Deck 1: Economics: The Study of Choice

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Question
The study of how people choose among the alternatives available to them is the:

A) definition of economics.
B) model of demand.
C) theory of opportunity costs.
D) method of distinguishing between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
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Question
Water is considered a scarce good rather than a free good because:

A) it has alternative uses.
B) it does not have alternative uses.
C) scarce goods are less expensive than free goods.
D) free goods are more expensive than scarce goods.
Question
The concept of scarcity indicates that:

A) most goods have no alternative uses.
B) almost all goods have alternative uses.
C) most decisions can be made without sacrificing alternatives.
D) certain societies are able to overcome the constraints imposed by alternative uses of resources.
Question
The problem of scarcity is confronted by:

A) industrialized societies.
B) pre-industrialized societies.
C) societies governed by communist philosophies.
D) all societies.
Question
When we are forced to make choices we are facing the concept of:

A) ceteris paribus.
B) free goods.
C) scarcity.
D) the margin.
Question
A scarce resource is one that:

A) is free.
B) is abundant.
C) has alternative uses.
D) has no alternative uses.
Question
The existence of alternative uses of a resource implies that it is:

A) free.
B) scarce.
C) expensive.
D) plentiful.
Question
Which of the following is most likely an example of a free good?

A) Sand in aquarium
B) Sand in the middle of a desert
C) Sand in a children's sandbox
D) Sand at the beach
Question
Economics, generally speaking, is primarily concerned with:

A) the operation of the bond and stock markets.
B) the issues of income inequality or income equality.
C) how people choose among the alternatives available to them.
D) ceteris paribus, the scientific method, and the margin.
Question
Scarcity exists when:

A) a choice must be made among two or more alternatives.
B) we face the notion of "all other things unchanged."
C) countries and people find themselves facing poverty.
D) the notions of normative economics come into play.
Question
The basic concern of economics is to:

A) keep business firms from losing money.
B) prove that capitalism is better than socialism.
C) study the choices people make.
D) use unlimited resources to produce goods and services to satisfy limited wants.
Question
A(n) _______ does not pose the problem of scarcity; one use of the good is not an alternative to another use.

A) free good
B) scarce good
C) economic good
D) monetary good
Question
Although water is very abundant in most places, it is scarce because:

A) it has no alternative uses.
B) it has two or more alternative uses.
C) it is a free good and not expensive.
D) scarce goods in general are not all that costly.
Question
The opportunity cost of going to a movie is:

A) the money spent on the ticket only.
B) all of the other movies that could have been seen instead.
C) the time spent in the theater only.
D) the next best use of the time and the money spent.
Question
Scarcity in economics means:

A) not having sufficient resources to produce all the goods and services we want.
B) the wants of people are limited.
C) there must be poor people in rich countries.
D) economists are clearly not doing their jobs.
Question
According to the textbook, economics is a:

A) social science.
B) study of business decisions, not social decisions.
C) part of operations and management science.
D) part of humanities.
Question
A scarce resource is one that:

A) has two or more alternative uses.
B) exhibits the basic properties of a free good.
C) is confronted only under socialist conditions.
D) has an unlimited supply.
Question
Economics is a:

A) social science that studies goods with no alternative uses.
B) natural science that studies goods with no alternative uses.
C) social science concerned chiefly with how people choose among alternatives.
D) social science concerned chiefly with reasons why society has unlimited resources.
Question
Economics is a:

A) social science that deals with making choices among alternatives.
B) natural science that concerns itself with allocating relatively scarce resources among alternative ends.
C) science that has no theories or models based on the scientific method.
D) humanities course that mainly concerns itself with limited wants versus unlimited resources.
Question
A key theme fundamental to all of economics is:

A) there are limited wants.
B) we are a rich country but are simply not aware of it.
C) people have unlimited wants facing limited means to satisfy them.
D) there are unlimited resources.
Question
Whenever a choice is made:

