Deck 18: Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions

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Question
The term for an exchange rate system where the currency is inconvertible is:

A) the gold standard.
B) exchange controls.
C) domestic price controls.
D) a verbatim currency system.
E) a variable currency system.
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Question
One of the ways governments control capital inflows and outflows is by:

A) regulating imports.
B) regulating exports.
C) regulating FDI.
D) regulating domestic businesses.
E) not having exchange controls.
Question
An inconvertible currency:

A) cannot be freely exchanged for another currency by consumers.
B) cannot be exchanged for another currency by the government.
C) can never be exchanged for another currency.
D) can be freely exchange by businesses.
E) never depreciates.
Question
Exchange controls:

A) require the government to balance inflows and outflows of foreign exchange at the current exchange rate.
B) require the government to ensure that the foreign exchange market is perfectly competitive.
C) require the government to sell more foreign exchange than it buys.
D) require the government to stop buying foreign exchange.
E) Require the government to intervene in the foreign exchange market.
Question
With exchange controls, a shortage of foreign exchange may require the government to:

A) devalue the currency.
B) adopt restrictive macroeconomic policies.
C) ration available foreign exchange among its competing uses.
D) All of the above.
E) None of the above
Question
Which of the following is one of the difficulties associated with exchange controls?

A) The ease of dealing with an efficient government agency
B) The difficulty of keeping the nominal and the real exchange rates aligned
C) Maintaining purchasing power parity
D) The relative simplicity of balancing inflows and outflows of foreign exchange
E) The stability of the real exchange rate.
Question
Which of the following is the term that refers to the buying and selling of foreign exchange by a central bank?

A) Sterilization
B) Exchange controls
C) Open market operations
D) Intervention
E) monetary policy
Question
An increase in a country's interest rate would necessitate which of the following actions by a central bank that did not want the nominal exchange rate to change?

A) An immediate adoption of exchange controls
B) The engineering of an exchange-rate shock
C) The buying of foreign exchange
D) The selling of foreign exchange
E) banning imports
Question
Intervention in the foreign exchange market means:

A) the government or central bank buys or sells foreign exchange.
B) the government restricts individuals from buying and selling foreign exchange.
C) the government restricts the importation of certain goods.
D) the government devalues the currency in the foreign exchange market.
E) that the central bank manipulates interest rates.
Question
If total inflows of foreign exchange exceed total outflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate, the government would need to intervene and:

A) buy foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
B) sell foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
C) devalue the country's currency.
D) conduct an expansionary monetary policy.
E) reduce trade flows.
Question
If total outflows of foreign exchange exceed total inflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate, the government would need to intervene and:

A) buy foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
B) sell foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
C) devalue the country's currency.
D) conduct an expansionary monetary policy.
E) conduct an expansionary fiscal policy.
Question
If a central bank intervenes in the foreign exchange market and does nothing else then:

A) the current account will get worse.
B) the current account will correct itself automatically.
C) the money supply will be unaffected.
D) sterilization will occur.
E) sterilization will be ineffective.
Question
Intervention in the foreign exchange market by selling foreign exchange causes:

A) the money supply to rise.
B) the money supply to fall.
C) no effect on the money supply.
D) a capital outflow.
E) FDI to decline.
Question
Intervention in the foreign exchange market by buying foreign exchange causes:

A) the money supply to rise.
B) the money supply to fall.
C) no effect on the money supply.
D) a capital outflow.
E) FDI to increase.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, intervention by a central bank automatically:

A) adjusts the economy to a sustainable internal balance.
B) adjusts the economy to a sustainable external balance.
C) adjusts the exchange rate.
D) adjusts the economy to a sustainable internal and external balance.
E) None of the above
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, when total inflows of foreign exchange exceed total outflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate:

A) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
B) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
C) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
D) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
E) the central bank would buy foreign exchange and cause the price level to rise.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, when total outflows of foreign exchange exceed total inflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate:

A) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
B) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
C) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
D) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
E) the central bank would sell foreign exchange and cause the price level to fall.
Question
Suppose that a country has a current account surplus and the central bank intervenes in the foreign exchange market and does nothing else. Which of the following statements is true in this case?

