Saturday Quiz – October 23, 2010

Welcome to the billy blog Saturday quiz. The quiz tests whether you have been paying attention over the last seven days. See how you go with the following five questions. Your results are only known to you and no records are retained.

Quiz #83

  • 1. A budget deficit equivalent to 3 per cent of GDP signals that the government is adopting a less expansionary policy than if the budget deficit outcome was equivalent to 5 per cent of GDP.
    • True
    • False
    • Maybe
  • 2. When the government borrows from the private sector to match an increase in net public spending, the resulting increase in aggregate demand is less than would be the case if there was no bond sale.
    • True
    • False
    • Maybe
  • 3. If the external balance remains in surplus, then the national government will not impede economic growth by running a budget surplus.
    • True
    • False
  • 4. Fiscal rules such as are embodied in the Stability and Growth Pact of the EMU will continually create conditions of slower growth because they deprive the government of fiscal flexibility to support aggregate demand when necessary.
    • False
    • True
  • 5. Premium Question: Consider the following table which describes four different economies in terms of the behavioural parameters relating to the leakages to aggregate demand. Assume that in all four economies, there is idle capacity, the central bank holds all interest rates constant, inflation is constant and there is no changes in international competitiveness.
    Which economy would deliver the largest national income bonus for a given discretionary expansion in government spending.
    • Economy D
    • Economy C
    • Economy B
    • Economy A

Sorry, quiz 83 is now closed.

You can find the answers and discussion here

This Post Has 4 Comments

  1. I missed one. Actually two, but one doesn’t count because I once again, for some idiotic reason, chose the opposite answer of what I intended to choose. So it doesn’t count.

    The “premium question” was easy.

  2. Ad #3) Shouldn’t this question read “if the external balance remains in a surplus that exceeds the sovereign surplus, then the national, etc.”?

    Ad #4) [Spoiler alert] Why not? Does it hinge on the word “continuously”?

    – Jake

  3. Dear JakeS (at 2010/10/23 at 8:07)

    I won’t comment on your questions (as you note it might spoil it for others) – but tomorrow you will see what was in my mind and probably realise why I worded the questions in that way.

    best wishes
    bill

  4. KT,

    I’m always doing that too, but I didn’t get Q.5 until I re-read it with the answer.

    I read BB to understand social policy, the nitty-gritty of monetary theory always sends my mind wandering.

    Still I’m trying to ‘tame the beast’

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