Deck 22: Developing Countries: Growth, Crisis, and Reform

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Question
Over the period 1960-2000, the United States economy grew at roughly

A) 2.1 percent.
B) 3 percent.
C) 4 percent.
D) one percent.
E) 3.5 percent.
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Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Pakistan and India fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Pakistan and India fall between lower-middle and upper-middle.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would mainland China fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
Question
Compared with industrialized economies, most developing countries are poor in the factors of production essential to modern industry: These factors are

A) capital and skilled labor.
B) capital and unskilled labor.
C) fertile land and unskilled labor.
D) fertile land and skilled labor.
E) water and capital.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the Saudi Arabia falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Saudi Arabia falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Malaysia falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Malaysia falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the smaller Latin American and Caribbean countries fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Smaller Latin American and Caribbean countries fall between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Singapore falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Singapore falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
Over the post-war era, the tendency for gaps between all countries' living standards

A) disappeared.
B) stayed the same.
C) increased.
D) decreased.
E) Hard to tell from the data.
Question
Over the period 1960-2000, France grew relative to the United States economy

A) more.
B) less.
C) the same.
D) The French economy grew by one percent.
E) The French economy grew by 2 percent.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Republics fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Republics fall between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
When one compares per-capital output growth rates among countries,

A) one needs to correct the data to account for departures from purchasing power parity.
B) such corrections are often not necessary.
C) such corrections are sometimes necessary.
D) the evidence whether such corrections are necessary are vague.
E) such corrections are not necessary.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would sub-Saharan Africa fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Sub-Saharan Africa falls between lower-middle and upper-middle.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Israel falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Israel falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
Average per-capita GNP in the richest, most prosperous economies is ________ times that of the average in the ________ economies.

A) 95, low (poorest) income
B) 95, lower-middle income
C) 73, lower-middle income
D) 44, low (poorest) income
E) 76, low (poorest) income
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Kuwait falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Kuwait falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
Over the post-war era, the gaps between industrial countries' living standards

A) disappeared.
B) stayed the same.
C) increased.
D) decreased.
E) fluctuated.
Question
The main factors that discourage investment in capital and skills in developing countries are:

A) political instability, insecure property rights.
B) political instability, insecure property rights, misguided economic policies.
C) political instability, misguided economic policies.
D) political instability.
E) insecure property rights, misguided economic policies.
Question
The upper middle-income countries enjoy only about ________ of the per-capita GNP of the industrial group.

A) 20 percent
B) 15 percent
C) 10 percent
D) 5 percent
E) 30 percent
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the South Africa falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) South Africa falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
Question
Which of the following countries had a larger growth rate since 1960?

A) U.S.
B) Senegal
C) South Korea
D) Kamul
E) Colombia
Question
Explain what the four main categories of world economies are and give examples?
Question
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040.<div style=padding-top: 35px> Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040.<div style=padding-top: 35px> Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the United States fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) The U.S. falls between high-income and upper middle-income.
Question
What is the basic problem of developing countries?

A) corruption
B) murder
C) poverty
D) stock market
E) natural resources
Question
Between 1960 and 1992, the annual growth rate in percent per year was the highest in

A) Canada.
B) United States.
C) Brazil.
D) Singapore.
E) South Korea.
Question
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Korea fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Korea falls between low income and lower middle-income.
Question
Over the post-war era, poorer countries grew

A) faster.
B) slower.
C) stayed the same.
D) grew faster, then grew slower.
E) No general tendency can be found.
Question
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea?<div style=padding-top: 35px> Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea?<div style=padding-top: 35px> Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea?
Question
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea.<div style=padding-top: 35px> Please consider Table 22-2 below.     At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea.<div style=padding-top: 35px> At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea.
Question
Explain the theory behind convergence and why it is a "deceptively simple" theory.
Question
How would you define convergence?