A) The surplus will get worse.
B) The exchange rate will appreciate.
C) The supply of money will rise.
D) The supply of money will fall.
E) The demand for money would fall.
Question
If a country maintains a fixed exchange rate by intervening in the foreign exchange market with no other actions by the central bank then it does not have a _____ policy.

A) expansionary fiscal
B) automatic fiscal
C) discretionary monetary
D) exchange rate
E) discretionary fiscal
Question
Which of the following situations would be easiest for a central bank to deal with?

A) External deficit and inflation
B) External deficit and high unemployment
C) External surplus and inflation
D) External balance and high inflation
E) external balance and low inflation.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system and freely flowing capital:

A) monetary policy is ineffective.
B) fiscal policy is ineffective.
C) monetary policy is very effective.
D) the supply of money is very important.
E) the demand for money will fall.
Question
Under fixed exchange rates, when is monetary policy consistent with both internal and external balance?

A) When the economy has unemployment and a current account deficit
B) When the economy has unemployment and a current account surplus
C) When the economy has inflation and a current account surplus
D) When the economy has both inflation and high unemployment
E) When the economy has both low inflation and negative real GDP growth.
Question
Under fixed exchange rates, when is monetary policy inconsistent with both internal and external balance?

A) When the economy has unemployment and a current account deficit
B) When the economy has unemployment and a current account surplus
C) When the economy has inflation and a current account deficit
D) When the economy has both inflation and high unemployment
E) When the economy has both high inflation and high unemployment
Question
As a government adopts an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) neither the supply nor the demand for loanable funds changes.
Question
Under a fixed exchange-rate system, as a government adopts an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) the demand for loanable funds does not change and interest rates fall.
Question
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, expansionary fiscal policy causes:

A) interest rates to rise and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
B) interest rates to fall and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
C) interest rates to rise and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
D) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
E) interest rates to remain unchanged with an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
Question
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) is very effective in changing equilibrium output.
B) is not effective in changing equilibrium output.
C) is effective in changing the exchange rate.
D) is not effective in changing capital flows between countries.
E) None of the above
Question
As a government adopts a contractionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) the supply of loanable funds does not change and interest rates fall.
Question
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, contractionary fiscal policy causes:

A) interest rates to rise and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
B) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
C) interest rates to rise and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
D) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
E) interest rates do not change and an inflow of foreign capital causes the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
Question
An expansionary fiscal policy:

A) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
B) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
C) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
D) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
E) does not change interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
Question
Which of the following is not one of the effects of a contractionary fiscal policy?

A) A higher government budget deficit
B) A lower interest rate
C) Higher capital inflows
D) Higher interest rates
E) lower real GDP
Question
A contractionary fiscal policy:

A) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
B) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
C) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
D) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
E) does not affect interest rates or the exchange rate.
Question
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, a contractionary fiscal policy:

A) is very effective in changing equilibrium output.
B) is not effective in changing equilibrium output.
C) is effective in changing the exchange rate.
D) is not effective in changing capital flows between countries.
E) does not change capital flows or the exchange rate.
Question
Which of the following statements would be true if aggregate demand were increasing rapidly?

A) The central bank would need to sell foreign exchange.
B) The central bank would need to buy foreign exchange.
C) The central bank would need to borrow money from the government.
D) The central bank would need to buy government bonds.
E) The central bank would not change policy.
Question
Which of the following is the term used to describe the offsetting of the effects of intervention in the foreign exchange market on the money supply?

A) daily intervention
B) sterilization
C) discretionary monetary policy
D) discretionary fiscal policy
E) currency board
Question
The benefits of a currency union associated with not having to exchange currencies is known as a:

A) monetary efficiency gain.
B) currency board gains.
C) transparency gains.
D) n-sum game gains.
E) government efficiency gain
Question
A currency union is a good idea as long as the monetary efficiency _____ are larger than the economic stability _____.

A) gains, losses
B) losses, gains
C) costs, benefits
D) costs, losses
E) the marginal costs, marginal benefits
Question
The Euro began circulating as a currency for all economic transactions in:

A) 1957
B) 1971
C) 1989
D) 2002
E) 2007
Question
Which country is a member of the EU and does not use the Euro as its national currency?

A) Spain
B) Finland
C) Denmark
D) Ireland
E) Greece
Question
Which country uses the Euro as its national currency?

