A) increases as real GDP increases.
B) increases as unemployment increases.
C) decreases as unemployment increases.
D) decreases in recession.
E) makes recessions more severe.
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A) a budget with a positive balance.
B) a budget deficit.
C) a budget surplus.
D) a budget with a negative debt.
E) an illegal budget because outlays must exceed tax revenues.
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A) with a negative balance.
B) deficit.
C) surplus.
D) debt.
E) with no balance.
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A) increases by $10 billion.
B) increases by $10 billion multiplied by the government expenditure multiplier.
C) increases by $10 billion multiplied by the tax multiplier.
D) decreases by $10 billion.
E) decreases by $10 billion multiplied by the government expenditure multiplier.
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A) equal to zero because taxes and government expenditure are changed to leave the budget balanced.
B) misnamed because it does not leave the budget balanced.
C) greater than zero and less than the government expenditure multiplier.
D) greater than zero and greater than the government expenditure multiplier.
E) less than zero, that is, it is negative.
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A) increases; increase
B) increases; decrease
C) decreases; increase
D) decreases; decrease
E) increase; do not change
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A) reduce the interest rate and so allow firms to increase their level of investment.
B) increase taxes so the budget is always balanced.
C) raise the exchange rate so U.S.exports become more attractive to foreigners.
D) mean disposable income does not change by as much as real GDP.
E) increase the quantity of money in circulation.
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A) spending by Congress on its own perks of office.
B) taxes paid by those qualified by their income.
C) spending on programs for people qualified to receive benefits.
D) spending by the President on the White House.
E) spending that increases in expansions and decreases in recessions.
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A) aggregate demand.
B) the budget deficit.
C) tax receipts.
D) aggregate supply.
E) potential GDP.
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A) decrease; decrease
B) increase; be unchanged
C) increase; increase
D) decrease; be unchanged
E) increase; decrease
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A) raising; increasing
B) raising; decreasing
C) cutting; increasing
D) cutting; decreasing
E) raising; not changing
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A) AD curve leftward.
B) AS curve leftward.
C) AD curve leftward and AS curve leftward.
D) AD curve rightward.
E) potential GDP line leftward.
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A) tax revenue exceeds government outlays.
B) tax revenue and government outlays are equal.
C) the tax revenue is falling and government outlays are rising.
D) government outlays exceed tax revenue.
E) the tax revenue is rising and government outlays are falling.
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A) recessionary; $1 trillion
B) inflationary; $1 trillion
C) recessionary; $12 trillion
D) inflationary; $12 trillion
E) recessionary; $13 trillion
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A) we are forced to pay for services from the government.
B) that vary with real GDP.
C) that are avoided with the use of legal tax shelters.
D) enacted by Congress that explicitly state the amount to be paid.
E) that rise in recessions and fall in expansions.
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A) recessionary; more than; more than
B) inflationary; less than; more than
C) inflationary; exactly; exactly
D) inflationary; less than; less than
E) recessionary; less than; less than
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A) $20; 200 billion
B) $30; 250 billion
C) $35; 200 billion
D) $30; 200 billion
E) The equilibrium is not shown.
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