Assets minus liabilities equals
A. net worth.
B. wealth.
C. depreciation.
D. Both A and B are correct.
Answer: D
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Suppose the economy is initially in long-run and short-run equilibrium. If the Fed decides to pursue a contractionary monetary policy, we will see
A) bond prices fall, interest rates fall, aggregate demand remains unchanged as consumption spending decreases, but investment spending increases. GDP remains constant in both the short run and the long run, but the price level falls in both. B) bond prices fall, interest rates rise, aggregate demand falls as investment and consumption spending decrease, and real GDP and the price level decreasing in the short-run, but only the price level decreasing in the long run. C) bond prices fall, interest rates rise, aggregate demand falls as investment spending decreases and consumption spending remains unchanged, and real GDP and the price level decrease in the short run, but only the price level falls in the short run. D) interest rates rise but no change in bond prices. Aggregate demand falls as consumption spending and investment spending decrease, and the price level and real GDP fall in both the short run and the long run.
Mark and Charles are roommates at college. Each has written a 25-page term paper for the same English class. They are equally poor typists. Charles types his own paper and gets paid by Mark to type his, too. On the basis of the information given, which one of the following must be true?
a. Mark is wealthier than Charles. b. Mark needs more time to study than Charles. c. Charles hates typing. d. Mark and Charles have different utilities for typing but place the same value on time. e. Mark's opportunity cost of typing is higher than Charles's.
If firms in a perfectly competitive market have dissimilar cost curves what will be the shape of the long-run supply curve?
Which of the following is the primary requirement for a market to be competitive?
a. Low barriers to entry and relatively easy exit b. A downward-sloping demand curve c. High barriers to entry d. A horizontal demand curve