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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Macroeconomics - 3
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Subjects
:
clep
,
economics
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Caused by changes in demand or technology. Long-term and continual unemployment that continues even though the economy is producing normally
Stabilization policies
Asset
Expansionary policies
Structural unemployment
2. The output per employed worker
Sole proprietorship
Labor productivity
Price level
Socially optimal quantity
3. The value of all goods and services produced anywhere in the world by a nation's citizens during a specified amount of time.
Gross National Product (GNP)
Interest
Inside lag
Corporation
4. The opposite of a substitute good - because it usually completes another item and may lead to more consumption of that item.
Seller's surplus
Sunk cost
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
Complement
5. There is an ___________ ___ when aggregate output is above potential output
Quantity equation
Inflationary gap
Okun's Law
Seller's reservation price
6. A policy that affects potential output
Consumption
The principle of efficiency
Supply-side policy
Unemployment insurance
7. Includes payment to the owners of tangible and intangible capital items such as: factories - machines - and copyrights.
Capital income
Law of Demand
Credibility of monetary policy
Intermediate Goods
8. Is equal to Consumption + Government Expenditures + Investment + Exports - Imports The market value of all goods and services produced within a nation during a specified amount of time.
Lorenz curve
Reservation price
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Automatic stabilizers
9. The difference between the price received by the seller and the seller's reservation price
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10. When an economic unit makes more than it spends
Price level
Disinflation
Saving
Interest
11. The increase in total benefit that comes from producing one additional unit.
Real GDP
Reservation price
Marginal benefit
Deflation
12. The slow change in inflation from year to year in industrialized nations
Inflation
Real employment
Macroeconomics
Inflation inertia
13. Measures the ability of an economy to produce (output) goods and services in the short-term and the long-term.
Credibility of monetary policy
Potential output
Aggregate Supply
The rate of inflation
14. Long Run Aggregate Supply - The natural level of GDP - shown vertical on a graph. When LRAS shifts - SRAS (Short Run Aggregate Supply) will follow .
Aggregate supply
LRAS
Law of Demand
Pay
15. Demonstrates that there is an inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment; as inflation increases - unemployment decreases (and vice versa).
Phillips curve
Aggregate supply shock
Unemployment insurance
Participation rate
16. (n) something of value; a resource; an advantage
Saving
Inflation inertia
Participation rate
Asset
17. Money multiplied by velocity equals nominal GDP.
Quantity equation
Traditional economic system
Planned aggregate expenditure (PAE)
Aggregate Supply
18. A GDP decline that lasts two-quarters (six months). A period of slow economic growth
Short run equilibrium output
Recession
Participation rate
Normative analysis
19. The speed that money changes hands in order to buy and sell final goods and services.
Velocity
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
LRAS
Consumption function
20. The maximum amount that an economy can output over a period of time
Potential output
Capitalism
Monetarism
Labor unions
21. A difference between the potential output (potential GDP) of an economy and its actual output (actual GDP)
Nominal GDP
Output gap
Labor unions
The real GDP per person
22. The international sector emphasizes the ________ rate.
Worker mobility
Average tax rate
Exchange
Real quantity
23. Government policies intended to avoid inflation and other effects due to increased expansion. Includes: Action such as decreasing government spending - increasing taxes - and decreasing the supply of money - and raising interest rates.
decreases increases
Menu cost
Invisible hand
Contractionary policies
24. The level of output where output equals planned aggregate expenditure
Worker mobility
Output gap
Intangible Assets
Short run equilibrium output
25. The time period between a policy's implementation and its desired effects on an economy.
Macroeconomics
Tangible Assets
Outside lag
Deflation
26. Can be found by multiplying the average labor productivity by the percentage of people that are working in the economy.
Substitution bias
Intangible Assets
Short run equilibrium output
The real GDP per person
27. A Scottish man (1723-1790) who is known as the father of modern economics.
Saving
Monetarism
Adam Smith
Inflation
28. Organizations that act as moderators between employers and employees
AD curve intersects the SAS curve
Intangible Assets
Hyperinflation
Labor unions
29. An extreme decline in the rate of inflation. Can lead to high levels of unemployment and recessionary gaps.
Disinflation
Unemployment insurance
Velocity
Congressional budget office
30. On a demand curve - the _____ of the item is placed on the vertical axis of the graph.
Outside lag
Velocity
Congressional budget office
Price
31. Combines pure market and command. Example: Japan
Consumer Nondurables
Mixed market
Worker mobility
Policy reaction function
32. An increase in spending due to a perceived increase in wealth.
Intermediate Goods
Saving
Participation rate
The Wealth Effect
33. In a traditional economic system - the availability of resources is based on inheritance. Goods are only produced for consumption and surpluses do not occur. This type of economy is normally found in South American - Asian - and African countries.
Traditional economic system
Worker mobility
Trough
Intangible Assets
34. Maximum price that a customer is willing to pay for a good
Labor unions
Output gap
Consumption function
Reservation price
35. The law that states that as the price of any good or service increases - the quantity of that good or service will increase and vice versa.
The principle of efficiency
Phillips curve
Average tax rate
Law of Supply
36. Describes how the economy directly effects the actions policymakers take.
Nominal GDP
Monopsony
Macroeconomics
Policy reaction function
37. The rate of price increase on all things except food and energy
Standard of living
Structural unemployment
Core rate of inflation
Unemployment insurance
38. When prices fall consistently over time - leading to negative inflation.
decreases increases
Deflation
Supply-side policy
Labor productivity
39. The amount spent by a household on goods and services such as: entertainment - food - and other perishables.
Monetarism
Keynesian economic theory
Trough
Consumption
40. Patents - Goodwill - and Trademarks (lack physical substance)
Intangible Assets
The quality adjustment bias
Real quantity
Expansionary policies
41. The annual percentage rate of change in price level reflected by price indexes
Intangible Assets
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
Inside lag
The rate of inflation
42. The total planned spending on final goods and services.
Income
Planned aggregate expenditure (PAE)
Asset
Average tax rate
43. The labor sector highlights the rate of ____ .
Monetarism
Pay
Short run equilibrium output
Cyclical unemployment
44. Goods like food and clothing that have a short lifespan.
Intermediate Goods
Consumer Nondurables
Worker mobility
Complement
45. Unicorporated entity that has shared ownership.
Indexing
Partnership
Marginal cost
Real GDP
46. Total tax paid divided by total (taxable) income - as a percentage.
Consumption
Substitution effect
AD curve intersects the SAS curve
Average tax rate
47. Payments that the government makes to unemployed workers.
Complement
Labor unions
Unemployment insurance
Reservation price
48. The increase in total cost that comes from producing one additional unit of a specific good or service.
Labor productivity
Consumption
Total surplus
Marginal cost
49. That efficiency leads to economic prosperity for all.
Adam Smith
The principle of efficiency
Invisible hand
Potential output
50. When there is no cyclical unemployment and every person who wishes to work is able to find a job at the prevailing rate for wages and in the prevailing working conditions.
Expansionary policies
Real employment
Autonomous Expenditure
Marginal benefit