A) tendency for gaps between industrial countries' per-capital incomes to narrow
B) tendency for gaps between all countries' per-capital incomes to narrow
C) the theory that a crisis in a low-income country will spread to all countries, regardless of debt structure
D) the theory that a crisis in a low-income country will spread to only those countries which had lent money to the original country
E) tendency for the world distribution of income to be persistently unequal
Question
Seigniorage refers to

A) real resources a government earns when it prints money to use for spending on goods and services.
B) nominal resources a government earns when it prints money to use for spending on goods and services.
C) real resources a government earns when it prints money.
D) nominal resources a government earns when it prints money.
E) real resources a government earns when it issues bonds to use for spending on goods and services.
Question
Since 1960, South Korea and Singapore enjoyed an average per-capita growth rate well ________ the average industrialized world.

A) above
B) below
C) the same
D) above at the beginning of the period and below at the end of the period
E) below at the beginning of the period and above at the end of the period
Question
In general, one expects that life expectancy reflect international differences in income levels. Do the data support such a claim?

A) Average life span falls as relative poverty falls.
B) Average life span increases as relative poverty falls.
C) There is no statistically significant relationship between the two.
D) The relation is not very strong.
E) The relationship looks more like a U-shape.
Question
How would you describe the world distribution of income?

A) persistently unequal
B) temporarily unequal
C) converging
D) fairly equal
E) completely unpredictable
Question
While many developing countries have reformed their economies in order to imitate the success of the successful industrial economies, the process remains incomplete and most developing countries tend to be characterized by all of the following except:

A) seigniorage.
B) control of capital movements by limiting foreign exchange transactions connected with trade in assets.
C) use of natural resources or agricultural commodities as an important share of exports.
D) a worse job of directing savings toward their most efficient investment uses.
E) reduced corruption and poverty due to limited underground markets.
Question
Countries in Africa have grown at rates far ________ those of the main industrial countries.

A) below
B) above
C) the same
D) above at the beginning of the period and below at the end of the period
E) below at the beginning of the period and above at the end of the period
Question
What explains the sharply divergent long-run growth patterns?
Question
Until recently, per-capita income increased in East Asian countries such as Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan by ________-fold every generation

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
E) 1
Question
Which of the following are characteristic of a developing country?

A) extensive embrace of free trade policies
B) low inflation
C) high national savings
D) a current account deficit and low national savings
E) strong credit institutions
Question
Brazil's 1999 crisis was relatively short lived because

A) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided borrowing all together.
B) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided heavy borrowing in local currency.
C) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided heavy borrowing in dollars.
D) Brazil's financial institutions had extended low-interest loans.
E) Brazil's financial institutions had extended high-interest loans.
Question
In developing economies, national saving is often ________ relative to developed economies

A) high
B) the same
C) hard to tell
D) low
E) low for the very poor countries and high for the more developed
Question
The Convertibility Law of April 1991 in Argentina

A) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to one.
B) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to two.
C) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to 0.5.
D) represents an era of floating exchange rate in Argentina.
E) pegged the Argentinean currency to the British pound at a ratio of one to one.
Question
What does it mean for a loan to be in default?

A) when the borrower of the a loan fails to repay on schedule according to a loan contract, without the agreement of the lender
B) when the borrower of a loan fails to repay on schedule according to a loan contract, with the agreement of the lender
C) when the lender of a loan fails to supplies the full amount of a loan to the borrower
D) when the lender of a loan supplies the full amount of a loan to a borrower without any promise of being repaid
E) when the lender of a loan fails to offer the promised sum
Question
One should expect ________ relationship between annual per-capita GDP and an inverse index of corruption

A) a weak and negative
B) a weak and positive
C) a strong and negative
D) a strong and positive
E) an unpredictable
Question
Explain the extensive economic role of government within a developing country.
Question
For many developing countries, natural resources or agricultural commodities make up a ________ share of exports

A) large
B) moderate
C) nonexistent
D) small
E) insubstantial
Question
For many developing countries, natural resources or agricultural commodities make up ________ share of exports

A) close to no
B) an unimportant
C) an important
D) close a to 5 percent
E) close to a 50 percent
Question
Which of the following does not explain why developing countries encouraged new manufacturing industries of their own in the mid 20th century?

