A) an increase in government expenditures and a reduction in budget deficits.
B) an increase in government expenditures and an increase in budget deficits.
C) a decrease in government expenditures and a reduction in budget deficits.
D) a decrease in government expenditures and an increase in budget deficits.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Industrial output had been declining, but it stabilized during the months following passage of the NIRA.
B) Industrial output increased sharply after the passage of the NIRA.
C) Industrial output had begun to increase, but it fell sharply following the passage of the NIRA.
D) Industrial output and employment declined during the months prior to passage of the NIRA, and the legislation was unable to stop the decline.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the Keynesian view
B) the supply-side view
C) the view that the federal government should maintain a balanced budget
D) the new classical view that fiscal policy exerts little impact on demand and output
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The policies of the New Deal brought the Great Depression to an end well before World War II.
B) Sound economic policy was followed during this era, which makes the length and severity of the Great Depression puzzling to economists.
C) The length and severity of the Great Depression was the result of unsound economic policies followed by both the Hoover and Roosevelt Administrations.
D) The Great Depression was largely the result of the highly expansionary monetary policy of the Fed during the 1930s.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the stock market crash of October 1929 was the cause of the Great Depression of the 1930s.
B) stock market prices rose steadily throughout the entire year of 1930.
C) after recovering most of its value from the crash of October 1929, stock prices again declined steadily during the debate and passage of the Smoot-Hawley trade bill.
D) after the crash of October 1929, the Smoot-Hawley trade bill marked the beginning of a steady recovery of the stock market.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) a reduction in unemployment and an increase in real output.
B) a stable economic environment and an increase in investment.
C) economic uncertainty and prolonged unemployment.
D) a quick end to the depression once the policies had taken effect.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the Fed allowed the money supply to contract substantially.
B) the Fed increased the money supply sharply.
C) Congress cut tax rates sharply.
D) Congress cut tariffs substantially.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) record-high unemployment rates for a period of many years
B) a sharp and prolonged contraction in the money supply
C) significant increases in taxes and trade restrictions in order to counter budget deficits
D) frequent policy changes that generated an unstable and unpredictable economic climate
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) They increase employment and thereby promote the growth of GDP.
B) They prevent a nation from fully realizing the potential gains from specialization, exchange, and competition.
C) They protect domestic producers and thereby promote economic growth.
D) Both a and c are correct.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) an increase in tax rates and a contraction in the money supply.
B) a decrease in tax rates and a contraction in the money supply.
C) a decrease in tax rates and an expansion in the money supply.
D) an increase in tax rates and an expansion in the money supply.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) labor unions.
B) business cartels.
C) minimum wage laws.
D) import tariffs.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) break monopolies and cartels, and introduce competition into several different industries.
B) fix prices, wages, and quotas for several industries in an effort to keep prices high.
C) lower corporate taxes and remove collusive behavior in an effort to keep U.S. firms competitive with foreign manufacturers.
D) create a stable economic environment that would encourage investment and expansion in the industrial sector of the economy.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) effective against inflation but incapable of dealing with a decline in output.
B) a source of economic instability if utilized inappropriately.
C) incapable of reversing an economic downturn when the money supply is increasing at a constant rate.
D) incapable of reversing a major downturn unless the recession stems from inflation.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) increase the incentive of people to earn.
B) lead to a proportional increase in tax revenue and a reduction in the size of the budget deficit.
C) cause people to work, earn, and invest less than would be the case if marginal tax rates were lower.
D) attract workers from other countries where tax rates are lower.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) increase trade restrictions and tariffs to save jobs and enhance tax revenue
B) a reduction in the money supply in order to strengthen the dollar and combat inflation
C) keep taxes low in order to stimulate production and minimize the decline in personal and business income
D) institute frequent policy changes in order to search for and find the policy combination that would be most effective
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) large increases in tax rates in 1932 and again in 1936
B) large increases in the money supply during the early 1930s
C) a reduction in tariffs protecting many U.S. industries
D) a substantial tax rate reduction, which led to large deficits and high interest rates during the early 1930s
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Trade restrictions are a good way for a country to increase the total employment and income level of its citizens.
B) As the experience during the 1930s illustrates, trade restrictions are an effective way to increase exports and tax revenues.
C) Trade restrictions provide gains to domestic residents at the expense of foreigners.
D) Trade restrictions often provide benefits to highly visible special interest groups while imposing a less visible cost on the general populace.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the large budget deficits of the federal government.
B) the reduction in tariffs and the influx of foreign imports during the early 1930s.
C) the excessive use of credit cards.
D) a sharp contraction in the money supply.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) steady growth in GDP and a decline in the rate of unemployment.
B) a prolonged period of high unemployment and output substantially below its potential.
C) a large decline in the stock market followed by a steady recovery.
D) a failure of expansionary monetary policy to stimulate output and employment.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The 1929 stock market crash explains the lengthy duration of the Great Depression.
B) The severity of the economic downturn, if not its onset, was the result of perverse monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policies.
C) The sharp decreases in tariff rates and tax rates cushioned the downturn and limited it to three years.
D) The Great Depression indicates that monetary policy affects prices but exerts little impact on output.
Correct Answer
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