A) France
B) Sweden
C) Denmark
D) the UK
E) Turkey
Question
The relationship between EU members and the countries using the Euro as their national currency is that:

A) all 15 countries in the EU use the Euro as their national currency.
B) none of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
C) only 6 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
D) 12 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
E) 18 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
Question
Which of the following countries is now using the U.S. dollar as a currency for both domestic and international transactions?

A) Canada
B) Argentina
C) Mexico
D) El Salvador
E) the Philippines
Question
Which of the following is related to the Trilemma?

A) capital flows.
B) the exchange rates.
C) independent monetary policy.
D) all of the above
E) b and c only
Question
One of the reasons that we study fixed exchange rates is that before the 1970s most of the world's economies used a fixed exchange-rate system.
Question
There are very few countries in the world that peg the value of their currency to that of another country.
Question
A system of fixed exchange rates is more common in developed countries.
Question
An inconvertible currency is one that cannot be freely traded for gold.
Question
Exchange control systems are common among developing countries.
Question
An inconvertible currency is one that cannot by freely traded for another currency.
Question
One method of balancing the supply and demand for foreign exchange by a government when the exchange rate is freely floating is to ration the available supply among competing uses.
Question
Under a currency board system, the central bank holds no domestic currency.
Question
When a country has an inconvertible currency the government adopts exchange controls and becomes a monopolist with respect to holding all foreign exchange.
Question
One problem associated with exchange controls is that the government must determine who gets the foreign exchange.
Question
Governments using an exchange control system often limit flows of money for capital account transactions.
Question
With exchange controls it is possible for the nominal exchange rate to appreciate and for the real exchange rate to also appreciate.
Question
Exchange controls tend to create surpluses of foreign exchange that are difficult for the government to dispose of.
Question
Countries with exchange controls never have to ration foreign exchange.
Question
There will be no black market for U.S. dollars in a country where there are no restrictions on currency transactions.
Question
Economists can perfectly predict when an exchange control system will collapse.
Question
The buying and selling of foreign exchange by a central bank is known as exchange control.
Question
If the demand for foreign exchange increases then the central bank would have to sell foreign exchange to keep the value of the currency fixed.
Question
If the supply of foreign exchange decreased, the central bank would have to buy foreign exchange to keep the exchange rate fixed.
Question
A decrease in interest rates would lead a central bank to buy foreign exchange if it wanted to keep the exchange rate from changing.
Question
Capital outflows make it easier to keep the exchange rate fixed while capital inflows do the reverse.
Question
A central bank could buy foreign exchange forever but it cannot sell foreign exchange forever.
Question
Offsetting the effects of intervention on the money supply is known as sterilization.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate the government must constantly balance the total demand and total supply of foreign exchange.
Question
Intervention is defined as the buying and selling of foreign exchange by the central bank.
Question
Intervention in the foreign exchange market means the government rations the available supply of foreign among competing uses.
Question
When a country intervenes in the foreign exchange market by selling foreign exchange, the domestic money supply declines.
Question
The buying of foreign exchange by the central bank causes the domestic money supply to fall.
Question
The selling of foreign exchange by the central bank has no effect on the domestic money supply.
Question
Internal balance is always the same thing as external balance.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, monetary policy is very effective in achieving internal balance.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, monetary policy can only be used to balance the supply and demand for foreign exchange.
Question
If a country has an external deficit, intervention in the foreign exchange market by the central bank will create a new equilibrium if the central bank buys foreign exchange.
Question
Under a fixed exchange rate system, a contractionary fiscal policy causes the central bank to intervene in the foreign exchange market and sell foreign exchange.
Question
With fixed exchange rates, expansionary fiscal policy will increase output and income.
Question
An expansionary fiscal policy in an open economy with freely mobile capital and fixed exchange rates is more effective in changing equilibrium output when compared to a closed economy.
Question
A contractionary fiscal policy is not very effective when a country adopts a fixed exchange rate.
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Deck 18: Fixed Exchange Rates and Currency Unions
1
The term for an exchange rate system where the currency is inconvertible is:

A) the gold standard.
B) exchange controls.
C) domestic price controls.
D) a verbatim currency system.
E) a variable currency system.
exchange controls.
2
One of the ways governments control capital inflows and outflows is by:

A) regulating imports.
B) regulating exports.
C) regulating FDI.
D) regulating domestic businesses.
E) not having exchange controls.
regulating FDI.
3
An inconvertible currency:

A) cannot be freely exchanged for another currency by consumers.
B) cannot be exchanged for another currency by the government.
C) can never be exchanged for another currency.
D) can be freely exchange by businesses.
E) never depreciates.
cannot be freely exchanged for another currency by consumers.
4
Exchange controls:

A) require the government to balance inflows and outflows of foreign exchange at the current exchange rate.
B) require the government to ensure that the foreign exchange market is perfectly competitive.
C) require the government to sell more foreign exchange than it buys.
D) require the government to stop buying foreign exchange.
E) Require the government to intervene in the foreign exchange market.
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5
With exchange controls, a shortage of foreign exchange may require the government to:

A) devalue the currency.
B) adopt restrictive macroeconomic policies.
C) ration available foreign exchange among its competing uses.
D) All of the above.
E) None of the above
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6
Which of the following is one of the difficulties associated with exchange controls?

A) The ease of dealing with an efficient government agency
B) The difficulty of keeping the nominal and the real exchange rates aligned
C) Maintaining purchasing power parity
D) The relative simplicity of balancing inflows and outflows of foreign exchange
E) The stability of the real exchange rate.
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7
Which of the following is the term that refers to the buying and selling of foreign exchange by a central bank?

A) Sterilization
B) Exchange controls
C) Open market operations
D) Intervention
E) monetary policy
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8
An increase in a country's interest rate would necessitate which of the following actions by a central bank that did not want the nominal exchange rate to change?

A) An immediate adoption of exchange controls
B) The engineering of an exchange-rate shock
C) The buying of foreign exchange
D) The selling of foreign exchange
E) banning imports
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9
Intervention in the foreign exchange market means:

A) the government or central bank buys or sells foreign exchange.
B) the government restricts individuals from buying and selling foreign exchange.
C) the government restricts the importation of certain goods.
D) the government devalues the currency in the foreign exchange market.
E) that the central bank manipulates interest rates.
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10
If total inflows of foreign exchange exceed total outflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate, the government would need to intervene and:

A) buy foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
B) sell foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
C) devalue the country's currency.
D) conduct an expansionary monetary policy.
E) reduce trade flows.
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11
If total outflows of foreign exchange exceed total inflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate, the government would need to intervene and:

A) buy foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
B) sell foreign exchange to maintain the exchange rate.
C) devalue the country's currency.
D) conduct an expansionary monetary policy.
E) conduct an expansionary fiscal policy.
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12
If a central bank intervenes in the foreign exchange market and does nothing else then:

A) the current account will get worse.
B) the current account will correct itself automatically.
C) the money supply will be unaffected.
D) sterilization will occur.
E) sterilization will be ineffective.
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13
Intervention in the foreign exchange market by selling foreign exchange causes:

A) the money supply to rise.
B) the money supply to fall.
C) no effect on the money supply.
D) a capital outflow.
E) FDI to decline.
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14
Intervention in the foreign exchange market by buying foreign exchange causes:

A) the money supply to rise.
B) the money supply to fall.
C) no effect on the money supply.
D) a capital outflow.
E) FDI to increase.
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15
Under a fixed exchange rate system, intervention by a central bank automatically:

A) adjusts the economy to a sustainable internal balance.
B) adjusts the economy to a sustainable external balance.
C) adjusts the exchange rate.
D) adjusts the economy to a sustainable internal and external balance.
E) None of the above
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16
Under a fixed exchange rate system, when total inflows of foreign exchange exceed total outflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate:

A) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
B) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
C) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
D) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
E) the central bank would buy foreign exchange and cause the price level to rise.
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17
Under a fixed exchange rate system, when total outflows of foreign exchange exceed total inflows of foreign exchange at the current fixed exchange rate:

A) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
B) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to contract.
C) the central bank would buy foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
D) the central bank would sell foreign exchange causing the economy to expand.
E) the central bank would sell foreign exchange and cause the price level to fall.
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18
Suppose that a country has a current account surplus and the central bank intervenes in the foreign exchange market and does nothing else. Which of the following statements is true in this case?

A) The surplus will get worse.
B) The exchange rate will appreciate.
C) The supply of money will rise.
D) The supply of money will fall.
E) The demand for money would fall.
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19
If a country maintains a fixed exchange rate by intervening in the foreign exchange market with no other actions by the central bank then it does not have a _____ policy.