A) They were cut off from traditional suppliers of manufactures during WWII.
B) Former colonial areas had something to prove; they wanted to attain the same income levels as their former rulers.
C) Leaders of these countries feared that their efforts to escape poverty would be doomed if they continues to specialize in primary commodity exports.
D) There was political pressure to protect these industries.
E) Developing countries ran out of the natural resources that traditionally made up the majority of their trade.
Question
Which of the following is not a common characteristic of a developing country?

A) Extensive direct government control of the economy
B) History of low inflation
C) Many weak credit institutions
D) "Pegged" exchange rates
E) Agricultural commodities make up a large share of its exports.
Question
Which of the following countries is the most corrupt?

A) U.S.
B) Iceland
C) Finland
D) New Zealand
E) Greenland
Question
In developing countries, exchange rates tend to be

A) floating with some government intervention.
B) pegged.
C) hard to tell from the data.
D) run by currency boards.
E) flexible.
Question
The real resource a government earns when it prints money and spends it on goods and services is called:

A) seigniorage.
B) control of capital movements by limiting foreign exchange transactions.
C) pure profits.
D) inflation profits.
E) greenback.
Question
Most developing countries have tried to

A) liberalize capital movement.
B) control capital movements.
C) Hard to tell from the data.
D) in the 1960s and 1970s control, now to liberalize.
E) in the 1960s and 1970s liberalize, now to control.
Question
Describe some of the features hindering developing countries from growing faster.
Question
The $50 billion emergency loan orchestrated by the U.S. Treasury and the IMF to Mexico in 1994

A) was a disastrous policy for Mexico.
B) avoided a disaster to the Mexican economy.
C) did not affect Mexico in the short run.
D) did not affect Mexico in the long run.
E) was ineffective both in the short and long runs.
Question
The relationship between annual real per-capita GDP and corruption across countries has been found to be:

A) negative.
B) positive.
C) The relationship was negative in the late 1960s but is now positive.
D) The relationship was in the late 1960s but is now negative.
E) There is no relationship between these two variables.
Question
In general, the development of underground economic activity ________ economic efficiency

A) hinders
B) has no effect
C) aides
D) hard to tell, sometime hinders, sometimes aides
E) spikes
Question
A trend that has been reinforced by many developing countries is privatization. Privatization refers to:

A) purchasing large companies and turning them into state-owned enterprises.
B) investing government money in large, privately-owned companies.
C) exchanging bonds for shares in state-owned enterprises.
D) selling large state-owned enterprises to private owners in the financial sector.
E) selling large state-owned enterprises to private owners in key areas such as electricity, telecommunications, or petroleum.
Question
The following are all the forms of debt finance:

A) bond, bank, and official finance.
B) bond and bank finance.
C) bond, bank, and portfolio finance.
D) foreign direct and portfolio investment.
E) direct investment, stock, and dividends
Question
The term Original Sin by two economists Barry Eichengreen and Ricardo Hausmann is used to describe what?

A) low-income economy
B) developing countries' inability to borrow in their own currencies
C) a sin that is part of the Ten Commandments.
D) borrows not able to receive loans
E) not diversifying economies portfolios
Question
During the time period of 1981-1983 what dramatic world issue happened?

A) political instability, insecure property rights
B) stock market crashed
C) world wide hyperinflation
D) the collapse of the U.S. mortgages market
E) A world economic recession caused developing countries to not be able to make payments on foreign loans, in turn causing a universal default.
Question
A considerable advantage that richer countries have over poorer ones is exemplified by the fact that:

A) richer countries do not have to denominate their foreign debts in their own currencies.
B) richer countries have the ability to denominate their foreign debts in foreign currencies.
C) when demand falls for a poorer country's goods, this leads to a significant wealth transfer from foreigners to the poorer country, a kind of international insurance payment.
D) richer countries have the ability to denominate their foreign debts in their own currencies.
E) richer countries can extract trade advantages by using military power.
Question
Explain why despite enormous natural resources, much of Latin America's population remains in poverty and the region has been repeatedly experiencing financial crises.
Question
Since foreign credit dries up in crises when it is most needed, developing countries can protect themselves from default by

A) cutting off imports of goods.
B) allowing the exchange rate to float.
C) using equity finance only.
D) accumulating high levels of international reserves.
E) avoiding the international capital market.
Question
Which Latin American country defaulted on loans in 2005 and paid off their creditors at only 1/3 value?