A) the value of all the other choices that could have been made is called opportunity cost.
B) normative economics is encountered.
C) the problem of "all other things unchanged" results.
D) the opportunity cost of that choice is the highest-valued other choice that could have been made.
Question
The problem of determining how goods and services should be produced is a problem of deciding:

A) the best combinations of resources to be used for producing goods and services.
B) the extent to which imports should be reduced relative to exports.
C) the extent to which exports should be reduced relative to imports.
D) who owns the resources.
Question
The problem of determining what goods and services society should produce:

A) exists because we can produce more than we need or want.
B) exists because there are not enough resources to provide all the goods and services that people want to purchase.
C) would not exist if all goods and services were scarce.
D) would not exist if government owned all of the resources.
Question
The statement that "there is no such thing as a free lunch" means:

A) there are no tradeoffs between economic goals.
B) any production requires the use of scarce resources, and thus the sacrifice of another alternative.
C) choices need not be made in rational behavior.
D) scarcity only exists in poor societies.
Question
The problem of determining for whom to produce exists because:

A) government regulations prevent firms from producing the kinds of goods that consumers want.
B) a decision that one person or group will receive a good or service usually means that another person or group will not.
C) taxes on firms make it more costly for them to produce all the goods that people want.
D) taxes on consumers make it more difficult for them to buy all the goods they want.
Question
The fundamental economic questions that every economic system must answer are:

A) what, how, and for whom.
B) what, why, and for whom.
C) when, why, and for whom.
D) how, when, and how much.
Question
Opportunity cost is:

A) the costs of all sacrifices not chosen when a choice is made.
B) the highest valued other choice that could have been made.
C) the result of having made a bad choice.
D) the result of not making choices at the margin.
Question
A free good is:

A) also a scarce good.
B) a relatively abundant good.
C) a good with no opportunity cost.
D) a good with relatively low opportunity cost.
Question
In the 1930s, the federal government established the social security system to provide a minimum level of income to elderly and disabled people.This primarily addressed the economic question of:

A) When will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) What goods and services should a society produce?
D) How should the resources be organized for production?
Question
One question that arises when determining for whom goods and services should be produced is:

A) Who gets how much of the economic pie?
B) How can we import more goods for domestic consumption?
C) How can we reduce exports so as to leave more goods for domestic consumption?
D) Should society outlaw child labor?
Question
The three fundamental economic questions of what, how, and for whom:

A) exist because of scarcity.
B) are much more serious in a socialist system.
C) are not serious in a capitalistic system.
D) are not relevant in the industrialized world of today.
Question
An answer to the question "How are goods produced?" determines:

A) who receives the goods that are produced.
B) how tastes and preferences are determined.
C) how resources are combined in the production of goods.
D) the types and quantities of goods and services produced.
Question
In the 1970s, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) tripled the price of petroleum, causing automobile manufacturers to look for ways to produce more fuel-efficient cars by substituting aluminum and plastic for steel.This was primarily a response to the economic question of:

A) When will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) What goods and services should a society produce?
D) How should goods and services be produced?
Question
The problem of determining what goods and services society should produce exists because:

A) resources are plentiful.
B) resources are scarce.
C) most of our resources are privately rather than socially owned.
D) most of our resources are socially rather than privately owned.
Question
An answer to the question "For whom" determines:

A) tastes and preferences.
B) how resources are combined in production.
C) the kinds and quantities of goods produced.
D) who gets the goods and services produced.
Question
A free good is different from a scarce good because it is:

A) not tradable.
B) not produced.
C) not scarce.
D) found only in nature.
Question
The problem of determining how goods and services should be produced exists because:

A) we do not have enough skilled workers relative to the number of unskilled workers.
B) we do not have enough unskilled workers relative to the number of skilled workers.
C) corporations want to avoid changing their methods of production.
D) most goods can be produced with different combinations of resources.
Question
Suppose that voters in your community pass a one-cent sales tax increase to fund education, knowing full well they will have to forgo other goods they typically consume.This primarily addresses the economic question of:

