Sample/practice Exam 12 April 2017, Questions and Answers Sample/practice Exam 12 April 2017, Questions and Answers
Sample/practice Exam 12 April 2017, Questions and Answers Sample/practice Exam 12 April 2017, Questions and Answers
3. A subsistence economy is
a. a very low income economy.
b. an economy in which people make what they consume.
c. an economy in which people receive food for pay.
d. all of the above.
Answer: B
5. Development economics must have a scope wider than traditional economics because
a. values and attitudes play little role in the pace of development.
b. people in developing societies do less utility-maximizing.
c. transformation of social institutions is necessary for development.
d. all of the above.
Answer: C
a. India.
b. Brazil.
c. Indonesia.
d. Nigeria.
Answer: B
6. What percent of the world’s nations have at least five significant ethnic populations?
a. 0–10
b. 10–20
c. 20–30
d. 30–40
e. over 40
Answer: E
7. What fraction of developing countries have recently experienced some form of significant
interethnic conflict?
a. less than one-tenth
b. a tenth to one-quarter
c. one quarter to one half
d. over one half
Answer: D
8. Which of the following African countries has experienced widespread death and destruction due
to ethnic or clan based conflict in the previous decade?
a. Rwanda
b. Sudan
c. Somalia
d. all of the above
Answer: D
9. Which measure uses a common set of international prices for all goods and services produced?
a. 20 million
b. 200 million
c. 500 million
d. 1 billion
e. 2 billion
Answer: E
12. About how many people lack access to safe water?
a. 20 million
b. 200 million
c. 500 million
d. 1 billion
e. 2 billion
Answer: D
13. About how many malnourished children under age five are there in the developing world?
a. 20 million
b. 150 million
c. 500 million
d. 1 billion
e. 2 billion
Answer: B
15. Conditions of today’s developed countries at the start of their industrialization differ from conditions
in the developing world in that
a. population growth rates were higher.
b. more advanced technology was available.
c. there were more opportunities for development assistance.
d. none of the above.
Answer: D
16. Most successful examples of modern economic growth have occurred in a country with
a. a temperate-zone climate.
b. a market economy.
c. exports of manufactured goods.
d. all of the above.
Answer: D
17. Which of the following is not an indicator that is used by the World Bank in measuring the level
of economic development?
a. life expectancy at birth.
b. adult literacy rate.
c. infant mortality rate.
d. all of the above are not used by the World Bank.
Answer: D
d. the percent of the population that is below 15 and above 65 years of age.
Answer: D
19. How many people still live on less than the equivalent of $1.25 per day (new definition of “extreme
poverty”)?
a. 100 million.
b. 500 million.
c. 1.4 billion.
d. 2.2 billion.
Answer: C
20. Which of the following is not an indicator that is used to compute the Human Development Index?
a. life expectancy at birth.
b. real GDP per capita.
c. infant mortality rate.
d. adult literacy rate.
Answer: C
22. Developing countries are starting to converge with developed countries in the long run in what
respect?
a. Growth rate
b. Income inequality
c. Population
d. Per capita income
Answer: D
23. Which region in the world has the lowest GNI per capita based on the World Bank Atlas method?
a. Sub-Saharan Africa
b. East Asia/Pacific
c. South Asia
d. Latin America/The Caribbean
Answer: C
1. Which of the following is not a policy proposal of the neoclassical counter-revolution school?
5. Which of the following approaches does not offer an international dependence explanation of
underdevelopment?
(a) the false paradigm model
(b) the neoclassical counter-revolution
(c) the dualistic development model
(d) the neocolonial dependence model
Answer: B
8. On which of the following does the neoclassical counter-revolution school most blame
underdevelopment?
(a) misguided government policies
9. According to the theory of structural patterns of development, which of the following tends to occur
as a country develops?
(a) a shift from agriculture to industry and services
(b) an increase in the percentage of income spent on food
(c) growth of the rural sector
(d) a decline in trade as a share of GNP
Answer: A
10. In the public choice (or new political economy) approach to development the emphasis is on
(a) growth in the rural sector.
(b) the self-interested behavior of public officials.
