Deck 1: The Role and Method of Economics

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Question
Living in a world of scarcity involves trade-offs.
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Question
Microeconomics explores the allocation of scarce resources from the perspective of small economic units such as consumers and firms.
Question
When people make choices they typically know with certainty which choice is best.
Question
Economists believe that most people's actions are rational and purposeful, not random and chaotic.
Question
Economists believe that only a small part of human behavior can be explained and predicted by assuming that most people act as if they are motivated by their own self-interest in an effort to increase their expected personal satisfaction.
Question
Scarcity applies to decision makers in macroeconomics but not in microeconomics.
Question
Self-interest could never include benevolence.
Question
Scarcity forces us to choose, and choices are costly because we must give up other opportunities that we value.
Question
Since resources are abundant, we do not have to make choices about their use.
Question
A good economic theory is always more useful when it includes detailed facts, even if the facts are not relevant to the questions being investigated.
Question
Wealthy consumers do not have to make decisions on what to buy or how much to save.
Question
Microeconomics is the branch of economics in which you study inflation and unemployment in the economy.
Question
Economics is the study of choices we make among our many wants and desires.
Question
Economists prefer to look at declared preferences (how they say they behave) rather than revealed preferences (how people actually behave).
Question
It is possible to completely eliminate scarcity.
Question
To an economist, rational self-interest means that individuals try to weigh the expected marginal (additional) benefits and marginal (additional) costs of their decisions.
Question
If we choose more work we sacrifice leisure.
Question
To an economist, individuals are acting "rationally" if they are striving to do their best to achieve their goals.
Question
One topic that microeconomics explores is how prices are determined in individual markets, while macroeconomics is concerned with issues such as the economy's overall rate of inflation, economic growth and unemployment.
Question
Economists assume that most individuals act as if they are motivated by self-interest and respond in predictable ways to changing circumstances.
Question
A testable proposition that predicts how people will react to changed circumstances is called a hypothesis.
Question
Theories and models are explanations of how things work that help us understand and predict how and why economic agents like consumers, producers, firms, government, etc. behave they way they do.
Question
A positive statement is prescriptive-it prescribes what should be done.
Question
Normative analysis focuses on statements that can be tested against real-world data.
Question
Which of the following forces us to choose among alternatives?

A)​Value
B)​Scarcity
C)​Rarity
D)​Market mechanism
Question
Scarcity exists for those with

A)​lower incomes.
B)​average incomes.
C)​higher incomes.
D)​all of the above.
Question
Most disagreements among economists stem from normative issues.
Question
A good economic theory, or model, weeds out the irrelevant facts from the relevant ones.
Question
When two variables repeatedly change at the same time, there must be a causal relationship between them.
Question
Scarcity is the result of:

A)​government decision making.
B)​inappropriate normative judgments.
C)​positive economics.
D)​wants that exceed the resources necessary to provide them.
Question
The fallacy of composition states that even if something is true for an individual, it is not necessarily true for many individuals as a group.
Question
A hypothesis is a normative statement.
Question
To be a positive economic statement, an assertion must be true.
Question
Economic models are of limited use since they cannot be tested empirically.
Question
The problem of scarcity:

A)​exists because resources are limited relative to wants.
B)​exists because resources are unlimited relative to wants.
C)​can be eliminated through appropriate government intervention into markets.
D)​does not exist in communist societies.
Question
The central question in economics is how to:

A)​regulate the supply of money.
B)​make the best use of scarce resources to satisfy our unlimited wants.
C)​reduce the wants of individuals, businesses and government.
D)find more resources to satisfy everyone's wants.​
Question
"A tax cut will lead to higher inflation" is an example of a positive economic statement.
Question
Economics is most importantly concerned with:

A)​how to profit from trading in the stock market.
B)​government taxation and spending.
C)​studying how we allocate scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how to successfully launch a business.
Question
A normative statement is descriptive-it describes what happens and why it happens.
Question
"Ceteris paribus" is a Latin expression that means "holding everything else constant."
Question
Economics is primarily the study of:

A)​human greed.
B)​how firms compete for profits in the marketplace.
C)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how successful investors make money in the stock market.
Question
When society can not produce all the goods and services people want, it is faced with

A)​scarcity.
B)​surpluses.
C)​inefficiencies.
D)​inequalities.
Question
Economics is concerned with:

A)​the choices people must make because resources are scarce.
B)​human decision makers and the factors that influence their choices.
C)​the allocation of limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​all of the above.
Question
The fundamental economic problem is:

A)​poverty.
B)​unemployment.
C)​scarcity.
D)​inflation.
Question
If oil is considered a non-renewable resource, than oil is

A)​an unlimited resource.
B)​a scarce resource.
C)​not a productive resource.
D)​has no opportunity cost.
Question
Which of the following goods would be considered scarce?