A) How will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) Why will the resources be used to produce goods?
D) What goods and services should a society produce?
Question
Whenever a choice is made:

A) the cost of that choice could be referred to as opportunity cost.
B) the cost is easy to measure in dollar terms.
C) a free good must be involved.
D) scarcity is not the problem.
Question
The answer to, "What goods are to be produced?" deals with:

A) who gets the goods.
B) how tastes and preferences are determined.
C) how resources are combined to produce goods and services.
D) the kinds and quantities of goods and services produced.
Question
The concept of the margin deals with:

A) making incremental choices.
B) one more or one less of something.
C) doing a little more or a little less.
D) all of the above.
Question
Economics is different from other social sciences because it gives special emphasis to the study of ______; it is similar to other social sciences because they are all concerned with the study of _______.

A) unlimited resources; economic systems
B) human interactions; limited resources
C) opportunity costs; choices
D) social behavior; scarcity
Question
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) more attention paid to benefits rather than the costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to average out some objective.
C) emphasis on how choices are made at the margin.
D) the notion that the industrialized nations have solved the problem of scarcity.
Question
Opportunity cost is:

A) zero for the use of a free combo meal offer.
B) the dollar payment for a product.
C) the benefit derived from a product.
D) the value of the best alternative forgone in making any choice.
Question
Making choices that are expected to achieve the highest possible value for some objective is termed:

A) maximizing.
B) minimizing.
C) sanitizing.
D) satisfying.
Question
The BEST example of making a choice at the margin is:

A) buying a new car.
B) quitting your job.
C) a coffee drinker drinking another cup of coffee.
D) attending college.
Question
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) more attention paid to benefits rather than the costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to maximize some objective.
C) emphasis on how choices affect total values rather than marginal values.
D) the notion that the world has solved the problem of scarcity.
Question
Unemployment and inflation are:

A) not relevant in the U.S.economy today.
B) major topics in macroeconomics.
C) unique only to capitalistic economies.
D) very important in the study of microeconomics.
Question
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) attention paid to the opportunity costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to average out some objective.
C) concern with the biological make up of decision makers.
D) emphasis on how choices affect total values rather than marginal values.
Question
The sacrifice of an alternative is called:

A) revenue.
B) benefit.
C) opportunity cost.
D) production.
Question
Microeconomics deals with:

A) the working of the entire economy or large sectors of it.
B) employment, growth, and inflation.
C) individual units in the economy.
D) normative economics for the most part.
Question
The study of a single firm and how it determines prices would fall under:

A) macroeconomics.
B) microeconomics.
C) the study of inflation.
D) normative economics.
Question
The opportunity cost of something is:

A) greater during periods of rising prices.
B) equal to the money cost.
C) less during periods of falling prices.
D) what is given up to acquire it.
Question
A choice made _______ is a choice whether to do a little more or a little less of something.

A) at the front end
B) in the beginning
C) at the margin
D) all of the above.
Question
Macroeconomics deals with:

A) bits and pieces of the economy.
B) the question of how a business unit should operate profitably.
C) the analysis of the aggregate values in the economy.
D) ceteris paribus.
Question
The primary emphasis in macroeconomics is on:

A) how firms set prices.
B) aggregates in the economy.
C) marginal analysis and normative economics.
D) international trade and environmental economics.
Question
The economic way of thinking has to do with:

A) analyzing benefits but not costs.
B) analyzing costs but not benefits.
C) making choices at the margin.
D) making the distinction between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
Question
The branch of economics that examines the choices of consumers and firms is:

A) positive economics.
B) normative economics.
C) macroeconomics.
D) microeconomics.
Question
Which of the following would be a part of macroeconomics? A study of:

A) the change in automobile sales due to a change in the price of automobiles.
B) a tax reduction impact on the profits of a business.
C) inflation.
D) the unemployment of workers displaced by technological change in the typesetting industry.
Question
A feature that distinguishes economists' approach to making choices is (are):

