If a German firm produces cars in the United States, that production should count towards
A) U.S. GNP.
B) German GDP.
C) U.S. GDP.
D) both U.S. GNP and German GDP.
Answer: C
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According to the above figure for a gasoline market, what happens when the price per gallon of gasoline jumps from $1 to $4?
A) A gasoline surplus is replaced by a gas shortage. B) The market moves from a shortage of 40 million gallons/day to a surplus of 50 million gallons/day. C) The market shortage is replaced by market equilibrium. D) A surplus of 40 million gallons/day results.
In evaluating public projects, a higher interest rate (r) will favor those projects which
a. have costs and benefits occurring in the more distant future. b. have costs and benefits occurring in the more immediate future. c. have benefits occurring in the more immediate future and costs occurring in the more distant future. d. have benefits occurring in the more distant future and costs occurring in the more immediate future.
If the economy is represented in the graph shown and is currently at point E2, which action is the Fed most likely to undertake?
A. Contractionary monetary policy, because it will shift AD to the left. B. Expansionary monetary policy, because it will shift AD to the right. C. Expansionary monetary policy, because it will shift AD to the left. D. Contractionary monetary policy, because it will shift AS to the right.
Following the collapse of its housing and stock markets around 1990, the Japanese government ________
A) effectively managed the crisis, limiting the damage to the Japanese economy B) took only limited action in response to the crisis C) was able to rely on private initiatives in quickly reversing the course of GDP in the 1990s D) fixed the value of the yen to the Euro and pursued an aggressive monetary policy