A) Argentina
B) Brazil
C) Chile
D) Colombia
E) Mexico
Question
In 1981-1983, the world economy suffered a steep recession. Naturally, the fall in industrial countries' aggregate demand had a direct negative impact on the developing countries. What other mechanism was an even more important contributor to this event?

A) the immediate steep inflation that followed the recession.
B) the dollar's sharp depreciation in the foreign exchange market
C) the increase in primary commodity prices, increasing terms of trade in many poor countries
D) the collapse in primary commodity prices and the immediate, large rise in the interest burden that debtors had to pay
E) the influx of defaulting credit
Question
Describe alternative forms of capital inflow to finance external deficits and explain why these methods were used in different times?
Question
How would you define exchange control?

A) The government allocates foreign exchange through decree rather than through the market.
B) a country NOT pegging its exchange rate
C) a country pegging its exchange rate
D) a country buying up excess current account so that CA=0
E) a country restricting all foreign exchange
Question
What factors lie behind capital inflows to the developing world?
Question
With which country did the Debt Crisis of the early 1980s begin?

A) France
B) Mexico
C) Argentina
D) Japan
E) Germany
Question
Explain why the distinction between debt and equity finance is useful in analyzing the response of developing countries to unforeseen events such as recession or terms of trade change?
Question
There are many ways developing countries finance their external deficits except

A) bank finance.
B) portfolio investment in ownership of firms.
C) bond finance.
D) official lending.
E) foreign exchange rates.
Question
Why may equity finance be preferred to debt finance for developing countries?

A) A fall in domestic income automatically reduces the earnings of foreign shareholders without violating any loan agreement.
B) There are laws insuring against any default with equity finance.
C) The risk is shared between debtor and creditor with debt finance.
D) The tax structure leaves equity finance unconstrained.
E) Repayments are unaffected by falls in real income.
Question
In 1991, Argentina established a radical institutional reform after experiencing a decade marked by financial instability. This program was called the new Convertibility Law. What did this law do?

A) made Argentina's currency fully convertible into Eurocurrency at a fixed rate
B) required that the monetary base be backed completely by U.S. dollars
C) placed limits on exports of commodities
D) made Argentina's currency fully convertible into U.S. dollars at a fixed rate and required that the monetary base be backed completely by gold or foreign currency.
E) restricted risky international trade activity.
Question
In the instances where a loan has been issued under certain terms and has to be repaid, what happens when the borrower does not uphold these stipulations?

A) call
B) option
C) payment
D) default
E) fraud
Question
As of 2010, how large is the debt of developing countries to the rest of the world?

A) $350 million
B) $350 billion
C) $5 trillion
D) $35 trillion
E) $3.5 trillion
Question
Which of the following is a reason that developing countries are running large surpluses?

A) They are required to do so by IMF.
B) They have defaulted on international loans.
C) They have pegged exchange rates and thus the growth of exports must drive surplus up.
D) They have a strong desire to accumulate international reserves to protect against a sudden stop of capital inflows.
E) They don't know how to manage their surpluses.
Question
When a government defaults on its obligations, the event is called a

A) sovereign default.
B) magisterial default.
C) private default.
D) sudden stop default.
E) national default.
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Deck 22: Developing Countries: Growth, Crisis, and Reform
1
Over the period 1960-2000, the United States economy grew at roughly