A)​iPods
B)​crude oil
C)​tax preparation services
D)​all of the above
Question
By the study of "scarcity," an economist means how we best utilize our:

A)​limited resources in order to promote full employment and price stability.
B)​unlimited desires in order to best use our unlimited resources.
C)​unlimited resources to best satisfy our unlimited desires.
D)​limited resources in order to best satisfy our unlimited desires.
Question
Which of the following statements are true?

A)​Wealthy people face scarcity.
B)​As a result of scarcity, individuals must make choices and face trade-offs.
C)​It is impossible to satisfy unlimited human wants with limited resources.
D)​All of the above are true statements.
Question
Economics is a social science that primarily explores how:

A)​businesses market products under competitive conditions.
B)​stock and bond prices fluctuate when there are changes in demand or supply.
C)​the government allocates its budget among competing political interests.
D)​goods and services are consumed, produced and distributed in a world with limited resources.
Question
Scarcity would cease to exist as an economic problem if:

A)​we learned to cooperate and not compete with each other.
B)​there were new discoveries of an abundance of natural resources.
C)​output per worker increased.
D)​none of the above.
Question
Fundamentally, economics is concerned with:

A)​how scarce resources are allocated to satisfy limited wants.
B)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy scarce wants.
C)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how limited wants can be used to satisfy limited resources.
Question
Scarcity:

A)​occurs only in centrally planned economies.
B)​will likely be eliminated by technological progress.
C)​exists only in poor nations.
D)​occurs if there are insufficient resources to provide for human wants.
Question
Scarcity means that:

A)​resources are unlimited.
B)​human wants are limited.
C)​limited resources cannot satisfy all of our unlimited human wants.
D)​choices are unnecessary.
Question
What are the two parts of the economic problem?

A)​economics explains many things, but only things that are related directly to money.
B)​natural resources are scarce but human-made resources are not.
C)​scarcity forces us to choose and choices are costly because we must give up other opportunities that we value.
D)​we have unlimited wants and unlimited resources.
Question
Scarcity exists because of:

A)​the allocation of goods by prices.
B)​specialization and division of labor.
C)​the market mechanism.
D)​unlimited wants and limited resources.
Question
Economics is primarily the study of:

A)​how choices are made in a world of scarcity.
B)​corporate balance sheets and income statements.
C)​how to operate a business.
D)​how to make money in the stock market.
Question
Which of the following is an example of an individual motivated by self-interest?

A)​a student volunteering at a soup kitchen
B)​an attorney providing free legal service to low income families
C)​a man buying a new Camaro
D)​all of the above
Question
Scarcity is:

A)​only a problem in modern industrialized economies.
B)​only a problem in impoverished economies.
C)​only a problem in centrally planned economies.
D)​a problem that necessitates making choices and tradeoffs.
Question
In order to determine if a hypothesis is valid we must utilize

A)​qualitative analysis.
B)​empirical analysis.
C)​marginal analysis.
D)​average analysis.
Question
Economics is the study of how people cope with:

A)​fluctuations in stock prices.
B)​greed.
C)​limited human wants.
D)​limited resources.
Question
Which of the following is an example of microeconomic analysis?

A)​impact of taxation on national income
B)​rate of increase in the national debt
C)​relationship between inflation and interest rates set by the Federal Reserve
D)​none of the above
Question
The basic difference between macroeconomics and microeconomics is that:

A)​microeconomics looks at aggregate markets while macroeconomics is concerned with individual markets.
B)​macroeconomics is concerned with policy decisions while microeconomics applies only to theory.
C)​microeconomics is concerned with individual markets while macroeconomics is concerned with aggregate markets.
D)​macroeconomics is concerned with positive economics while microeconomics is concerned with normative economics.
Question
Economics is a science that:

A)​typically uses controlled experiments to learn about consumer and firm behavior.
B)​uses models that cannot be tested empirically due to the complex nature of the economy.
C)​explores how choices are made between conflicting wants and desires in a world of scarcity.
D)​relies entirely upon normative analysis.
Question
Economics is primarily concerned with the study of:

A)​problems such as poverty and unemployment.
B)​limited desires pursuing unlimited resources.
C)​production and distribution of goods in a world of unlimited resources.
D)​production and distribution of goods in a world of limited resources.
Question
In economic terms, religious and spiritual services are treated as:

A)​goods that people desire.
B)​resources or inputs.
C)​marginal benefits.
D)​priceless commodities.
Question
The real core of the economic problem is to:

A)​increase the amount of leisure time available to people.
B)​guarantee everyone on the planet a minimum level of food, shelter and clean water.
C)​allocate limited resources among competing uses.
D)​eliminate scarcity.
Question
Which of the following are likely to be studied in a microeconomics course?