A) assigning opportunity costs a major role in their analyses of choices.
B) assuming individuals make choices to maximize objectives.
C) emphasizing that choices are made at the margin.
D) all of the above.
Question
A systematic set of procedures through which knowledge is created is:

A) the economy.
B) the scientific method.
C) a market.
D) a model.
Question
Economists concerned about the behavior of individual households, firms, and industries are studying:

A) microeconomics.
B) macroeconomics.
C) neither macroeconomics nor microeconomics.
D) the "forest" of economic behavior, rather than the "trees."
Question
The branch of economics that examines the impact of choices on aggregates in the economy is:

A) positive economics.
B) normative economics.
C) macroeconomics.
D) microeconomics.
Question
The scientific method is more difficult for economists than, say, chemists, because:

A) controlled laboratory conditions are more problematic in economics.
B) it is difficult to hold other factors that may affect the variables being studied constant in economics.
C) economic conditions may change quickly and unexpectedly.
D) all of the above.
Question
A proposition about the relationship between two variables that can be proven false is called:

A) a hypothesis.
B) a law.
C) a theory.
D) the scientific method.
Question
Economists concerned about economy-wide trends in the unemployment of labor, the rate of inflation, and the level of economic production are studying:

A) microeconomics.
B) macroeconomics.
C) specific units or parts of the economy.
D) the "trees" of economic behavior, rather than the "forest."
Question
A hypothesis is an assertion that can be:

A) proven to be false.
B) proven to be true.
C) proven to be true or false.
D) tested only in the normative sense.
Question
The Case in Point on the Simpsons indicated that time is:

A) a scarce resource.
B) a resource without alternative uses.
C) a ubiquitous resource.
D) not a resource.
Question
Something whose value does not change is a:

A) variable.
B) constant.
C) hypothesis.
D) all of the above.
Question
Which of the following statements is (are) true?

A) A model is a set of simplifying assumptions about some aspect of the real world.
B) Models are based on assumed conditions that are simpler than those of the real world.
C) A model cannot be a complete representation of the real world.
D) All of the above are true.
Question
A hypothesis that has been tested extensively without being rejected and has won widespread acceptance is a:

A) model.
B) constant.
C) variable.
D) theory.
Question
Macroeconomics is most likely to be concerned with the:

A) amount of unemployment in a specific industry.
B) economic behavior of a particular household.
C) economic behavior of specific parts or units of the economy.
D) aggregates in the economy.
Question
Economic models are:

A) created and used in order to duplicate virtually every aspect of the real world.
B) useless if they are simple.
C) made generally of wood, plastic, and/or metal.
D) built using assumptions.
Question
A model or theory in economics is:

A) based mostly on value judgments.
B) built using relevant observations, assumptions, and abstractions.
C) only useful if it correctly portrays the real world and its complexities.
D) useful only if it is based on normative economic statements.
Question
Anything whose value can change is a:

A) variable.
B) constant.
C) hypothesis.
D) all of the above.
Question
Microeconomics is most likely to be concerned with the:

A) economy as a whole.
B) activity of large segments of the economy.
C) economic behavior of specific parts or units of the economy.
D) economy-wide trends in unemployment, prices, and production.
Question
In economics, the function of theories, laws, and hypotheses is to:

A) prevent any misunderstanding of economic behavior.
B) divide topics between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
C) generate a complete and unchanging description of economic behavior.
D) discover relationships between events that are important to economic behavior.
Question
According to the text, which of the following is true?

