Test bank Chapter one
- Which of the following in is true of the Production Possibilities frontier (PPF) for a closed economy?
- A high rate of investment guarantees a strong outwards movement of the PPF over time
- A country can produce outside the PPF
- At the frontier investment is made possible by saving
- The economy may consume outside the PPF if households save more out of their incomes.
- Using a simple PPF, a country that saves and invests 50% of its income is likely to find all but one of the following:
- Citizens have a poor current standard of living.
- The sacrifices made today are too great in relation to the benefits in the future.
- Additional capital goods have a high opportunity cost.
- Economic growth will be slow.
- The PPF shows the combinations of investment and consumption goods which may be produced with a country’s fixed resources. Which is not true?
- more investment goods should allow more consumption in the future
- with trade, an economy may consume beyond the PPF
- points inside the PPF represent an inefficient use of resources
- with trade, an economy may produce beyond the PPF
- In a closed economy it must be true that
- the economy is always on the PPF.
- it is possible to reach a point beyond the PPF.
- national saving equals national investment.
- investment will always cause the PPF to move out.
- Competitive markets, in theory, ensure all but which one of the following
- that the economy is always on thePPF.
- that the output is produced using technically efficient methods.
- that the economy is allocatively efficient and produces what consumers demand.
- that output is fairly distributed.
- The macroeconomy is comprised of four major markets. Which is not true?
- All these markets are interdependent.
- Each has its own demand and supply, equilibrium price and quantity.
- The market for dairy products is one of these markets.
- The market for labour and the goods market are closely related.
- In the circular flow of income which is not true?
- Money travels to households in exchange for goods.
- Households supply land, capital and labour to firms.
- Money is a stock, income is a flow.
- The monetary value of total output equals that of total income
- If the terms of trade of a country like New Zealand fall, it may be that
- export prices have risen less quickly than import prices.
- the price of a critical import has fallen.
- overseas trading partners have experienced a boom which has increased demand for primary produce.
- all of the above.
- Which of the following statements is not true concerning New Zealand’s cycles of business activity?
- Improving terms of trade have caused boom conditions in the past.
- Two consecutive quarters of negative growth constitute a depression.
- Short term growth is often high but long-term trend growth has been low.
- Recovery and boom are often accompanied by speculation in real estate.
- The balance of trade is
- influenced by the exchange rate and the terms of trade
- Is the difference between national income and national expenditure
- Is represented by exports minus imports (X-M)
- All of the above