A)​choices made by individual consumers
B)​the causes of inflation
C)​how the economy's total output is measured
D)​how an increase in government spending affects the level of unemployment
Question
Economics can be divided into two main branches of study:

A)​capitalism and communism.
B)​capitalism and socialism.
C)​demand and supply.
D)​microeconomics and macroeconomics.
Question
Economics:

A)​is a natural science like biology and chemistry.
B)​is a science built on survey data and declared preferences (what people say they are going to do) not on revealed preferences (how people actually behave).
C)​is a science concerned with reaching generalizations about human behavior, not unlike sociology or psychology.
D)​is concerned with predicting business conditions in the future, not with the current state of the stock market.
Question
Which of the following statements most likely lies within the realm of microeconomics?

A)​Unemployment rises during a recession and falls during an expansion.
B)​A rapid acceleration of the supply of money may create inflation.
C)​An increase in government spending will increase the aggregate demand for goods and services in the economy.
D)​An increase in labor costs will increase the additional cost of producing another airplane.
Question
The basic difference between macroeconomics and microeconomics is:

A)​microeconomics concentrates on individual markets while macroeconomics focuses primarily on international trade.
B)​microeconomics concentrates on the behavior of individual consumers while macroeconomics focuses on the behavior of firms.
C)​microeconomics concentrates on the behavior of individual consumers and firms while macroeconomics focuses on the performance of the entire economy.
D)​microeconomics explores the causes of inflation while macroeconomics focuses on the causes of unemployment.
Question
Macroeconomic topics do not usually include:

A)​the rate of inflation.
B)​the rate of unemployment.
C)​economic growth.
D)​the profit maximizing decisions of an individual firm.
Question
Economics:

A)​is a narrowly focused discipline.
B)​is a broad-ranging, problem-solving discipline.
C)​concerns itself only with monetary decisions.
D)​says very little about "everyday life."
Question
Which of the following lies primarily within the realm of macroeconomics?

A)​a study of the elasticity of demand for gasoline
B)​a study of how tax cuts stimulate aggregate production
C)​an analysis of supply and demand conditions in the electricity market
D)​a study of the impact of "mad cow" disease on the price of beef worldwide
Question
The branch of economics that studies the aggregate decisions of all households and all firms is called:

A)​positive economics.
B)​normative economics.
C)​microeconomics.
D)​macroeconomics.
Question
Which of the following is most likely a topic of discussion in macroeconomics?

A)​an increase in the price of a pizza
B)​a decrease in the production of DVD players by a consumer electronics company
C)​an increase in the wage rate paid to automobile workers
D)​a decrease in the unemployment rate
Question
Which of the following is most likely a topic of discussion in a microeconomics course?

A)​a decrease in the share of national income paid to the government in taxes
B)​an increase in the price of lumber used to construct houses
C)​an increase in the rate of inflation
D)​an increase in the number of jobless individuals filing unemployment claims
Question
Understanding economics would be helpful to which of the following individuals?

A)​a college student planning her next semester courses
B)​a fashion designer selecting fabric for a new spring collection
C)​a restaurant owner deciding whether to expand his establishment's hours of operation
D)​All of the above
Question
Which of the following statements most likely lies within the realm of macroeconomics?

A)​An increase in the price of automobiles will lead to a decrease in the quantity of automobiles demanded.
B)​Due to process innovations in computer chip manufacturing, the market supply of computers increased.
C)​Due to an economic recession, manufacturing firms began implementing layoffs of their workforces.
D)​Anticipating that the benefits would outweigh costs involved, an undergraduate student purchases the course textbook.
Question
Which of the following lies primarily within the realm of microeconomics?