A) Scientists can prove a hypothesis is true.
B) Scientists can show that a hypothesis is false.
C) Economists really don't try to use the scientific method.
D) None of the above is true.
Question
The Case in Point on the Simpsons indicated that even fictional characters face:

A) diminishing marginal product.
B) opportunity costs.
C) the fallacy of false cause.
D) positive statements.
Question
The models used in economics:

A) are usually limited to variables that are directly related.
B) are essentially not reliable because they are not testable in the real world.
C) are of necessity unrealistic and have no relationship to the real world.
D) emphasize basic relationships by abstracting from complexities in the everyday world.
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Deck 1: Economics: The Study of Choice
1
The study of how people choose among the alternatives available to them is the:

A) definition of economics.
B) model of demand.
C) theory of opportunity costs.
D) method of distinguishing between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
definition of economics.
2
Water is considered a scarce good rather than a free good because:

A) it has alternative uses.
B) it does not have alternative uses.
C) scarce goods are less expensive than free goods.
D) free goods are more expensive than scarce goods.
it has alternative uses.
3
The concept of scarcity indicates that:

A) most goods have no alternative uses.
B) almost all goods have alternative uses.
C) most decisions can be made without sacrificing alternatives.
D) certain societies are able to overcome the constraints imposed by alternative uses of resources.
almost all goods have alternative uses.
4
The problem of scarcity is confronted by:

A) industrialized societies.
B) pre-industrialized societies.
C) societies governed by communist philosophies.
D) all societies.
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k this deck
5
When we are forced to make choices we are facing the concept of:

A) ceteris paribus.
B) free goods.
C) scarcity.
D) the margin.
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k this deck
6
A scarce resource is one that:

A) is free.
B) is abundant.
C) has alternative uses.
D) has no alternative uses.
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7
The existence of alternative uses of a resource implies that it is:

A) free.
B) scarce.
C) expensive.
D) plentiful.
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8
Which of the following is most likely an example of a free good?

A) Sand in aquarium
B) Sand in the middle of a desert
C) Sand in a children's sandbox
D) Sand at the beach
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9
Economics, generally speaking, is primarily concerned with:

A) the operation of the bond and stock markets.
B) the issues of income inequality or income equality.
C) how people choose among the alternatives available to them.
D) ceteris paribus, the scientific method, and the margin.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Scarcity exists when:

A) a choice must be made among two or more alternatives.
B) we face the notion of "all other things unchanged."
C) countries and people find themselves facing poverty.
D) the notions of normative economics come into play.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
11
The basic concern of economics is to:

A) keep business firms from losing money.
B) prove that capitalism is better than socialism.
C) study the choices people make.
D) use unlimited resources to produce goods and services to satisfy limited wants.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
12
A(n) _______ does not pose the problem of scarcity; one use of the good is not an alternative to another use.

A) free good
B) scarce good
C) economic good
D) monetary good
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13
Although water is very abundant in most places, it is scarce because:

A) it has no alternative uses.
B) it has two or more alternative uses.
C) it is a free good and not expensive.
D) scarce goods in general are not all that costly.
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14
The opportunity cost of going to a movie is:

A) the money spent on the ticket only.
B) all of the other movies that could have been seen instead.
C) the time spent in the theater only.
D) the next best use of the time and the money spent.
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15
Scarcity in economics means:

A) not having sufficient resources to produce all the goods and services we want.
B) the wants of people are limited.
C) there must be poor people in rich countries.
D) economists are clearly not doing their jobs.
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k this deck
16
According to the textbook, economics is a:

A) social science.
B) study of business decisions, not social decisions.
C) part of operations and management science.
D) part of humanities.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A scarce resource is one that:

A) has two or more alternative uses.
B) exhibits the basic properties of a free good.
C) is confronted only under socialist conditions.
D) has an unlimited supply.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Economics is a:

A) social science that studies goods with no alternative uses.
B) natural science that studies goods with no alternative uses.
C) social science concerned chiefly with how people choose among alternatives.
D) social science concerned chiefly with reasons why society has unlimited resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Economics is a:

A) social science that deals with making choices among alternatives.
B) natural science that concerns itself with allocating relatively scarce resources among alternative ends.
C) science that has no theories or models based on the scientific method.
D) humanities course that mainly concerns itself with limited wants versus unlimited resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A key theme fundamental to all of economics is:

A) there are limited wants.
B) we are a rich country but are simply not aware of it.
C) people have unlimited wants facing limited means to satisfy them.
D) there are unlimited resources.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Whenever a choice is made:

A) the value of all the other choices that could have been made is called opportunity cost.
B) normative economics is encountered.
C) the problem of "all other things unchanged" results.
D) the opportunity cost of that choice is the highest-valued other choice that could have been made.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
The problem of determining how goods and services should be produced is a problem of deciding:

A) the best combinations of resources to be used for producing goods and services.
B) the extent to which imports should be reduced relative to exports.
C) the extent to which exports should be reduced relative to imports.
D) who owns the resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The problem of determining what goods and services society should produce:

A) exists because we can produce more than we need or want.
B) exists because there are not enough resources to provide all the goods and services that people want to purchase.
C) would not exist if all goods and services were scarce.
D) would not exist if government owned all of the resources.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The statement that "there is no such thing as a free lunch" means:

A) there are no tradeoffs between economic goals.
B) any production requires the use of scarce resources, and thus the sacrifice of another alternative.
C) choices need not be made in rational behavior.
D) scarcity only exists in poor societies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The problem of determining for whom to produce exists because:

A) government regulations prevent firms from producing the kinds of goods that consumers want.
B) a decision that one person or group will receive a good or service usually means that another person or group will not.
C) taxes on firms make it more costly for them to produce all the goods that people want.
D) taxes on consumers make it more difficult for them to buy all the goods they want.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The fundamental economic questions that every economic system must answer are:

A) what, how, and for whom.
B) what, why, and for whom.
C) when, why, and for whom.
D) how, when, and how much.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Opportunity cost is:

A) the costs of all sacrifices not chosen when a choice is made.
B) the highest valued other choice that could have been made.
C) the result of having made a bad choice.
D) the result of not making choices at the margin.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
A free good is:

A) also a scarce good.
B) a relatively abundant good.
C) a good with no opportunity cost.
D) a good with relatively low opportunity cost.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In the 1930s, the federal government established the social security system to provide a minimum level of income to elderly and disabled people.This primarily addressed the economic question of:

A) When will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) What goods and services should a society produce?
D) How should the resources be organized for production?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
One question that arises when determining for whom goods and services should be produced is:

A) Who gets how much of the economic pie?
B) How can we import more goods for domestic consumption?
C) How can we reduce exports so as to leave more goods for domestic consumption?
D) Should society outlaw child labor?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The three fundamental economic questions of what, how, and for whom:

A) exist because of scarcity.
B) are much more serious in a socialist system.
C) are not serious in a capitalistic system.
D) are not relevant in the industrialized world of today.
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32
An answer to the question "How are goods produced?" determines:

A) who receives the goods that are produced.
B) how tastes and preferences are determined.
C) how resources are combined in the production of goods.
D) the types and quantities of goods and services produced.
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33
In the 1970s, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) tripled the price of petroleum, causing automobile manufacturers to look for ways to produce more fuel-efficient cars by substituting aluminum and plastic for steel.This was primarily a response to the economic question of:

A) When will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) What goods and services should a society produce?
D) How should goods and services be produced?
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34
The problem of determining what goods and services society should produce exists because:

A) resources are plentiful.
B) resources are scarce.
C) most of our resources are privately rather than socially owned.
D) most of our resources are socially rather than privately owned.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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35
An answer to the question "For whom" determines:

A) tastes and preferences.
B) how resources are combined in production.
C) the kinds and quantities of goods produced.
D) who gets the goods and services produced.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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36
A free good is different from a scarce good because it is:

A) not tradable.
B) not produced.
C) not scarce.
D) found only in nature.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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37
The problem of determining how goods and services should be produced exists because:

A) we do not have enough skilled workers relative to the number of unskilled workers.
B) we do not have enough unskilled workers relative to the number of skilled workers.
C) corporations want to avoid changing their methods of production.
D) most goods can be produced with different combinations of resources.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
38
Suppose that voters in your community pass a one-cent sales tax increase to fund education, knowing full well they will have to forgo other goods they typically consume.This primarily addresses the economic question of:

A) How will each good be produced?
B) For whom shall the goods be produced?
C) Why will the resources be used to produce goods?
D) What goods and services should a society produce?
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Whenever a choice is made:

A) the cost of that choice could be referred to as opportunity cost.
B) the cost is easy to measure in dollar terms.
C) a free good must be involved.
D) scarcity is not the problem.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
40
The answer to, "What goods are to be produced?" deals with:

A) who gets the goods.
B) how tastes and preferences are determined.
C) how resources are combined to produce goods and services.
D) the kinds and quantities of goods and services produced.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The concept of the margin deals with:

A) making incremental choices.
B) one more or one less of something.
C) doing a little more or a little less.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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42
Economics is different from other social sciences because it gives special emphasis to the study of ______; it is similar to other social sciences because they are all concerned with the study of _______.

A) unlimited resources; economic systems
B) human interactions; limited resources
C) opportunity costs; choices
D) social behavior; scarcity
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
43
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) more attention paid to benefits rather than the costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to average out some objective.
C) emphasis on how choices are made at the margin.
D) the notion that the industrialized nations have solved the problem of scarcity.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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44
Opportunity cost is:

A) zero for the use of a free combo meal offer.
B) the dollar payment for a product.
C) the benefit derived from a product.
D) the value of the best alternative forgone in making any choice.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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45
Making choices that are expected to achieve the highest possible value for some objective is termed:

A) maximizing.
B) minimizing.
C) sanitizing.
D) satisfying.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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46
The BEST example of making a choice at the margin is:

A) buying a new car.
B) quitting your job.
C) a coffee drinker drinking another cup of coffee.
D) attending college.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) more attention paid to benefits rather than the costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to maximize some objective.
C) emphasis on how choices affect total values rather than marginal values.
D) the notion that the world has solved the problem of scarcity.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
48
Unemployment and inflation are:

A) not relevant in the U.S.economy today.
B) major topics in macroeconomics.
C) unique only to capitalistic economies.
D) very important in the study of microeconomics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The economic way of thinking includes:

A) attention paid to the opportunity costs involved in any choice.
B) the assumption that individuals choose to average out some objective.
C) concern with the biological make up of decision makers.
D) emphasis on how choices affect total values rather than marginal values.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The sacrifice of an alternative is called:

A) revenue.
B) benefit.
C) opportunity cost.
D) production.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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51
Microeconomics deals with:

A) the working of the entire economy or large sectors of it.
B) employment, growth, and inflation.
C) individual units in the economy.
D) normative economics for the most part.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
52
The study of a single firm and how it determines prices would fall under:

A) macroeconomics.
B) microeconomics.
C) the study of inflation.
D) normative economics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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53
The opportunity cost of something is:

A) greater during periods of rising prices.
B) equal to the money cost.
C) less during periods of falling prices.
D) what is given up to acquire it.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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54
A choice made _______ is a choice whether to do a little more or a little less of something.

A) at the front end
B) in the beginning
C) at the margin
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Macroeconomics deals with:

A) bits and pieces of the economy.
B) the question of how a business unit should operate profitably.
C) the analysis of the aggregate values in the economy.
D) ceteris paribus.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
56
The primary emphasis in macroeconomics is on:

A) how firms set prices.
B) aggregates in the economy.
C) marginal analysis and normative economics.
D) international trade and environmental economics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
57
The economic way of thinking has to do with:

A) analyzing benefits but not costs.
B) analyzing costs but not benefits.
C) making choices at the margin.
D) making the distinction between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
The branch of economics that examines the choices of consumers and firms is:

A) positive economics.
B) normative economics.
C) macroeconomics.
D) microeconomics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
Which of the following would be a part of macroeconomics? A study of:

A) the change in automobile sales due to a change in the price of automobiles.
B) a tax reduction impact on the profits of a business.
C) inflation.
D) the unemployment of workers displaced by technological change in the typesetting industry.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
A feature that distinguishes economists' approach to making choices is (are):