A) expansionary fiscal
B) automatic fiscal
C) discretionary monetary
D) exchange rate
E) discretionary fiscal
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20
Which of the following situations would be easiest for a central bank to deal with?

A) External deficit and inflation
B) External deficit and high unemployment
C) External surplus and inflation
D) External balance and high inflation
E) external balance and low inflation.
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21
Under a fixed exchange rate system and freely flowing capital:

A) monetary policy is ineffective.
B) fiscal policy is ineffective.
C) monetary policy is very effective.
D) the supply of money is very important.
E) the demand for money will fall.
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22
Under fixed exchange rates, when is monetary policy consistent with both internal and external balance?

A) When the economy has unemployment and a current account deficit
B) When the economy has unemployment and a current account surplus
C) When the economy has inflation and a current account surplus
D) When the economy has both inflation and high unemployment
E) When the economy has both low inflation and negative real GDP growth.
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23
Under fixed exchange rates, when is monetary policy inconsistent with both internal and external balance?

A) When the economy has unemployment and a current account deficit
B) When the economy has unemployment and a current account surplus
C) When the economy has inflation and a current account deficit
D) When the economy has both inflation and high unemployment
E) When the economy has both high inflation and high unemployment
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24
As a government adopts an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) neither the supply nor the demand for loanable funds changes.
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25
Under a fixed exchange-rate system, as a government adopts an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) the demand for loanable funds does not change and interest rates fall.
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26
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, expansionary fiscal policy causes:

A) interest rates to rise and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
B) interest rates to fall and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
C) interest rates to rise and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
D) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
E) interest rates to remain unchanged with an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
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27
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, an expansionary fiscal policy:

A) is very effective in changing equilibrium output.
B) is not effective in changing equilibrium output.
C) is effective in changing the exchange rate.
D) is not effective in changing capital flows between countries.
E) None of the above
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28
As a government adopts a contractionary fiscal policy:

A) the demand for loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
B) the demand for loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
C) the supply of loanable funds increases causing interest rates to rise.
D) the supply of loanable funds decreases causing interest rates to fall.
E) the supply of loanable funds does not change and interest rates fall.
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29
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, contractionary fiscal policy causes:

A) interest rates to rise and an inflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
B) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
C) interest rates to rise and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and sell foreign currency.
D) interest rates to fall and an outflow of foreign capital causing the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
E) interest rates do not change and an inflow of foreign capital causes the government to intervene and buy foreign currency.
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30
An expansionary fiscal policy:

A) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
B) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
C) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
D) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
E) does not change interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
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31
Which of the following is not one of the effects of a contractionary fiscal policy?

A) A higher government budget deficit
B) A lower interest rate
C) Higher capital inflows
D) Higher interest rates
E) lower real GDP
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32
A contractionary fiscal policy:

A) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
B) puts upward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
C) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to buy foreign exchange.
D) puts downward pressure on interest rates causing the government to sell foreign exchange.
E) does not affect interest rates or the exchange rate.
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33
In an open economy with fixed exchange rates, a contractionary fiscal policy:

A) is very effective in changing equilibrium output.
B) is not effective in changing equilibrium output.
C) is effective in changing the exchange rate.
D) is not effective in changing capital flows between countries.
E) does not change capital flows or the exchange rate.
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34
Which of the following statements would be true if aggregate demand were increasing rapidly?

A) The central bank would need to sell foreign exchange.
B) The central bank would need to buy foreign exchange.
C) The central bank would need to borrow money from the government.
D) The central bank would need to buy government bonds.
E) The central bank would not change policy.
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35
Which of the following is the term used to describe the offsetting of the effects of intervention in the foreign exchange market on the money supply?

A) daily intervention
B) sterilization
C) discretionary monetary policy
D) discretionary fiscal policy
E) currency board
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36
The benefits of a currency union associated with not having to exchange currencies is known as a:

A) monetary efficiency gain.
B) currency board gains.
C) transparency gains.
D) n-sum game gains.
E) government efficiency gain
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37
A currency union is a good idea as long as the monetary efficiency _____ are larger than the economic stability _____.

A) gains, losses
B) losses, gains
C) costs, benefits
D) costs, losses
E) the marginal costs, marginal benefits
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38
The Euro began circulating as a currency for all economic transactions in:

A) 1957
B) 1971
C) 1989
D) 2002
E) 2007
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39
Which country is a member of the EU and does not use the Euro as its national currency?

