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Test Bank For All - 10e Gregory Mankiw (Test Bank For All Chapters,...

Testbanks Dec 30, 2025 ★★★★☆ (4.0/5)
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Essen�als o f Economics 10e Gregory Mankiw (Test Bank For All Chapters, 100% Original Verified, A+ Grade) 1 / 4

Page 1

Ch 01: Ten Principles o

f Economics Indicate the answer choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

1.Resources are

  • scarce for households but plentiful for economies.
  • plentiful for households but scarce for economies.
  • scarce for households and scarce for economies.
  • plentiful for households and plentiful for economies.
  • 2.Fundamentally, economics deals with

  • scarcity.
  • money.
  • poverty.
  • banking.
  • 3.The overriding reason why households and societies face many decisions is that

  • resources are scarce.
  • goods and services are not scarce.
  • incomes fluctuate with business cycles.
  • people, by nature, tend to disagree.
  • 4.The phenomenon of scarcity stems from the fact that

  • most economies' production methods are not very good.
  • in most economies, wealthy people consume disproportionate quantities of goods and services.
  • governments restrict production of too many goods and services.
  • resources are limited.
  • 5.In most societies, resources are allocated by

  • a single central planner.
  • a small number of central planners.
  • those firms that use resources to provide goods and services.
  • the combined actions of millions of households and firms.
  • 6.Coal is considered to be a nonrenewable energy source. Which of the following statements is correct?

  • Coal is an unlimited resource.
  • Coal is a scarce resource.
  • Coal is a nonscarce resource.
  • Coal is not a resource.
  • 7.Economics is the study of how society manages its

  • limited wants and unlimited resources.
  • unlimited wants and unlimited resources.
  • limited wants and limited resources.
  • unlimited wants and limited resources.
  • 8.What term refers to the idea that society has limited resources and therefore cannot produce all the goods and services

. 2 / 4

Name:

Class:

Date:

Ch 01: Ten Principles of Economics

Page 2

people wish to have?

  • inefficiency
  • inequality
  • scarcity
  • market failure
  • The adage, "There ain't no such thing as a free lunch," means
  • even people who receive TANF benefits have to pay for food.
  • the cost of living is always increasing.
  • people face tradeoffs.
  • all costs are included in the price of a product.
  • Which of the following statements best represents the principle of the adage, "There ain't no such thing as a free
  • lunch"?

  • Diego can attend the concert only by carpooling with siblings.
  • Justin leaves wallet at home and misses lunch.
  • Zehra must repair the bike tire before riding it to school.
  • Dani must decide between going to Florida or Brazil for spring break.
  • Suppose that you plan your activities for a hot summer day. You would like to go to the local swimming pool and see
  • the latest blockbuster movie. However, the only available ticket is for the same time that the pool is open. So you can only choose one activity. This illustrates the basic principle that

  • people respond to incentives.
  • rational people think at the margin.
  • people face tradeoffs.
  • improvements in efficiency sometimes come at the expense of equality.
  • While pollution regulations yield the benefit of a cleaner environment and the improved health that comes with it, the
  • regulations come at the cost of reducing the incomes of the regulated firms' owners, workers, and customers. This statement illustrates the principle that

  • trade can make everyone better off.
  • rational people think at the margin.
  • people face tradeoffs.
  • people respond to incentives.
  • When society requires that firms reduce pollution, there is
  • a tradeoff because of reduced incomes to the firms' owners and workers.
  • a tradeoff only if some firms are forced to close.
  • no tradeoff, since the cost of reducing pollution falls only on the firms affected by the requirements.
  • no tradeoff, since everyone benefits from reduced pollution.
  • Efficiency means that
  • society is conserving resources in order to save them for the future.
  • society's goods and services are distributed equally among society's members.
  • society's goods and services are distributed fairly, though not necessarily equally, among society's members.

. 3 / 4

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Ch 01: Ten Principles of Economics

Page 3

  • society is getting the most it can from its scarce resources.
  • The property of society getting the most it can from its scarce resources is called
  • efficiency.
  • equality.
  • externality.
  • productivity.
  • Efficiency
  • and equality both refer to how much a society can produce with its resources.
  • and equality both refer to how fairly the benefits from using resources are distributed between members of a
  • society.

  • refers to how much a society can produce with its resources. Equality refers to how evenly the benefits from
  • using resources are distributed among members of society.

  • refers to how evenly the benefits from using resources are distributed between members of society. Equality
  • refers to how much a society can produce with its resources.

  • The terms equality and efficiency are similar in that they both refer to benefits to society. However, they are different
  • in that

  • equality refers to uniform distribution of those benefits and efficiency refers to maximizing benefits from
  • scarce resources.

  • equality refers to maximizing benefits from scarce resources and efficiency refers to uniform distribution of
  • those benefits.

  • equality refers to everyone facing identical tradeoffs and efficiency refers to the opportunity cost of the
  • benefits.

  • equality refers to the opportunity cost of the benefits and efficiency refers to everyone facing identical
  • tradeoffs.

  • When society gets the most it can from its scarce resources, then the outcome is called
  • equitable.
  • efficient.
  • normal.
  • marginal.
  • A typical society strives to get the most it can from its scarce resources. At the same time, the society attempts to
  • distribute the benefits of those resources to the members of the society in a fair manner. However, redistributing income from rich to poor reduces the reward for working hard. Therefore, society faces a tradeoff between

  • guns and butter.
  • efficiency and equality.
  • inflation and unemployment.
  • work and leisure.
  • Which of the following is true?
  • Efficiency refers to the size of the economic pie; equality refers to how the pie is divided.
  • Government policies usually improve upon both equality and efficiency.
  • As long as the economic pie continually gets larger, no one will have to go hungry.
  • .

  • / 4

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