They have decided that the best way to increase productivity is to reorganize work and increase the division of labor. Since the only reason people come to work is for a paycheck, workers' salaries will be tied to their productivity. This approach represents what industrial sociologists call the:

A) conflict approach
B) human relations approach
C) industrial ecology approach
D) scientific management approach
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Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
Efforts to improve cooperation between workers and managers in order to achieve the organization's goals are characteristic of:

A) conflict-oriented approach to management
B) professionalization
C) scientific management
D) the human-relations approach to management
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Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 146 flashcards in this deck.