A)​an empirical analysis of the relationship between the growth of the money supply and the rate of inflation
B)​an economic model forecasting the impact of a tax increase on consumer spending and national output
C)​a study of supply and demand conditions in the market for orange juice
D)​a model forecasting the impact of a change in interest rates on the level of investment in the economy
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Deck 1: The Role and Method of Economics
1
Living in a world of scarcity involves trade-offs.
True
2
Microeconomics explores the allocation of scarce resources from the perspective of small economic units such as consumers and firms.
True
3
When people make choices they typically know with certainty which choice is best.
False
4
Economists believe that most people's actions are rational and purposeful, not random and chaotic.
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k this deck
5
Economists believe that only a small part of human behavior can be explained and predicted by assuming that most people act as if they are motivated by their own self-interest in an effort to increase their expected personal satisfaction.
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k this deck
6
Scarcity applies to decision makers in macroeconomics but not in microeconomics.
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7
Self-interest could never include benevolence.
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8
Scarcity forces us to choose, and choices are costly because we must give up other opportunities that we value.
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k this deck
9
Since resources are abundant, we do not have to make choices about their use.
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k this deck
10
A good economic theory is always more useful when it includes detailed facts, even if the facts are not relevant to the questions being investigated.
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k this deck
11
Wealthy consumers do not have to make decisions on what to buy or how much to save.
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k this deck
12
Microeconomics is the branch of economics in which you study inflation and unemployment in the economy.
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13
Economics is the study of choices we make among our many wants and desires.
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14
Economists prefer to look at declared preferences (how they say they behave) rather than revealed preferences (how people actually behave).
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15
It is possible to completely eliminate scarcity.
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16
To an economist, rational self-interest means that individuals try to weigh the expected marginal (additional) benefits and marginal (additional) costs of their decisions.
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17
If we choose more work we sacrifice leisure.
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18
To an economist, individuals are acting "rationally" if they are striving to do their best to achieve their goals.
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19
One topic that microeconomics explores is how prices are determined in individual markets, while macroeconomics is concerned with issues such as the economy's overall rate of inflation, economic growth and unemployment.
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20
Economists assume that most individuals act as if they are motivated by self-interest and respond in predictable ways to changing circumstances.
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21
A testable proposition that predicts how people will react to changed circumstances is called a hypothesis.
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22
Theories and models are explanations of how things work that help us understand and predict how and why economic agents like consumers, producers, firms, government, etc. behave they way they do.
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23
A positive statement is prescriptive-it prescribes what should be done.
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24
Normative analysis focuses on statements that can be tested against real-world data.
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25
Which of the following forces us to choose among alternatives?

A)​Value
B)​Scarcity
C)​Rarity
D)​Market mechanism
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k this deck
26
Scarcity exists for those with

A)​lower incomes.
B)​average incomes.
C)​higher incomes.
D)​all of the above.
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k this deck
27
Most disagreements among economists stem from normative issues.
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28
A good economic theory, or model, weeds out the irrelevant facts from the relevant ones.
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29
When two variables repeatedly change at the same time, there must be a causal relationship between them.
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30
Scarcity is the result of:

A)​government decision making.
B)​inappropriate normative judgments.
C)​positive economics.
D)​wants that exceed the resources necessary to provide them.
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31
The fallacy of composition states that even if something is true for an individual, it is not necessarily true for many individuals as a group.
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32
A hypothesis is a normative statement.
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33
To be a positive economic statement, an assertion must be true.
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34
Economic models are of limited use since they cannot be tested empirically.
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k this deck
35
The problem of scarcity:

A)​exists because resources are limited relative to wants.
B)​exists because resources are unlimited relative to wants.
C)​can be eliminated through appropriate government intervention into markets.
D)​does not exist in communist societies.
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k this deck
36
The central question in economics is how to:

A)​regulate the supply of money.
B)​make the best use of scarce resources to satisfy our unlimited wants.
C)​reduce the wants of individuals, businesses and government.
D)find more resources to satisfy everyone's wants.​
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
37
"A tax cut will lead to higher inflation" is an example of a positive economic statement.
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k this deck
38
Economics is most importantly concerned with:

A)​how to profit from trading in the stock market.
B)​government taxation and spending.
C)​studying how we allocate scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how to successfully launch a business.
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39
A normative statement is descriptive-it describes what happens and why it happens.
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40
"Ceteris paribus" is a Latin expression that means "holding everything else constant."
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41
Economics is primarily the study of:

A)​human greed.
B)​how firms compete for profits in the marketplace.
C)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how successful investors make money in the stock market.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
When society can not produce all the goods and services people want, it is faced with

A)​scarcity.
B)​surpluses.
C)​inefficiencies.
D)​inequalities.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
43
Economics is concerned with:

A)​the choices people must make because resources are scarce.
B)​human decision makers and the factors that influence their choices.
C)​the allocation of limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
44
The fundamental economic problem is:

A)​poverty.
B)​unemployment.
C)​scarcity.
D)​inflation.
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45
If oil is considered a non-renewable resource, than oil is

A)​an unlimited resource.
B)​a scarce resource.
C)​not a productive resource.
D)​has no opportunity cost.
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46
Which of the following goods would be considered scarce?