A) 2.1 percent.
B) 3 percent.
C) 4 percent.
D) one percent.
E) 3.5 percent.
A
2
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Pakistan and India fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Pakistan and India fall between lower-middle and upper-middle.
A
3
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would mainland China fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
D
4
Compared with industrialized economies, most developing countries are poor in the factors of production essential to modern industry: These factors are

A) capital and skilled labor.
B) capital and unskilled labor.
C) fertile land and unskilled labor.
D) fertile land and skilled labor.
E) water and capital.
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5
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the Saudi Arabia falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Saudi Arabia falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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6
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Malaysia falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Malaysia falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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7
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the smaller Latin American and Caribbean countries fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Smaller Latin American and Caribbean countries fall between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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8
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Singapore falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Singapore falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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9
Over the post-war era, the tendency for gaps between all countries' living standards

A) disappeared.
B) stayed the same.
C) increased.
D) decreased.
E) Hard to tell from the data.
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10
Over the period 1960-2000, France grew relative to the United States economy

A) more.
B) less.
C) the same.
D) The French economy grew by one percent.
E) The French economy grew by 2 percent.
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11
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Republics fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Republics fall between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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12
When one compares per-capital output growth rates among countries,

A) one needs to correct the data to account for departures from purchasing power parity.
B) such corrections are often not necessary.
C) such corrections are sometimes necessary.
D) the evidence whether such corrections are necessary are vague.
E) such corrections are not necessary.
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13
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would sub-Saharan Africa fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Sub-Saharan Africa falls between lower-middle and upper-middle.
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14
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Israel falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Israel falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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15
Average per-capita GNP in the richest, most prosperous economies is ________ times that of the average in the ________ economies.

A) 95, low (poorest) income
B) 95, lower-middle income
C) 73, lower-middle income
D) 44, low (poorest) income
E) 76, low (poorest) income
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16
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Kuwait falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Kuwait falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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17
Over the post-war era, the gaps between industrial countries' living standards

A) disappeared.
B) stayed the same.
C) increased.
D) decreased.
E) fluctuated.
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18
The main factors that discourage investment in capital and skills in developing countries are:

A) political instability, insecure property rights.
B) political instability, insecure property rights, misguided economic policies.
C) political instability, misguided economic policies.
D) political instability.
E) insecure property rights, misguided economic policies.
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19
The upper middle-income countries enjoy only about ________ of the per-capita GNP of the industrial group.

A) 20 percent
B) 15 percent
C) 10 percent
D) 5 percent
E) 30 percent
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20
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the South Africa falls under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) South Africa falls between low income and lower middle-income economies.
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21
Which of the following countries had a larger growth rate since 1960?

A) U.S.
B) Senegal
C) South Korea
D) Kamul
E) Colombia
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22
Explain what the four main categories of world economies are and give examples?
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23
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040. Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, calculate the output per capita for the United States and South Korea for the year 2040.
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24
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would the United States fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) The U.S. falls between high-income and upper middle-income.
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25
What is the basic problem of developing countries?

A) corruption
B) murder
C) poverty
D) stock market
E) natural resources
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26
Between 1960 and 1992, the annual growth rate in percent per year was the highest in

A) Canada.
B) United States.
C) Brazil.
D) Singapore.
E) South Korea.
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27
The world's economies can be divided into four main categories according to their annual per-capita income levels: low-income, lower middle-income, upper middle-income and high-income economies. What category would Korea fall under?

A) low-income
B) upper middle-income
C) high-income
D) lower middle-income
E) Korea falls between low income and lower middle-income.
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28
Over the post-war era, poorer countries grew

A) faster.
B) slower.
C) stayed the same.
D) grew faster, then grew slower.
E) No general tendency can be found.
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29
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea? Please consider Table 22-2 below.     Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea? Assuming constant Annual Average Growth Rate in the future, determine the year in which the United States will have the same output per capita as South Korea?
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30
Please consider Table 22-2 below. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea. Please consider Table 22-2 below.     At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea. At that Annual Average Growth Rate, how many years does it take for the output per capita to double in both the United States and South Korea.
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31
Explain the theory behind convergence and why it is a "deceptively simple" theory.
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32
How would you define convergence?

