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1. To maintain their standard of living, most people rely on
2. To maintain their standard of living, most people rely on
All of the above are correct.
3. Which of the following is correct?
The amount of unemployment that a country typically experiences is a determinant of that country’s standard
of living, and some degree of unemployment is inevitable in a complex economy.
The amount of unemployment that a country typically experiences is a determinant of that country’s standard
of living, and a complex economy can achieve zero unemployment.
The amount of unemployment that a country typically experiences is not a determinant of that country’s
standard of living, and a complex economy can achieve zero unemployment.
The amount of unemployment that a country typically experiences is not a determinant of that country’s
standard of living, and some degree of unemployment is inevitable in a complex economy.
4. The amount of unemployment varies
little over time and across countries.
little over time but substantially across countries.
substantially over time but little across countries.
substantially over time and across countries.
5. The amount of unemployment that an economy normally experiences is called the
average rate of unemployment.
natural rate of unemployment.
cyclical rate of unemployment.
typical rate of unemployment.
6. An economy’s natural rate of unemployment is the
economy’s long-run target level of unemployment.
amount of unemployment that the economy normally experiences.
lowest rate of unemployment the economy can achieve.
All of the above are correct.
7. The natural rate of unemployment is the
unemployment rate that would prevail with zero inflation.
rate associated with the highest possible level of GDP.
difference between the long-run and short-run unemployment rates.
amount of unemployment that the economy normally experiences.
8. In the long run the unemployment rate equals
the cyclical rate of unemployment.
the natural rate of unemployment.
the sum of the cyclical and natural rate of unemployment.
9. Cyclical unemployment refers to
the portion of unemployment created by job search.
short-run fluctuations around the natural rate of unemployment.
changes in unemployment due to changes in the natural rate of unemployment.
the portion of unemployment created by wages set above the equilibrium level.
10. The deviation of unemployment from its natural rate is called
the economic rate of unemployment.
11. Cyclical unemployment refers to
the relationship between the probability of unemployment and a worker’s changing level of experience.
how often a worker is likely to be employed during her lifetime.
year-to-year fluctuations of unemployment around its natural rate.
long-term trends in unemployment.
12. Cyclical unemployment
has a different explanation than does the natural rate of unemployment.
refers to the year-to-year fluctuation in unemployment around an economy’s natural rate of unemployment.
is closely associated with short-run ups and downs of economic activity.
All of the above are correct.
13. Cyclical unemployment is closely associated with
long-term economic growth.
short-run ups and downs of the economy.
fluctuations in the natural rate of unemployment.
changes in the minimum wage.
14. The designation “natural” implies that the natural rate of unemployment
is impervious to economic policy.
does not go away on its own even in the long run.
15. The natural rate of unemployment
is the economy’s desirable level of unemployment.
cannot be affected by economic policy.
is typically constant over time.
None of the above is correct.
16. The natural rate of unemployment
is the economy’s desirable level of unemployment.
arises from a single problem that has a single solution.
is the amount of unemployment that does not go away on its own.
None of the above is correct.
17. The natural rate of unemployment
arises from a single problem that has a single solution.
is easy for policymakers to reduce.
Both a and b are correct.
None of the above is correct.
18. The natural rate of unemployment
varies less than the measured unemployment rate.
cannot be changed by government policy.
is closely associated with the ups and downs in economic activity.
is set by the Federal Reserve.