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POSC 100 Study Guide Ricardo Salas

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Title: POSC 100 Study Guide Ricardo Salas


1
POSC 100 Study Guide Ricardo
Salas
  • Part 4
  • Assignment 26

2
Notice
  • Dear students
  • The odd-numbered questions are answered for
    you. The answers to the even-numbered questions
    are the result of your readings. This is to
    assure that you are understanding the material.
    Good luck!

3
Assignment 26
4
Fiscal Policy Government as Manager
  • T or F Questions (4)
  • Multiple Choice questions (16)
  • Fill-in Questions (4)

5
True or False Questions

6
True or False
  • 1/4
  • Although the United States has had
    recessionary periods since the 1930s, none of
    these downturns has been anywhere near the
    severity of the Great Depression.

7
Answer
  • 1/4
  • True

8
True or False
  • 2/4
  • The president can choose not to pay interest
    on the federal owed on the national debt.

9
Answer
  • 2/4

10
True or False
  • 3/4
  • In reality, even a large part of discretionary
    spending of the federal budget is not truly
    discretionary.

11
Answer
  • 3/4
  • True

12
True or False
  • 4/4
  • The fact is the Fed is a wholly impartial
    body, representing the public interest and no
    special interest.

13
Answer
  • 4/4

14
Multiple Choice Questions
  • The following questions are multiple choices.
    Select the most appropriate answer.

15
1/16
  • Prior to the 1930s, the federal government
    adopted the following policy when dealing with
    the nation's economy
  • a) had extensive policies in place to
    stimulate the
  • economy
  • b) believed that the market was
    self-regulating and
  • assumed a passive role
  • c) supported farm subsidies, but avoided an
    industrial
  • policy
  • d) limited support programs to the
    unemployed worker
  • but no one else.

16
Answer
  • 1/16
  • b

17
2/16
  • The government's efforts to maintain a stable
    economy are made mainly through its taxing and
    spending decisions, which together are referred
    to as
  • a) fiscal policy
  • b) monetary policy
  • c) oversight role
  • d) authorization responsibilities.

18
Answer
  • 2/16

19
3/16
  • John Maynard Keynes offered the following
  • economic policy when a depression occurs
  • a) The government should curtail its
    expenditures to bring
  • needed capital into private hands
  • b) The government should print less money to
    assure that
  • consumers and investors can help stimulate
    the
  • economy
  • c) The government should let the market rectify
    the
  • economic downturn by limiting its role
  • d) The government should engage in deficit
    spending to
  • help stimulate recovery.

20
Answer
  • 3/16
  • d

21
4/16
  • Why did policymakers not apply a keynesian
  • economic strategy to help bring the U.S.
  • economy out of recession in the early 1990s?
  • a) They felt that monetary policies were
    unsuitable for
  • resolving most economic downturns
  • b) Ideologues had taken over fiscal policy
    during the
  • Bush presidency, limiting his options
  • c) A huge national debt had accumulated over
    the past
  • two decades
  • d) Keynesian theory could only works during a
    severe economic
  • crisis, like the Great Depression, not for
    less severe ones.

22
Answer
  • 4/16

23
5/16
  • How high had the federal government's
  • national debt become in the early 1990s?
  • a) 250 billion b) 1
    trillion
  • c) 4 trillion d) 10
    trillion.

24
Answer
  • 5/16
  • c

25
6/16
  • About how many people receive social
  • security checks from the federal
  • government?
  • a) 10 million b) 17
    million
  • c) 29 million d) 40
    million.

26
Answer
  • 6/16

27
7/16
  • Every day, the federal government spends
  • about 4 billion, which is more than a
  • typical corporation pumps into the economy
  • during an entire
  • a) week b) month
  • c) half year d)
    year.

28
Answer
  • 7/16
  • d

29
8/16
  • A cornerstone of President Reagan's
  • economic program, whereby tax breaks for
  • businesses and upper-income individuals
  • was the way to stimulate economic growth
  • a) demand-side fiscal policy
  • b) business stimulation theory
  • c) supply-side economics
  • d) private-sector capital accumulation.

30
Answer
  • 8/16

31
9/16
  • A tax that individuals pay on capital-
  • investments, such as property and stocks
  • a) money-investment tax
  • b) income-generated tax
  • c) capital-gains tax
  • d) capital-induced tax.