A) tendency for gaps between industrial countries' per-capital incomes to narrow
B) tendency for gaps between all countries' per-capital incomes to narrow
C) the theory that a crisis in a low-income country will spread to all countries, regardless of debt structure
D) the theory that a crisis in a low-income country will spread to only those countries which had lent money to the original country
E) tendency for the world distribution of income to be persistently unequal
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33
Seigniorage refers to

A) real resources a government earns when it prints money to use for spending on goods and services.
B) nominal resources a government earns when it prints money to use for spending on goods and services.
C) real resources a government earns when it prints money.
D) nominal resources a government earns when it prints money.
E) real resources a government earns when it issues bonds to use for spending on goods and services.
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34
Since 1960, South Korea and Singapore enjoyed an average per-capita growth rate well ________ the average industrialized world.

A) above
B) below
C) the same
D) above at the beginning of the period and below at the end of the period
E) below at the beginning of the period and above at the end of the period
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35
In general, one expects that life expectancy reflect international differences in income levels. Do the data support such a claim?

A) Average life span falls as relative poverty falls.
B) Average life span increases as relative poverty falls.
C) There is no statistically significant relationship between the two.
D) The relation is not very strong.
E) The relationship looks more like a U-shape.
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36
How would you describe the world distribution of income?

A) persistently unequal
B) temporarily unequal
C) converging
D) fairly equal
E) completely unpredictable
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37
While many developing countries have reformed their economies in order to imitate the success of the successful industrial economies, the process remains incomplete and most developing countries tend to be characterized by all of the following except:

A) seigniorage.
B) control of capital movements by limiting foreign exchange transactions connected with trade in assets.
C) use of natural resources or agricultural commodities as an important share of exports.
D) a worse job of directing savings toward their most efficient investment uses.
E) reduced corruption and poverty due to limited underground markets.
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38
Countries in Africa have grown at rates far ________ those of the main industrial countries.

A) below
B) above
C) the same
D) above at the beginning of the period and below at the end of the period
E) below at the beginning of the period and above at the end of the period
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39
What explains the sharply divergent long-run growth patterns?
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40
Until recently, per-capita income increased in East Asian countries such as Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan by ________-fold every generation

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
E) 1
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41
Which of the following are characteristic of a developing country?

A) extensive embrace of free trade policies
B) low inflation
C) high national savings
D) a current account deficit and low national savings
E) strong credit institutions
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42
Brazil's 1999 crisis was relatively short lived because

A) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided borrowing all together.
B) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided heavy borrowing in local currency.
C) Brazil's financial institutions had avoided heavy borrowing in dollars.
D) Brazil's financial institutions had extended low-interest loans.
E) Brazil's financial institutions had extended high-interest loans.
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43
In developing economies, national saving is often ________ relative to developed economies

A) high
B) the same
C) hard to tell
D) low
E) low for the very poor countries and high for the more developed
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44
The Convertibility Law of April 1991 in Argentina

A) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to one.
B) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to two.
C) pegged the Argentinean currency to the US dollar at a ratio of one to 0.5.
D) represents an era of floating exchange rate in Argentina.
E) pegged the Argentinean currency to the British pound at a ratio of one to one.
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45
What does it mean for a loan to be in default?

A) when the borrower of the a loan fails to repay on schedule according to a loan contract, without the agreement of the lender
B) when the borrower of a loan fails to repay on schedule according to a loan contract, with the agreement of the lender
C) when the lender of a loan fails to supplies the full amount of a loan to the borrower
D) when the lender of a loan supplies the full amount of a loan to a borrower without any promise of being repaid
E) when the lender of a loan fails to offer the promised sum
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46
One should expect ________ relationship between annual per-capita GDP and an inverse index of corruption

A) a weak and negative
B) a weak and positive
C) a strong and negative
D) a strong and positive
E) an unpredictable
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47
Explain the extensive economic role of government within a developing country.
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48
For many developing countries, natural resources or agricultural commodities make up a ________ share of exports

A) large
B) moderate
C) nonexistent
D) small
E) insubstantial
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49
For many developing countries, natural resources or agricultural commodities make up ________ share of exports

A) close to no
B) an unimportant
C) an important
D) close a to 5 percent
E) close to a 50 percent
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50
Which of the following does not explain why developing countries encouraged new manufacturing industries of their own in the mid 20th century?

