A) 20 percent.
B) 40 percent.
C) 60 percent.
D) 80 percent.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) zero.
B) 25 percent.
C) 50 percent.
D) 100 percent.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) reduced the incentive of high-income Americans to work.
B) increased the incentive of high-income Americans to utilize tax shelters.
C) increased the unemployment rate of high-income Americans.
D) increased the visible income of high-income Americans.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) average income of the bottom one-tenth of all income recipients.
B) cost of an economical and nutritional food plan for a family multiplied by six.
C) cost of an economical and nutritional food plan for a family multiplied by three.
D) average income of a family headed by a worker who has been unemployed for six months or more.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) unorganized groups of taxpayers and consumers will be better able to secure redistribution through the political process than well-organized interest groups.
B) rent-seeking activities are beneficial to a nation's prosperity because they alter public policy.
C) most income transfers in the United States are directed toward the poor.
D) market adjustments and competition for transfers will erode much of the gain of transfer recipients.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) person age 65 years and older.
B) husband and wife team with one but not the other in the labor force.
C) single-parent.
D) college graduate.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) country III has the most unequal income distribution.
B) country II has the most unequal income distribution.
C) country I has the most unequal income distribution.
D) country III has the most equal income distribution.
E) country II has a more equal income distribution than Country I.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) an absolute amount that applies to all families equally (i.e., $20,000 household earnings for 2009) .
B) variable with respect to family size and composition.
C) adjusted once each decade, with the census numbers.
D) all of the above.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) adjusted annually for increases in real per capita income.
B) adjusted annually for changes in prices.
C) invariant to differences in the size and composition of families.
D) the highest income level that would leave one in the bottom quintile of income recipients.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Various measures of income inequality can be used to objectively determine the fairness of an income distribution.
B) When the political process is democratic, income transfer programs will redistribute income from the rich to the poor.
C) The fairness of an income distribution is a normative concept; it cannot be determined objectively by economic criteria.
D) Income inequality is the fairest method to allocate income.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 10 percent.
B) 40 percent.
C) 60 percent.
D) 75 percent.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The degree of inequality is reduced when transfers and taxes are considered.
B) The inequality in annual income data understates the true degree of inequality in lifetime income.
C) Differences in age and family characteristics contribute to the degree of inequality.
D) The inequality in consumption spending across households is smaller than the inequality in annual income.
Correct Answer
verified
Essay
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Both I and II are true.
B) Both I and II are false.
C) I is true; II is false.
D) II is true; I is false.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) there is a fixed economic pie to be divided among individuals.
B) differences in incomes provide individuals with an incentive to supply resources that are highly valued by others.
C) a central distributing agency carves up the economic pie and allocates slices to individuals.
D) both a and b above are true.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) individuals will undertake fewer projects that create income.
B) taxing the rich and distributing the money to the poor becomes the best way to increase the size of the economic pie.
C) corporations will profit more.
D) individuals have a strong incentive to undertake projects that generate income.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Samaritan's dilemma.
B) rule of inverse benefits.
C) implicit marginal tax law.
D) Smith paradox.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) filed tax returns and thus all their income were known.
B) were different with regard to their age and size characteristics.
C) were more similar with regard to size, age, education, and other major factors that are linked to income.
D) were more similar with regard to their hair color, height, and weight.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) 45 percent.
B) 55 percent.
C) 65 percent.
D) 70 percent.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) improve the overall efficiency of the economy.
B) increase aggregate output.
C) lead to a higher personal income.
D) provide additional tax revenue for the government.
Correct Answer
verified
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