A) a positive slope that increases as we move along it from left to right.
B) a negative slope that increases as we move along it from left to right.
C) a negative slope that decreases as we move along it from left to right.
D) a negative slope that is constant as we move along it from left to right.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) increase its production of both goods X and Y simultaneously.
B) increase its production of one good, but only at the expense of reducing the other good.
C) not produce any more of one of the goods X or Y.
D) not employ any more resources, because all resources are now employed.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) have unlimited resources but limited economic wants.
B) can increase resources by limiting their economic wants.
C) have limited economic wants and limited resources.
D) have unlimited economic wants but limited resources.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) is irrelevant in socialistic economies because of central planning.
B) suggests that the use of resources in any particular line of production means that alternative outputs must be forgone.
C) is irrelevant if the production possibilities curve is shifting to the right.
D) suggests that insatiable wants can be fulfilled.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) $8,000.
B) $9,000.
C) $10,000.
D) $11,000.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) maximum dollar amount of budget that the consumer has for good Y.
B) price that the consumer has to pay for each unit of good Y.
C) maximum quantity of good Y that the consumer could buy with a given budget.
D) quantity of good Y that the consumer would want to buy.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) businesses would go bankrupt if they offered free lunches.
B) the thought of a free lunch is often better than the reality of consuming it.
C) there are opportunity costs involved even in free lunches.
D) free lunches used by businesses to attract customers are an inefficient marketing ploy.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) can only produce more consumer goods by producing fewer capital goods.
B) can only produce more capital goods by producing fewer consumer goods.
C) can produce more of both consumer goods and capital goods by using resources that are currently idle.
D) must improve its technology to produce more output.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The unemployment rate fell for the fourth straight month, reflecting the effects from stronger economic growth in the second quarter.
B) The worsening balance of trade must be corrected if this nation is to remain competitive in the world economy.
C) Consumer prices are rising at a faster rate than in past months, indicating a renewal of inflationary pressures on the economy.
D) To help balance the Federal budget, Congress increased the tax on gasoline to its highest level in the past 10 years.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the aggregate or total levels of income, employment, and output.
B) a detailed examination of specific economic units that make up the economic system.
C) positive economics, but not normative economics.
D) establishing an overall view of the operation of the economic system.
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Multiple Choice
A) Microeconomics focuses on specific decision-making units of the economy; macroeconomics examines the economy as a whole.
B) Macroeconomics focuses on specific decision-making units of the economy; microeconomics examines the economy as a whole.
C) Every topic in economics is either a microeconomic or a macroeconomic issue; a topic cannot be both.
D) Topics in microeconomics have public policy implications; topics in macroeconomics do not.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Many economic resources are better at producing one product rather than another.
B) The economy is employing all of its available resources.
C) In any economy, the state of technology is changing and resources are variable.
D) The economy is achieving productive efficiency by producing goods at the least cost.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) if society wants to produce more of a particular good, it must sacrifice larger and larger amounts of another good to do so.
B) the sum of the costs of producing a particular good cannot rise above the current market price of that good.
C) if the sum of the costs of producing a particular good rises by a specified percentage, the price of that good must rise by a greater relative amount.
D) if the prices of all the resources used to produce goods increase, the cost of producing any particular good will increase at the same rate.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) can attain some combination of goods lying outside its production possibilities curve.
B) can move from a high consumption-low investment to a high investment-low consumption point on its production possibilities curve.
C) will only attain some combination of goods lying within its production possibilities curve.
D) will cause its production possibilities curve to shift leftward.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) -0.5
B) -0.8
C) -1.6
D) -2.0
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) major topics of macroeconomics.
B) not relevant to the U.S.economy.
C) the primary focus of microeconomics.
D) positive economic issues, but not normative issues.
Correct Answer
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