A) assigning opportunity costs a major role in their analyses of choices.
B) assuming individuals make choices to maximize objectives.
C) emphasizing that choices are made at the margin.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
A systematic set of procedures through which knowledge is created is:

A) the economy.
B) the scientific method.
C) a market.
D) a model.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Economists concerned about the behavior of individual households, firms, and industries are studying:

A) microeconomics.
B) macroeconomics.
C) neither macroeconomics nor microeconomics.
D) the "forest" of economic behavior, rather than the "trees."
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
The branch of economics that examines the impact of choices on aggregates in the economy is:

A) positive economics.
B) normative economics.
C) macroeconomics.
D) microeconomics.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
The scientific method is more difficult for economists than, say, chemists, because:

A) controlled laboratory conditions are more problematic in economics.
B) it is difficult to hold other factors that may affect the variables being studied constant in economics.
C) economic conditions may change quickly and unexpectedly.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
A proposition about the relationship between two variables that can be proven false is called:

A) a hypothesis.
B) a law.
C) a theory.
D) the scientific method.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
66
Economists concerned about economy-wide trends in the unemployment of labor, the rate of inflation, and the level of economic production are studying:

A) microeconomics.
B) macroeconomics.
C) specific units or parts of the economy.
D) the "trees" of economic behavior, rather than the "forest."
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
A hypothesis is an assertion that can be:

A) proven to be false.
B) proven to be true.
C) proven to be true or false.
D) tested only in the normative sense.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The Case in Point on the Simpsons indicated that time is:

A) a scarce resource.
B) a resource without alternative uses.
C) a ubiquitous resource.
D) not a resource.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Something whose value does not change is a:

A) variable.
B) constant.
C) hypothesis.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Which of the following statements is (are) true?

A) A model is a set of simplifying assumptions about some aspect of the real world.
B) Models are based on assumed conditions that are simpler than those of the real world.
C) A model cannot be a complete representation of the real world.
D) All of the above are true.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
A hypothesis that has been tested extensively without being rejected and has won widespread acceptance is a:

A) model.
B) constant.
C) variable.
D) theory.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Macroeconomics is most likely to be concerned with the:

A) amount of unemployment in a specific industry.
B) economic behavior of a particular household.
C) economic behavior of specific parts or units of the economy.
D) aggregates in the economy.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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73
Economic models are:

A) created and used in order to duplicate virtually every aspect of the real world.
B) useless if they are simple.
C) made generally of wood, plastic, and/or metal.
D) built using assumptions.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
A model or theory in economics is:

A) based mostly on value judgments.
B) built using relevant observations, assumptions, and abstractions.
C) only useful if it correctly portrays the real world and its complexities.
D) useful only if it is based on normative economic statements.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Anything whose value can change is a:

A) variable.
B) constant.
C) hypothesis.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Microeconomics is most likely to be concerned with the:

A) economy as a whole.
B) activity of large segments of the economy.
C) economic behavior of specific parts or units of the economy.
D) economy-wide trends in unemployment, prices, and production.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
In economics, the function of theories, laws, and hypotheses is to:

A) prevent any misunderstanding of economic behavior.
B) divide topics between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
C) generate a complete and unchanging description of economic behavior.
D) discover relationships between events that are important to economic behavior.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
According to the text, which of the following is true?

A) Scientists can prove a hypothesis is true.
B) Scientists can show that a hypothesis is false.
C) Economists really don't try to use the scientific method.
D) None of the above is true.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
The Case in Point on the Simpsons indicated that even fictional characters face:

A) diminishing marginal product.
B) opportunity costs.
C) the fallacy of false cause.
D) positive statements.
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Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The models used in economics:

A) are usually limited to variables that are directly related.
B) are essentially not reliable because they are not testable in the real world.
C) are of necessity unrealistic and have no relationship to the real world.
D) emphasize basic relationships by abstracting from complexities in the everyday world.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 145 flashcards in this deck.