32
Answer
  • 9/16
  • c

33
10/16
  • George Bush cut the federal government's
    capital-gains tax from 28 percent to
  • a) 25 percent b) 20 percent
  • c) 18 percent d) 15 percent

34
Answer
  • 10/16

35
11/16
  • Outgoing Federal Reserve board
  • chairman Alan Greenspan said he would
  • prefer to see the deficits reduced through
  • a) tax increases on capital gains and
    wealthy incomes,
  • b) privatizing social security and
    eliminating medicare,
  • c) spending cuts
  • d) continued borrowing.

36
Answer
  • 11/16
  • c

37
12/16
  • An increase in the average level of prices of
  • goods and services
  • a) inflation b)
    deflation
  • c) stagflation d)
    recession.

38
Answer
  • 12/16

39
13/16
  • To fight inflation, government should
  • a) decrease taxes on both corporations and
    individuals,
  • b) decrease interest rates via monetary
    policy and
  • increase expenditures
  • c) expand the federal budget while decreasing
    taxing
  • d) cut expenditures and raise personal income
    taxes to
  • lower demand.

40
Answer
  • 13/16
  • d

41
14/16
  • Why would Republicans prefer to keep
  • income taxes on wealthier individuals at a
  • relatively low level?
  • a) to encourage savings and investment that
    fosters
  • economic growth
  • b) based on the principle that the purpose of
    government is
  • to protect property not take it
  • c) wealthy people are better able to compel
    public figures
  • to support policies that protects the
    former's interests
  • d) elected officials are dependent on the rich
    and powerful
  • to pay for the costs of their campaigns.

42
Answer
  • 14/16

43
15/16
  • The 2001 Bush tax proposal, the legislation
  • contained the largest tax cut since 1981,
  • primarily benefiting the
  • a) poor b) the
    middle class
  • c) the wealthy d) no one.

44
Answer
  • 15/16
  • c

45
16/16
  • What is the key advantage that monetary
  • policy has over fiscal policy according to
  • Patterson?
  • a) monetary policy is less complex than fiscal
    policy
  • b) monetary policy can be implemented more
    quickly
  • c) members of the Fed are independent of the
    public
  • and powerful interest groups
  • d) the Fed has the ability to affect taxes.

46
Answer
  • 16/16

47
Fill-in Questions
  • The following questions have missing critical
    words. Fill in the most appropriate missing word.

48
1/4
  • How does the policy of demand-side economics
    contribute to economic recovery?
  • a) When the economy is __________, the
    government
  • can __________ its spending, thus placing
    more
  • money in consumers' hands.
  • b) With additional money to spend, consumers buy
  • more _______ and __________.
  • c) This increased demand ____________
  • ____________ to produce more goods and
    hire
  • more workers.

49
Answer
  • 1/4
  • sluggish, increase
  • goods, services
  • stimulates businesses

50
2/4
  • What are the general steps by which the federal
    budget is
  • achieved?
  • a) In _________, the president transmits the full
    budget to Congress.
  • b) In reviewing the president's proposed budget,
    the Congress relies heavily on the
    _______________ ________ __________.
  • c) The House Appropriations Committee and the
    Senate Appropriations Committee and their
    subcommittees then takes on the primary task of
    ___________ the budget items, invariably making
    some changes at this stage.The subcommittees'
    recommendations are then submitted to the House
    and Senate Appropriations Committee for final
    review and submission for a full vote.
  • d) After the work of the appropriations
    committees has been completed and is approved by
    the full House and Senate, differences in the
    Senate and House versions of the appropriations
    bill must be ____________ in ____________
    committee. The final version is sent to the
    president.
  • e) Once the budget has been passed by both the
    House and the Senate and is signed by the
    president, it takes effect on _________ 1, the
    starting date of the federal government's fiscal
    year.

51
Answer
  • 2/4

52
3/4
  • The following are principles embraced by
    monetarists when evaluating the economy
  • a) Too much money in circulation contributes to
  • ___________ because
  • b) too many _________ are chasing too few
    _______,
  • which drives up prices.
  • c) Too little money in circulation results in a
    slowing
  • economy and rising ______________,
    because
  • d) ___________ lack the ready cash and easy
    credit
  • required to push spending levels up.

53
Answer
  • 3/4
  • inflation
  • dollars, goods
  • unemployment
  • consumers

54
4/4
  • How does the Fed affect the money supply?
  • a) by raising or lowering the ______ _________
    that
  • member banks are required to _________
    with the
  • Federal Reserve,
  • b) This reserve is a ____________ of each
    member's
  • total deposits.
  • c) By raising or lowering __________ _______.

55
Answer
  • 4/4

56

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