A) not an effective tool for fine-tuning the economy.
B) least useful in a serious economic crisis.
C) always ineffective because of crowding out.
D) effective only when potential output is perfectly known.
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Multiple Choice
A) based on empirical evidence that fiscal policy can be effective in smoothing business cycles.
B) based on the political realities of voters wanting their government to respond to recessions.
C) a theoretical proposition, not a moral proposition.
D) a proposition supported by public choice economists.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) tax receipts to fall and government spending to rise.
B) tax receipts to rise and government spending to fall.
C) both tax receipts and government spending to rise.
D) both tax receipts and government spending to fall.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Maintain a balanced budget at all times, under the principle of sound finance.
B) Use a sound finance approach during normal economic times, and a functional finance approach during a recession or a boom.
C) Run larger deficits during recessions and smaller deficits during economic booms, counting on economic growth to be high enough to keep the debt-to-GDP ratio low.
D) Economists were wholly concerned with microeconomics and had ignored problems of government deficits, debt, recessions, and economic growth.
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Multiple Choice
A) public finance.
B) fiscal policy.
C) the Ricardian equivalence.
D) sound finance.
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Multiple Choice
A) run a budget deficit because the Ricardian equivalence theorem is true both in theory and in practice.
B) run a budget deficit despite the truth of the Ricardian equivalence theorem.
C) maintain a balanced budget because the Ricardian equivalence theorem is true in practice.
D) maintain a balanced budget for political and moral reasons.
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Multiple Choice
A) a budget deficit and increase spending, which will reduce output.
B) a budget surplus and decrease spending, which will reduce output.
C) neither a surplus nor a deficit since changes in deficit spending do not affect output.
D) neither a surplus nor a deficit since changes in spending affect output.
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Multiple Choice
A) workers lose jobs as a result of anti-inflationary fiscal policies.
B) the federal government engages in bond sales to finance its budget deficit.
C) Congress enacts budget cuts to balance the budget.
D) tax receipts rise more slowly than anticipated, resulting in the need to cut government spending.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) tend to increase.
B) tend to decrease.
C) change unpredictably.
D) not change.
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Multiple Choice
A) rise.
B) fall.
C) remain unchanged.
D) rise or fall, depending on how the deficit is financed.
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Multiple Choice
A) fall and transfer payments rise, causing the economy to contract by less than it would in the absence of automatic stabilizers.
B) rise and transfer payments rise, causing the economy to contract by more than it would in the absence of automatic stabilizers.
C) fall and transfer payments fall, causing the economy to contract by more than it would in the absence of automatic stabilizers.
D) rise and transfer payments fall, causing the economy to contract by less than it would in the absence of automatic stabilizers.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The economy is self-regulating and the best thing the government can do to enhance stability is to stay out of the way.
B) Budgets should be balanced. Doing otherwise is morally wrong.
C) The government should decide on tax and spending plans based on their effects on the economy.
D) Crowding out almost completely cancels out any deficit spending, so fiscal policy is likely to be ineffective.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) government deficits imply higher future taxes.
B) government deficits imply lower future taxes.
C) consumption reduces future taxes.
D) consumption increases future taxes.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) State financing would become more procyclical
B) Balanced-budget requirements in state constitutions would be much less procyclical
C) The need for automatic stabilizers at the federal level would increase
D) State governments would run a greater risk of running short of funds during recessions
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Multiple Choice
A) consumption was sensitive to changes in prices.
B) the government always ran budget deficits.
C) the interest rate was greatly affected by shifts in the demand of loanable funds.
D) investment was not sensitive to changes in the interest rates.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) reduce both budget surpluses and deficits.
B) reduce a budget surplus or increase a deficit.
C) reduce a budget deficit or increase a surplus.
D) increase both budget surpluses and deficits.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) A.
B) B.
C) C.
D) D.
Correct Answer
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