A) They were cut off from traditional suppliers of manufactures during WWII.
B) Former colonial areas had something to prove; they wanted to attain the same income levels as their former rulers.
C) Leaders of these countries feared that their efforts to escape poverty would be doomed if they continues to specialize in primary commodity exports.
D) There was political pressure to protect these industries.
E) Developing countries ran out of the natural resources that traditionally made up the majority of their trade.
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51
Which of the following is not a common characteristic of a developing country?

A) Extensive direct government control of the economy
B) History of low inflation
C) Many weak credit institutions
D) "Pegged" exchange rates
E) Agricultural commodities make up a large share of its exports.
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52
Which of the following countries is the most corrupt?

A) U.S.
B) Iceland
C) Finland
D) New Zealand
E) Greenland
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53
In developing countries, exchange rates tend to be

A) floating with some government intervention.
B) pegged.
C) hard to tell from the data.
D) run by currency boards.
E) flexible.
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54
The real resource a government earns when it prints money and spends it on goods and services is called:

A) seigniorage.
B) control of capital movements by limiting foreign exchange transactions.
C) pure profits.
D) inflation profits.
E) greenback.
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55
Most developing countries have tried to

A) liberalize capital movement.
B) control capital movements.
C) Hard to tell from the data.
D) in the 1960s and 1970s control, now to liberalize.
E) in the 1960s and 1970s liberalize, now to control.
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56
Describe some of the features hindering developing countries from growing faster.
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57
The $50 billion emergency loan orchestrated by the U.S. Treasury and the IMF to Mexico in 1994

A) was a disastrous policy for Mexico.
B) avoided a disaster to the Mexican economy.
C) did not affect Mexico in the short run.
D) did not affect Mexico in the long run.
E) was ineffective both in the short and long runs.
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58
The relationship between annual real per-capita GDP and corruption across countries has been found to be:

A) negative.
B) positive.
C) The relationship was negative in the late 1960s but is now positive.
D) The relationship was in the late 1960s but is now negative.
E) There is no relationship between these two variables.
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59
In general, the development of underground economic activity ________ economic efficiency

A) hinders
B) has no effect
C) aides
D) hard to tell, sometime hinders, sometimes aides
E) spikes
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60
A trend that has been reinforced by many developing countries is privatization. Privatization refers to:

A) purchasing large companies and turning them into state-owned enterprises.
B) investing government money in large, privately-owned companies.
C) exchanging bonds for shares in state-owned enterprises.
D) selling large state-owned enterprises to private owners in the financial sector.
E) selling large state-owned enterprises to private owners in key areas such as electricity, telecommunications, or petroleum.
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61
The following are all the forms of debt finance:

A) bond, bank, and official finance.
B) bond and bank finance.
C) bond, bank, and portfolio finance.
D) foreign direct and portfolio investment.
E) direct investment, stock, and dividends
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62
The term Original Sin by two economists Barry Eichengreen and Ricardo Hausmann is used to describe what?

A) low-income economy
B) developing countries' inability to borrow in their own currencies
C) a sin that is part of the Ten Commandments.
D) borrows not able to receive loans
E) not diversifying economies portfolios
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63
During the time period of 1981-1983 what dramatic world issue happened?