A) Spain
B) Finland
C) Denmark
D) Ireland
E) Greece
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40
Which country uses the Euro as its national currency?

A) France
B) Sweden
C) Denmark
D) the UK
E) Turkey
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41
The relationship between EU members and the countries using the Euro as their national currency is that:

A) all 15 countries in the EU use the Euro as their national currency.
B) none of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
C) only 6 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
D) 12 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
E) 18 of the EU countries use the Euro as their national currency.
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42
Which of the following countries is now using the U.S. dollar as a currency for both domestic and international transactions?

A) Canada
B) Argentina
C) Mexico
D) El Salvador
E) the Philippines
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43
Which of the following is related to the Trilemma?

A) capital flows.
B) the exchange rates.
C) independent monetary policy.
D) all of the above
E) b and c only
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44
One of the reasons that we study fixed exchange rates is that before the 1970s most of the world's economies used a fixed exchange-rate system.
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45
There are very few countries in the world that peg the value of their currency to that of another country.
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46
A system of fixed exchange rates is more common in developed countries.
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47
An inconvertible currency is one that cannot be freely traded for gold.
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48
Exchange control systems are common among developing countries.
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49
An inconvertible currency is one that cannot by freely traded for another currency.
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50
One method of balancing the supply and demand for foreign exchange by a government when the exchange rate is freely floating is to ration the available supply among competing uses.
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51
Under a currency board system, the central bank holds no domestic currency.
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52
When a country has an inconvertible currency the government adopts exchange controls and becomes a monopolist with respect to holding all foreign exchange.
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53
One problem associated with exchange controls is that the government must determine who gets the foreign exchange.
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54
Governments using an exchange control system often limit flows of money for capital account transactions.
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55
With exchange controls it is possible for the nominal exchange rate to appreciate and for the real exchange rate to also appreciate.
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56
Exchange controls tend to create surpluses of foreign exchange that are difficult for the government to dispose of.
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57
Countries with exchange controls never have to ration foreign exchange.
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58
There will be no black market for U.S. dollars in a country where there are no restrictions on currency transactions.
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59
Economists can perfectly predict when an exchange control system will collapse.
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60
The buying and selling of foreign exchange by a central bank is known as exchange control.
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61
If the demand for foreign exchange increases then the central bank would have to sell foreign exchange to keep the value of the currency fixed.
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62
If the supply of foreign exchange decreased, the central bank would have to buy foreign exchange to keep the exchange rate fixed.
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63
A decrease in interest rates would lead a central bank to buy foreign exchange if it wanted to keep the exchange rate from changing.
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64
Capital outflows make it easier to keep the exchange rate fixed while capital inflows do the reverse.
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65
A central bank could buy foreign exchange forever but it cannot sell foreign exchange forever.
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66
Offsetting the effects of intervention on the money supply is known as sterilization.
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67
Under a fixed exchange rate the government must constantly balance the total demand and total supply of foreign exchange.
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68
Intervention is defined as the buying and selling of foreign exchange by the central bank.
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69
Intervention in the foreign exchange market means the government rations the available supply of foreign among competing uses.
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70
When a country intervenes in the foreign exchange market by selling foreign exchange, the domestic money supply declines.
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71
The buying of foreign exchange by the central bank causes the domestic money supply to fall.
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72
The selling of foreign exchange by the central bank has no effect on the domestic money supply.
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73
Internal balance is always the same thing as external balance.
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74
Under a fixed exchange rate system, monetary policy is very effective in achieving internal balance.
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75
Under a fixed exchange rate system, monetary policy can only be used to balance the supply and demand for foreign exchange.
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76
If a country has an external deficit, intervention in the foreign exchange market by the central bank will create a new equilibrium if the central bank buys foreign exchange.
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77
Under a fixed exchange rate system, a contractionary fiscal policy causes the central bank to intervene in the foreign exchange market and sell foreign exchange.
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78
With fixed exchange rates, expansionary fiscal policy will increase output and income.
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79
An expansionary fiscal policy in an open economy with freely mobile capital and fixed exchange rates is more effective in changing equilibrium output when compared to a closed economy.
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80
A contractionary fiscal policy is not very effective when a country adopts a fixed exchange rate.
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