A) cut taxes and/or increased spending.
B) increased taxes and/or cut spending.
C) wanted to rein in inflation.
D) did not change its discretionary fiscal policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) increase aggregate demand.
B) decrease aggregate demand.
C) increase aggregate supply.
D) decrease aggregate supply.
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Multiple Choice
A) by subtracting the government's total liabilities from its total assets
B) by cumulating the annual government purchases over time
C) by subtracting current government spending from current government tax revenues
D) by cumulating the annual difference between tax revenues and government spending over the years
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Multiple Choice
A) shift aggregate demand by increasing taxes
B) shift aggregate demand by decreasing taxes
C) shift aggregate supply by increasing taxes
D) shift aggregate demand by increasing government spending
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Multiple Choice
A) an increase in taxes and an increase in government spending
B) a decrease in taxes and an increase in government spending
C) an increase in taxes and no change in government spending
D) a decrease in taxes and a decrease in government spending
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Fiscal policy has been expansionary every year since 2000.
B) Fiscal policy has been contractionary every year since 2000.
C) Fiscal policy swung from expansionary to contractionary in 2002.
D) Fiscal policy swung from contractionary to expansionary in 2002.
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Multiple Choice
A) Social Security revenues became zero.
B) Social Security contributions fell short of payouts.
C) Social Security payouts did not increase.
D) the Social Security Trust Fund ran out of funds.
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Multiple Choice
A) shift the AD curve to the right.
B) increase the equilibrium GDP.
C) not affect the AD curve.
D) shift the AD curve to the left.
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Multiple Choice
A) increase government expenditures by $100 billion.
B) increase government expenditures by $50 billion.
C) reduce taxes by $50 billion.
D) reduce taxes by $200 billion.
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Multiple Choice
A) increases crowding out in the economy.
B) decreases real interest rates in the economy.
C) offsets the timing problem for fiscal policy.
D) serves as an automatic stabilizer for the economy.
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Multiple Choice
A) U.S. securities, corporate bonds, and common stock.
B) Federal Reserve Notes.
C) U.S. gold certificates.
D) Treasury bills, Treasury notes, Treasury bonds, and U.S. savings bonds.
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Multiple Choice
A) Real GDP will fall to Y and the price level will fall to , assuming in?exible prices.
B) Real GDP will fall to X and the price level will remain unchanged, assuming prices are in?exible downward.
C) Real GDP will fall to X and the price level will fall to , assuming in?exible prices.
D) Real GDP will fall to Y and the price level will remain unchanged, assuming in?exible prices.
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Multiple Choice
A) Year 1
B) Year 2
C) Year 4
D) Year 5
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Multiple Choice
A) tax increases are paid primarily out of saving and therefore are not an effective fiscal device.
B) increases in government spending financed through borrowing will increase the interest rate and thereby reduce investment.
C) it is very difficult to have excessive aggregate spending in the U.S. economy.
D) consumer and investment spending always vary inversely.
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Multiple Choice
A) foreign interest rates are persistently higher than domestic interest rates.
B) the payment of interest reduces the volume of goods and services available for domestic uses.
C) the payment of interest will conflict with a nation's foreign aid programs.
D) the payment of interest will necessarily have a deflationary effect on prices in the paying nation.
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) Built-in stability only partially offsets fluctuations in economic activity.
B) Built-in stability works in halting inflation, but it cannot alleviate unemployment.
C) Built-in stability can be relied on to eliminate completely any fluctuation in economic activity.
D) Built-in stability has eliminated the need for discretionary fiscal policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) the public sector is exerting an expansionary impact on the economy.
B) tax revenues would exceed government expenditures if full employment were achieved.
C) the actual budget is necessarily also in surplus.
D) the economy is actually operating at full employment.
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Multiple Choice
A) taxes.
B) transfer payments.
C) the size of the budget deficit.
D) its purchases of goods and services.
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Multiple Choice
A) The cyclically adjusted budget and the actual budget differ because the latter does not take government transfer payments into account.
B) The cyclically adjusted budget is less likely to show a deficit than is the actual budget.
C) The cyclically adjusted budget and the actual budget will show the same size deficit or surplus in any given fiscal year.
D) The cyclically adjusted budget is more likely to show a deficit than is the actual budget.
Correct Answer
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