A) political instability, insecure property rights
B) stock market crashed
C) world wide hyperinflation
D) the collapse of the U.S. mortgages market
E) A world economic recession caused developing countries to not be able to make payments on foreign loans, in turn causing a universal default.
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64
A considerable advantage that richer countries have over poorer ones is exemplified by the fact that:

A) richer countries do not have to denominate their foreign debts in their own currencies.
B) richer countries have the ability to denominate their foreign debts in foreign currencies.
C) when demand falls for a poorer country's goods, this leads to a significant wealth transfer from foreigners to the poorer country, a kind of international insurance payment.
D) richer countries have the ability to denominate their foreign debts in their own currencies.
E) richer countries can extract trade advantages by using military power.
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65
Explain why despite enormous natural resources, much of Latin America's population remains in poverty and the region has been repeatedly experiencing financial crises.
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66
Since foreign credit dries up in crises when it is most needed, developing countries can protect themselves from default by

A) cutting off imports of goods.
B) allowing the exchange rate to float.
C) using equity finance only.
D) accumulating high levels of international reserves.
E) avoiding the international capital market.
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67
Which Latin American country defaulted on loans in 2005 and paid off their creditors at only 1/3 value?

A) Argentina
B) Brazil
C) Chile
D) Colombia
E) Mexico
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68
In 1981-1983, the world economy suffered a steep recession. Naturally, the fall in industrial countries' aggregate demand had a direct negative impact on the developing countries. What other mechanism was an even more important contributor to this event?

A) the immediate steep inflation that followed the recession.
B) the dollar's sharp depreciation in the foreign exchange market
C) the increase in primary commodity prices, increasing terms of trade in many poor countries
D) the collapse in primary commodity prices and the immediate, large rise in the interest burden that debtors had to pay
E) the influx of defaulting credit
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69
Describe alternative forms of capital inflow to finance external deficits and explain why these methods were used in different times?
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70
How would you define exchange control?

A) The government allocates foreign exchange through decree rather than through the market.
B) a country NOT pegging its exchange rate
C) a country pegging its exchange rate
D) a country buying up excess current account so that CA=0
E) a country restricting all foreign exchange
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71
What factors lie behind capital inflows to the developing world?
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72
With which country did the Debt Crisis of the early 1980s begin?

A) France
B) Mexico
C) Argentina
D) Japan
E) Germany
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73
Explain why the distinction between debt and equity finance is useful in analyzing the response of developing countries to unforeseen events such as recession or terms of trade change?
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74
There are many ways developing countries finance their external deficits except

A) bank finance.
B) portfolio investment in ownership of firms.
C) bond finance.
D) official lending.
E) foreign exchange rates.
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75
Why may equity finance be preferred to debt finance for developing countries?

A) A fall in domestic income automatically reduces the earnings of foreign shareholders without violating any loan agreement.
B) There are laws insuring against any default with equity finance.
C) The risk is shared between debtor and creditor with debt finance.
D) The tax structure leaves equity finance unconstrained.
E) Repayments are unaffected by falls in real income.
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76
In 1991, Argentina established a radical institutional reform after experiencing a decade marked by financial instability. This program was called the new Convertibility Law. What did this law do?

A) made Argentina's currency fully convertible into Eurocurrency at a fixed rate
B) required that the monetary base be backed completely by U.S. dollars
C) placed limits on exports of commodities
D) made Argentina's currency fully convertible into U.S. dollars at a fixed rate and required that the monetary base be backed completely by gold or foreign currency.
E) restricted risky international trade activity.
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77
In the instances where a loan has been issued under certain terms and has to be repaid, what happens when the borrower does not uphold these stipulations?

A) call
B) option
C) payment
D) default
E) fraud
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78
As of 2010, how large is the debt of developing countries to the rest of the world?

A) $350 million
B) $350 billion
C) $5 trillion
D) $35 trillion
E) $3.5 trillion
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79
Which of the following is a reason that developing countries are running large surpluses?

A) They are required to do so by IMF.
B) They have defaulted on international loans.
C) They have pegged exchange rates and thus the growth of exports must drive surplus up.
D) They have a strong desire to accumulate international reserves to protect against a sudden stop of capital inflows.
E) They don't know how to manage their surpluses.
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80
When a government defaults on its obligations, the event is called a

A) sovereign default.
B) magisterial default.
C) private default.
D) sudden stop default.
E) national default.
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