A) be happy with the amount of government involvement in the economy.
B) find government involvement in the economy to be too much.
C) find government involvement in the economy to be too little.
D) be unhappy with the amount of government involvement in the economy.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) has persisted well beyond its original purpose in the 1940s.
B) is an example of the "special-interest effect."
C) can be attributed to the principal-agent problem.
D) is hard to stop because of the "concentrated benefit and diffuse costs" problem.
E) All of these choices are correct.
Correct Answer
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Essay
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) logrolling.
B) rent-seeking behavior.
C) the paradox of voting.
D) the median-voter model.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) marginal benefit exceeds marginal cost by the greatest amount.
B) total benefit equals total cost.
C) marginal benefit equals marginal cost.
D) marginal benefit is zero.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) log-rolling.
B) pork-barrel politics.
C) the special-interest effect.
D) market failure.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) a majority of the voters would favor the park, 2-to-1.
B) a majority of the voters would favor the stadium, 2-to-1.
C) a majority of the voters would favor the park, 3-to-0.
D) a majority of the voters would favor the stadium, 3-to-0.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the marginal benefit is still larger than the marginal cost.
B) of externalities in production.
C) the benefits accrue to politically powerful government officials and their constituents.
D) of market failures.
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Multiple Choice
A) workers and managers.
B) managers and stockholders.
C) stockholders and bondholders.
D) corporations and their banks.
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Multiple Choice
A) the market allocating resources efficiently.
B) monopoly power due to lack of competition.
C) supply-side market failure.
D) demand-side market failure.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) accepted; the public good is produced, even though it is economically inefficient.
B) defeated; the public good is not produced, even though it would have been efficient to do so.
C) accepted; the public good is produced, which is economically efficient.
D) defeated; the public good is not produced, which is the proper outcome.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) splitting the difference.
B) social engineering.
C) logrolling.
D) grandstanding.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) negative externalities that are created by some policy actions.
B) political rules that encourage elected officials to engage in unethical and illegal behavior.
C) inconsistency between voters' interest in programs and politicians' interest in reelection.
D) paradox of voting.
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True/False
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Abby, Ben, Clara, and Joe
B) Ben, Clara, Joe, and Matt
C) Ben, Clara, and Joe
D) Abby, Ben, and Clara
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) special-interest effect.
B) principal-agent problem.
C) moral hazard problem.
D) adverse selection effect.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) law of demand.
B) diminishing marginal utility.
C) nonexcludability characteristic.
D) rivalry characteristic.
Correct Answer
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