A)​iPods
B)​crude oil
C)​tax preparation services
D)​all of the above
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47
By the study of "scarcity," an economist means how we best utilize our:

A)​limited resources in order to promote full employment and price stability.
B)​unlimited desires in order to best use our unlimited resources.
C)​unlimited resources to best satisfy our unlimited desires.
D)​limited resources in order to best satisfy our unlimited desires.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
48
Which of the following statements are true?

A)​Wealthy people face scarcity.
B)​As a result of scarcity, individuals must make choices and face trade-offs.
C)​It is impossible to satisfy unlimited human wants with limited resources.
D)​All of the above are true statements.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Economics is a social science that primarily explores how:

A)​businesses market products under competitive conditions.
B)​stock and bond prices fluctuate when there are changes in demand or supply.
C)​the government allocates its budget among competing political interests.
D)​goods and services are consumed, produced and distributed in a world with limited resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Scarcity would cease to exist as an economic problem if:

A)​we learned to cooperate and not compete with each other.
B)​there were new discoveries of an abundance of natural resources.
C)​output per worker increased.
D)​none of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Fundamentally, economics is concerned with:

A)​how scarce resources are allocated to satisfy limited wants.
B)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy scarce wants.
C)​how limited resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited wants.
D)​how limited wants can be used to satisfy limited resources.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Scarcity:

A)​occurs only in centrally planned economies.
B)​will likely be eliminated by technological progress.
C)​exists only in poor nations.
D)​occurs if there are insufficient resources to provide for human wants.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Scarcity means that:

A)​resources are unlimited.
B)​human wants are limited.
C)​limited resources cannot satisfy all of our unlimited human wants.
D)​choices are unnecessary.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
What are the two parts of the economic problem?

A)​economics explains many things, but only things that are related directly to money.
B)​natural resources are scarce but human-made resources are not.
C)​scarcity forces us to choose and choices are costly because we must give up other opportunities that we value.
D)​we have unlimited wants and unlimited resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Scarcity exists because of:

A)​the allocation of goods by prices.
B)​specialization and division of labor.
C)​the market mechanism.
D)​unlimited wants and limited resources.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Economics is primarily the study of:

A)​how choices are made in a world of scarcity.
B)​corporate balance sheets and income statements.
C)​how to operate a business.
D)​how to make money in the stock market.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Which of the following is an example of an individual motivated by self-interest?

A)​a student volunteering at a soup kitchen
B)​an attorney providing free legal service to low income families
C)​a man buying a new Camaro
D)​all of the above
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58
Scarcity is:

A)​only a problem in modern industrialized economies.
B)​only a problem in impoverished economies.
C)​only a problem in centrally planned economies.
D)​a problem that necessitates making choices and tradeoffs.
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59
In order to determine if a hypothesis is valid we must utilize

A)​qualitative analysis.
B)​empirical analysis.
C)​marginal analysis.
D)​average analysis.
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60
Economics is the study of how people cope with:

A)​fluctuations in stock prices.
B)​greed.
C)​limited human wants.
D)​limited resources.
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61
Which of the following is an example of microeconomic analysis?

A)​impact of taxation on national income
B)​rate of increase in the national debt
C)​relationship between inflation and interest rates set by the Federal Reserve
D)​none of the above
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62
The basic difference between macroeconomics and microeconomics is that:

A)​microeconomics looks at aggregate markets while macroeconomics is concerned with individual markets.
B)​macroeconomics is concerned with policy decisions while microeconomics applies only to theory.
C)​microeconomics is concerned with individual markets while macroeconomics is concerned with aggregate markets.
D)​macroeconomics is concerned with positive economics while microeconomics is concerned with normative economics.
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63
Economics is a science that:

A)​typically uses controlled experiments to learn about consumer and firm behavior.
B)​uses models that cannot be tested empirically due to the complex nature of the economy.
C)​explores how choices are made between conflicting wants and desires in a world of scarcity.
D)​relies entirely upon normative analysis.
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64
Economics is primarily concerned with the study of:

A)​problems such as poverty and unemployment.
B)​limited desires pursuing unlimited resources.
C)​production and distribution of goods in a world of unlimited resources.
D)​production and distribution of goods in a world of limited resources.
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65
In economic terms, religious and spiritual services are treated as:

A)​goods that people desire.
B)​resources or inputs.
C)​marginal benefits.
D)​priceless commodities.
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66
The real core of the economic problem is to:

A)​increase the amount of leisure time available to people.
B)​guarantee everyone on the planet a minimum level of food, shelter and clean water.
C)​allocate limited resources among competing uses.
D)​eliminate scarcity.
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67
Which of the following are likely to be studied in a microeconomics course?