(c) the dependence of LDCs on former colonial powers.
(d) the inherent efficiency of developing country markets.
Answer: B
11. A situation in which government intervention in the economy worsens the economic outcome is
termed
(a) neoclassical failure.
(b) socialism.
(c) government failure.
(d) dependency revolution.
Answer: C
12. According to the dependence theory, the developing world is known as the
(a) backward areas.
(b) periphery.
(c) first world.
(d) center.
Answer: B
14. The supply curve of labor to industry in the Lewis model is horizontal if there is surplus labor in
agriculture. This condition persists as long as
(a) the marginal product of labor is less than the average product of labor in agriculture.
(b) the marginal product of labor in agriculture is less than the marginal product of labor in industry.
(a) rich-poor.
(b) developed-developing.
(c) center-periphery.
(d) independent-dependent.
Answer: C
18. The linear stages theory of economic growth fails to recognize that increased investment is
(a) both a necessary and a sufficient condition.
(b) a necessary but not a sufficient condition.
(c) a sufficient but not a necessary condition.
(d) neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition.
Answer: B
Answer: D
3. In contrast to the earlier neoclassical models of economic growth, in endogenous growth models,
there is more emphasis on
(a) human capital.
(b) externalities.
(c) increasing returns to scale.
(d) all of the above.
Answer: D
4. The new growth theory attempts to explain
6. The big-push theory argues that coordination failures may arise because of
(a) pecuniary externalities.
(b) technological externalities.
(c) lack of human capital.
(d) all of the above.
Answer: A
(a) labor income may be highly concentrated in well-paid modern sector workers.
(b) some poor farmers may receive a sizable share of income in rent.
(c) income from nonmarket activities such as foraging may be important.
(d) all of the above.
Answer: D
6. The number of people in the world who are absolutely poor is closest to
(a) a quarter-billion.
(b) a half-billion.
(c) one and a half billion.
(d) two billion.
(e) four billion.
Answer: C
9. Higher income countries tend to have lower levels of absolute poverty because
(a) more employment opportunities
(b) more public assistance
(c) greater entrepreneurship opportunities.
(d) all of the above.
Answer: D
11. Which of the following policies might increase labor intensity in industry?
(a) a decline in the cost of credit
(b) a decline in the minimum wage rate
(c) a decline in the elasticity of substitution
(d) all of the above.
Answer: B
12. Which of the following policies may decrease the level of capital intensity in industry?
(a) an increase in the cost of capital
(b) a decrease in the minimum wage
(c) an increase in the elasticity of substitution
(d) all of the above.
Answer: D
14. About what percent of the world’s poorest people are female?
(a) 30
(b) 50
(c) 70
(d) 90
Answer: C
15. About how many girls and women are said to be “missing” in LDCs?
(a) 2 million
(b) 20 million
(c) 100 million
(d) 2 billion
Answer: C
17. Distribution of income according to percentiles, such as the highest 40% or lowest 20% is known as
the _______________ distribution of income.
(a) size
(b) functional
(c) GNP-weighted
(d) equal-weighted
Answer: A
18. What conclusion can be reached from the following data on income shares?
19. Developing countries who have adopted capital-intensive technologies tend to have
20. Assuming that the Gini coefficient for Egypt is 0.403 and the Gini coefficient for Australia is 0.404,
it is possible to conclude that both Egypt and Australia have
(a) virtually the same number of households in absolute poverty.
(b) virtually the same percentage of households in absolute poverty.
(c) virtually the same level of the Human Development Index.
(d) none of the above.
Answer: D
21. Brazil’s growth rate during the 1960’s was 6.0% when poverty weights were used to evaluate
growth, compared with 8.2% when GNP weights were used to evaluate growth. One can conclude
from these numbers that
(a) average income growth was greater for poor households than for rich households.
(b) average income growth was greater for rich households than for poor households.
(c) more and more households were falling below the poverty line.
(d) the size distribution of income was getting worse.
Answer: B
23. The functional distribution of income refers to the distribution of income between
(a) individuals or households.
(b) rural individuals or households.
(c) urban individuals or households.
(d) the factors of production (land, labor and capital).
Answer: D