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Economics - Fundamental Concepts

Wants and Resources

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Q1

Which of the following conditions represents the primary methodological reason why the absolute definition of 'scarcity' persists in a highly automated post-scarcity manufacturing economy?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The persistent lack of liquidity in capital markets

B.

The relative imbalance between infinite human wants and finite productive inputs

C.

The operational inefficiencies of command allocation models

D.

The rapid degradation of non-renewable capital assets

Explanation

Scarcity is defined by the fundamental imbalance between infinite human wants and finite resources (including time and ecological capacity), meaning technological productivity cannot mathematically eliminate it.

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Q2

What paradoxical behavioral condition occurs when an individual experiences an increase in wage income but reduces their total hours of labor supplied?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The substitution effect completely overpowers the income effect

B.

The income effect dominates the substitution effect at high wage levels

C.

The consumer exhibits zero marginal utility for all basic goods

D.

The total value of wealth drops below zero

Explanation

A backward-bending labor supply curve happens when a wage increase causes the income effect (preferring more leisure due to higher wealth) to dominate the substitution effect (preferring more work due to a higher opportunity cost of leisure).

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Q3

What is the primary microeconomic implication of the assumption that human 'wants' are inherently insatiable over time?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The market price of all consumer goods will eventually drop to zero

B.

Scarcity and the necessity of choice remain permanent features of any economy

C.

The marginal utility of all products must become infinitely positive

D.

Production possibility frontiers will become linear curves

Explanation

Insatiable wants imply that regardless of economic growth, choices and trade-offs will always exist, making opportunity cost a permanent feature of human life.

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Q4

What is the economic classification of an asset that is completely destroyed or used up during a single cycle of commercial production?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

Fixed wealth asset

B.

Circulating capital or intermediate input good

C.

Durable consumer luxury good

D.

Intangible sovereign asset

Explanation

Assets completely consumed in a single production iteration (such as raw materials or electricity) are classified as circulating capital or intermediate consumption goods, distinct from fixed capital.

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Q5

Which of the following conditions correctly differentiates the concept of a 'wants-and-resources' bottleneck from a simple structural supply disruption within an economy?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

A seasonal mismatch in agricultural trading contracts

B.

The absolute limit of physical inputs and technology to meet unbounded human utility desires

C.

An artificial shortage engineered by oligopolistic cartels

D.

A failure in the banking sector's clearing house operations

Explanation

A structural wants-and-resources bottleneck reflects the absolute boundary where finite physical or technological constraints prevent the fulfillment of theoretically infinite human desires, irrespective of supply chain efficiency.

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Q6

What type of structural unemployment occurs when an absolute shortage of capital goods restricts an economy from employing its entire willing workforce, highlighting a 'wants-and-resources' imbalance?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

Keynesian cyclical unemployment

B.

Structural capital-shortage unemployment

C.

Frictional transactional unemployment

D.

Seasonal resource matching gap

Explanation

Marxian or structural capital-shortage unemployment occurs when resource or capital assets are insufficient to absorb the total labor supply, highlighting absolute scarcity of physical inputs over cyclical demand constraints.

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Q7

Which structural feature differentiates 'wants-and-resources' matching models under institutional economics from classical frictionless general equilibrium systems?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The assumption of perfect factor adaptability

B.

The inclusion of transaction costs and imperfect institutional property rights

C.

The systematic conversion of all economic goods into free goods

D.

The optimization of utility parameters to infinity

Explanation

Institutional resource allocation explicitly introduces transaction costs, bounded rationality, and property title frictions into the trade-offs of matching scarce resources to human wants.

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Q8

According to the Arrow-Debreu general equilibrium model, what structural condition guarantees that market pricing can efficiently clear human wants against scarce resources?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The complete nationalization of circulating wealth portfolios

B.

Perfect competition backed by complete markets with zero external frictions

C.

A fixed ratio of marginal utility across free goods

D.

The pegging of interest rates to real consumption growth

Explanation

The model relies on perfectly competitive markets, a complete set of futures options, and the absence of asymmetric information or external transactional spillover distortions.

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Q9

If an individual chooses to forfeit an implicit rental income stream from a self-owned commercial workspace to utilize it for private storage wants, how is this decision categorized under choice theory?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

An explicit historical accounting write-off

B.

An implicit opportunity cost of resource allocation

C.

A sunk depreciation allowance liability

D.

An autonomous public capital asset injection

Explanation

The sacrificed market lease value represents an implicit opportunity cost that must be deducted to find the real economic cost of using the asset for private storage.

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Q10

According to David Ricardo's formulation of economic rent, what underlying condition explains why prime agricultural land commands a positive exchange value while marginal 'no-rent' land does not?

1 · 2 marks · MCQ

A.

The artificial price ceilings imposed by mercantilist laws

B.

The differential fertility and absolute scarcity of top-tier land relative to demand

C.

The explicit cash investments poured into subsoil drainage systems

D.

The uniform elasticity of food crop consumption functions

Explanation

Ricardian rent is a differential surplus arising from the absolute scarcity of highly fertile land relative to total human agricultural wants. As less fertile land is brought into cultivation, more fertile land generates an economic rent.