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quiz Questions
Q1
According to the Permanent Income Hypothesis (PIH) formulated by Milton Friedman, what type of income fluctuation dictates a consumer's current consumption choices?
Transitory income shifts drop consumption to zero
Changes in permanent income guide long-term consumption patterns
Diurnal wage receipts generate hyper-elastic luxury demand
Unexpected windfalls are entirely consumed immediately
Explanation
The PIH states that consumption is a function of permanent income (long-term expected income), while transitory income changes are primarily directed into savings or dissavings.
Q2
In John Maynard Keynes's General Theory, what primary macroeconomic identity connects disposable income ($Y_d$), consumption ($C$), and saving ($S$)?
$Y_d \equiv C - S + I$
$Y_d \equiv C + S$
$Y_d \equiv C \times S$
$Y_d \equiv S - C$
Explanation
By definition, private disposable income is divided entirely between current consumption expenditure and saving, yielding the identity $Y_d \equiv C + S$.
Q3
Which concept defines the physical transformation of current saving into real physical capital assets like machinery, equipment, or factory installations?
Financial arbitrage
Real economic investment
Precautionary hoarding
Portfolio speculation
Explanation
In economic theory, investment is the addition to the real physical stock of capital in an economy over a given period, distinct from financial asset purchases.
Q4
What economic concept is illustrated by the classic 'Paradox of Thrift' within a demand-driven macroeconomic model during a recession?
Higher savings lower interest rates and boost employment instantly
Attempts by all individuals to save more cut aggregate demand and total income
Wealth shifts from lenders to debtors through deflationary loops
Scarcity of capital shifts the long-run supply curve outwards
Explanation
The paradox of thrift shows that if everyone tries to increase saving during a recession, aggregate demand falls, which drops total income and can leave total community savings unchanged or lower.
Q5
If an increase in public investment causes an equal dollar-for-dollar reduction in private business investment due to surging capital costs, what economic term describes this outcome?
The multiplier process
Crowding out effect
Liquidity trap trap
Capital accumulation loop
Explanation
Crowding out refers to a situation where increased government involvement or borrowing in a financial market drives up interest rates, directly reducing private investment.
Q6
If an individual chooses to spend $10,000 of their income on purchasing a highly volatile financial derivative rather than placing it in a bank savings account, how is the $10,000 classified in macroeconomic resource accounting?
Real capital investment
Financial asset portfolio allocation
Direct personal consumption expenditure
Autonomous state expenditure
Explanation
In macroeconomic accounting, buying secondary financial instruments is a portfolio reallocation (financial transaction), not a real economic investment adding to the physical capital stock.
Q7
What operational concept describes the long-term process of saving money to replace worn-out capital assets, ensuring an economy's total wealth does not shrink?
Net financial capital surplus
Capital consumption allowance (Depreciation)
Autonomous inventory build
Sunk accounting cost mitigation
Explanation
Depreciation allowances or capital consumption adjustments represent the savings required to replace degraded capital stock and maintain the baseline wealth of the economy.
Q8
According to the lifecycle hypothesis of saving and consumption, how do individuals balance their resource allocations during their peak earning years?
They consume their entire current income to maximize instantaneous utility
They accumulate net savings to fund consumption during retirement
They borrow extensively against future inheritance values
They convert all liquid wealth into immediate cash balances
Explanation
The lifecycle hypothesis states that individuals save a high proportion of their income during peak working years to fund consumption during retirement and maintain a smooth living standard.
Q9
What is the relationship between the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) and the marginal propensity to save (MPS) out of any additional change in disposable income?
$MPC imes MPS = 1$
$MPC + MPS = 1$
$MPC / MPS = Income Elasticity$
$MPC - MPS = Average Savings$
Explanation
Because any incremental dollar of disposable income must either be consumed or saved, the fractions must sum to exactly one: $MPC + MPS = 1$.
Q10
If an individual chooses to save an unexpected windfall gain instead of increasing their consumption of economic goods, which behavioral parameter must be zero under the absolute income hypothesis?
Marginal propensity to save
Marginal propensity to consume
Average propensity to save
Income elasticity of investment
Explanation
The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) measures the fraction of additional income that is spent on consumption. If all additional income is saved, the MPC is exactly zero.