A)​choices made by individual consumers
B)​the causes of inflation
C)​how the economy's total output is measured
D)​how an increase in government spending affects the level of unemployment
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68
Economics can be divided into two main branches of study:

A)​capitalism and communism.
B)​capitalism and socialism.
C)​demand and supply.
D)​microeconomics and macroeconomics.
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69
Economics:

A)​is a natural science like biology and chemistry.
B)​is a science built on survey data and declared preferences (what people say they are going to do) not on revealed preferences (how people actually behave).
C)​is a science concerned with reaching generalizations about human behavior, not unlike sociology or psychology.
D)​is concerned with predicting business conditions in the future, not with the current state of the stock market.
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70
Which of the following statements most likely lies within the realm of microeconomics?

A)​Unemployment rises during a recession and falls during an expansion.
B)​A rapid acceleration of the supply of money may create inflation.
C)​An increase in government spending will increase the aggregate demand for goods and services in the economy.
D)​An increase in labor costs will increase the additional cost of producing another airplane.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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71
The basic difference between macroeconomics and microeconomics is:

A)​microeconomics concentrates on individual markets while macroeconomics focuses primarily on international trade.
B)​microeconomics concentrates on the behavior of individual consumers while macroeconomics focuses on the behavior of firms.
C)​microeconomics concentrates on the behavior of individual consumers and firms while macroeconomics focuses on the performance of the entire economy.
D)​microeconomics explores the causes of inflation while macroeconomics focuses on the causes of unemployment.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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72
Macroeconomic topics do not usually include:

A)​the rate of inflation.
B)​the rate of unemployment.
C)​economic growth.
D)​the profit maximizing decisions of an individual firm.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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73
Economics:

A)​is a narrowly focused discipline.
B)​is a broad-ranging, problem-solving discipline.
C)​concerns itself only with monetary decisions.
D)​says very little about "everyday life."
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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74
Which of the following lies primarily within the realm of macroeconomics?

A)​a study of the elasticity of demand for gasoline
B)​a study of how tax cuts stimulate aggregate production
C)​an analysis of supply and demand conditions in the electricity market
D)​a study of the impact of "mad cow" disease on the price of beef worldwide
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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75
The branch of economics that studies the aggregate decisions of all households and all firms is called:

A)​positive economics.
B)​normative economics.
C)​microeconomics.
D)​macroeconomics.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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76
Which of the following is most likely a topic of discussion in macroeconomics?

A)​an increase in the price of a pizza
B)​a decrease in the production of DVD players by a consumer electronics company
C)​an increase in the wage rate paid to automobile workers
D)​a decrease in the unemployment rate
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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77
Which of the following is most likely a topic of discussion in a microeconomics course?

A)​a decrease in the share of national income paid to the government in taxes
B)​an increase in the price of lumber used to construct houses
C)​an increase in the rate of inflation
D)​an increase in the number of jobless individuals filing unemployment claims
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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78
Understanding economics would be helpful to which of the following individuals?

A)​a college student planning her next semester courses
B)​a fashion designer selecting fabric for a new spring collection
C)​a restaurant owner deciding whether to expand his establishment's hours of operation
D)​All of the above
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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79
Which of the following statements most likely lies within the realm of macroeconomics?

A)​An increase in the price of automobiles will lead to a decrease in the quantity of automobiles demanded.
B)​Due to process innovations in computer chip manufacturing, the market supply of computers increased.
C)​Due to an economic recession, manufacturing firms began implementing layoffs of their workforces.
D)​Anticipating that the benefits would outweigh costs involved, an undergraduate student purchases the course textbook.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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80
Which of the following lies primarily within the realm of microeconomics?

A)​an empirical analysis of the relationship between the growth of the money supply and the rate of inflation
B)​an economic model forecasting the impact of a tax increase on consumer spending and national output
C)​a study of supply and demand conditions in the market for orange juice
D)​a model forecasting the impact of a change in interest rates on the level of investment in the economy
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.