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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) national defense
B) subsidies for mass transportation
C) law enforcement in major U.S. cities
D) Social Security
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Multiple Choice
A) 2009
B) 1984
C) 1993
D) 2001
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Multiple Choice
A) government budget deficit.
B) government budget surplus.
C) balanced budget.
D) public debt.
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Multiple Choice
A) a reduction in the size of the recessionary gap and increase in real GDP.
B) an increase in the size of the recessionary gap and decrease in real GDP.
C) an increase in inflation and increase in aggregate supply.
D) an inflationary gap.
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Multiple Choice
A) a noncontrollable expenditure.
B) national defense.
C) payments to contractors for routing services performed.
D) discretionary payments.
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Multiple Choice
A) results in inflation-adjusted revenue and expenditure numbers.
B) helps us understand the size of the deficit relative to the size of the economy.
C) was useful through the 1980s, but is no longer helpful because both the deficit and real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) have grown so large.
D) is only useful if the budget deficit is rising at an annual rate of more than 4 percent.
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Multiple Choice
A) a budget surplus.
B) a budget deficit.
C) the national debt.
D) fiscal policy.
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Multiple Choice
A) about the same number of years with budget deficits as with budget surpluses.
B) twice as many annual budget surpluses as annual budget deficits.
C) only one year with a budget surplus.
D) many more budget deficits than budget surpluses.
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A) included in the net public debt.
B) added to the gross public debt to calculate the net public debt.
C) not included in the gross public debt.
D) excluded from the net public debt.
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Multiple Choice
A) Interest rates decline.
B) Interest rates rise.
C) Interest rates hold constant because the demand for credit decreases.
D) There is no impact unless the Federal Reserve decides to alter the money supply.
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Multiple Choice
A) Spending on the military and the war on terrorism
B) Spending to improve the nation's schools
C) Spending to improve and expand the nation's infrastructure
D) Spending on entitlements
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Multiple Choice
A) decreased by $70 billion.
B) increased by $250 billion.
C) increased by $70 billion.
D) decreased by $62.5 billion.
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Multiple Choice
A) the total amount consumers owe on their credit cards.
B) the total amount in taxes consumers pay to the government.
C) accumulated budget deficits and surpluses.
D) the total amount the government spends for goods and services.
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Multiple Choice
A) The nation's national debt equals $0.4 trillion.
B) This nation has a current year budget surplus of $0.4 trillion.
C) This nation is currently running a budget deficit of $0.4 trillion.
D) The nation has a current year trade surplus of $0.4 trillion.
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Multiple Choice
A) budget surpluses.
B) balanced budgets.
C) budget deficits.
D) contractionary budget cycles.
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Multiple Choice
A) entitlements.
B) military spending.
C) interest expenses.
D) salaries of government employees.
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Multiple Choice
A) look at the absolute amount owed by the government.
B) compare it to the nation's real GDP.
C) look at the annual percentage change in the public debt.
D) compare it to the debts of all developed countries.
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Multiple Choice
A) the military.
B) entitlement programs.
C) environmental protection programs.
D) foreign aid.
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Multiple Choice
A) increases in tax revenues.
B) increases in payments for entitlements.
C) increases in government spending.
D) decreases in tax rates.
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