True/False Indicate whether the
statement is true or false.
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1.
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The single European currency – the euro – came into existence on 1
January 2002.
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2.
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In the context of the Single European Market project, the single European
Currency was seen as a final step towards completing the single market.
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3.
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Because international capital flows are so huge, currency pegs such as the
Exchange Rate Mechanism are always vulnerable to speculative attacks.
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4.
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The people who would lose their jobs working on currency transactions if the UK
to join the European EMU represent a significant cost of adopting the euro.
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5.
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The major cost to the UK of joining the euro would be the loss of the freedom
for the country to set its own monetary policy and the loss of the possibility of needed adjustments
in the UK economy being achieved through changes in the foreign exchange value of the UK
currency.
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6.
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In 2004 Germany had a lower degree of trade integration with the other EU
countries than did the UK
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7.
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Since the European EMU was established the degree of capital market integration
among EMU member countries has increased substantially at both the level of the wholesale financial
markets and the level of the retail financial markets.
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8.
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The free rider problem that arises in a currency union is that a member
government that borrows heavily may not be obliged to pay as high a rate of interest on its borrowing
as it would if it were not a member of the currency union, while the other governments of the
currency union find the financial markets require them to pay higher interest on their borrowing
because of the high borrowing of one of their neighbours.
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9.
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Eurozone countries in breach of the excessive deficit criterion could be subject
to a fine of up to 1% of their GDP under the Stability and Growth Pact.
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10.
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Some of the criteria for deciding whether a group of economies constitute an
optimum currency area are probably endogenous.
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Multiple Choice Identify the
choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
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11.
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Before Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) most EU member countries participated
in something called the
a. | European Common Currency Area. | b. | Exchange Rate Model. | c. | European Monetary
Union. | d. | Exchange Rate Mechanism. | e. | European Union
Mechanism. |
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12.
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Which of the following was not a goal of the EU in passing the 1986 Single
European Act to complete the Single European Market (SEM)?
a. | The approximation of relevant laws, regulations and administrative provisions between
member states. | b. | A common, EU-wide competition policy, administered by the European
Commission. | c. | A common, EU-wide agricultural policy. | d. | The free movement of goods, services, labour
and capital between EU member states. | e. | A system of common external tariffs implemented
against countries that are not members of the EU. |
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13.
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Which one of the following is rightly considered a cost of a single
currency?
a. | The loss of the freedom for countries joining the single currency to set their own
fiscal policies. | b. | The loss of the freedom for countries joining the single currency to set their own
monetary policies. | c. | Higher unemployment. | d. | The loss of jobs
involved in currency transactions. | e. | Higher
inflation. |
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14.
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Which one of these benefits of a single currency is not correctly
explained?
a. | Using a single currency reduces price discrimination because companies will be
obliged by law to charge the same prices for their goods in the different countries of the currency
union. | b. | None of the benefits of a single currency described in these answers is incorrectly
explained. | c. | Using a single currency reduces transaction costs involved in trade between members
of a common currency area and the resources that are no longer employed in working on currency
transactions can be used more productively to produce other goods and services. | d. | Using a single
currency eliminates exchange rate variability for companies trading with other members of the common
currency area and so companies may engage in more of this trade, and they can also eliminate the cost
of entering into forward foreign exchange contracts with banks. |
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15.
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If two countries, A and B, have separate currencies and there is a shift in
consumer preferences away from the goods of country A and towards those of country B, then
a. | there will be an increase in inflation in country A. | b. | the foreign exchange
value of country A’s currency is likely to rise, thus making country A’s goods relatively
more expensive and worsening the reduction in aggregate demand in country A. | c. | the foreign exchange
value of country A’s currency is likely to fall, thus making country A’s goods relatively
cheaper and offsetting the reduction in aggregate demand in country A. | d. | there will be a fall
in aggregate demand in country B. |
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16.
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If two countries, A and B, are members of a currency union and there is a shift
in consumer preferences away from the goods of country A and towards those of country B, then which
one of the following would help to offset the effect of the resulting changes in aggregate demand in
A and B on inflation and unemployment in the two countries?
a. | A high degree of labour mobility between the two countries. | b. | An increase in
government spending in country A. | c. | A depreciation in the foreign exchange value of
the common currency. | d. | A low degree of capital mobility between the
two countries. | e. | A cut in taxes in both countries. |
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17.
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Which of the following could not be described as an asymmetric macroeconomic
shock?
a. | None of these answers. All of them are asymmetric macroeconomic
shocks. | b. | A sudden and substantial fall in the worldwide demand for French
wine. | c. | An epidemic of an animal disease in a country that significantly reduces the
country’s agricultural output. | d. | A hurricane that disrupts economic activity in
the USA. | e. | A sudden and substantial rise in prices on the world oil
market. |
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18.
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A high degree of real wage flexibility will tend to reduce the costs to a
country of joining a currency union because
a. | all of the reasons given in these answers are correct. | b. | real wages fall
rapidly in a recession and the economy moves quickly back to long-run equilibrium, so limiting the
duration of the recession even when exchange rate adjustment is not possible. | c. | workers will move
from a country in which aggregate demand falls to other countries of the currency union, and so
unemployment remains lower than it otherwise would. | d. | real wages fall and so offset the inflationary
effect of switching from the old currency to the new common currency. |
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19.
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Which one of the following is not a characteristic that reduces the cost of a
single currency?
a. | A high degree of labour mobility among the countries of the common currency
area. | b. | A high degree of capital mobility among the countries of the common currency
area. | c. | None of the characteristics described in these answers – they are all
characteristics that reduce the cost of a single currency. | d. | Synchronized
economic cycles in the countries of the common currency area. | e. | A high degree of
trade integration among the countries of the common currency area. |
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20.
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How does the eurozone compare with the USA as a possible optimal currency area
(OCA)?
a. | The eurozone has a higher degree of labour mobility than the USA and labour law is
much less restrictive in the eurozone than in the USA. On these measures, the eurozone is more likely
to be an OCA than is the USA. | b. | The eurozone has a lower degree of labour
mobility than the USA and labour law is much more restrictive in the eurozone than in the USA. On
these measures, the eurozone is less likely to be an OCA than is the USA. | c. | The eurozone has a
higher degree of labour mobility than the USA but labour law is much more restrictive in the eurozone
than in the USA. On these measures, it is hard to judge whether the eurozone is more or less likely
to be an OCA than is the USA. | d. | The eurozone has a lower degree of labour
mobility than the USA but labour law is much less restrictive in the eurozone than in the USA. On
these measures, it is hard to judge whether the eurozone is more or less likely to be an OCA than is
the USA. |
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21.
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What is fiscal federalism?
a. | A fiscal system for a group of countries in which fiscal policy is set in a treaty
signed by all the countries. | b. | A fiscal system for a group of countries in
which government budget deficits are strictly limited. | c. | A fiscal system for a group of countries
involving a common fiscal budget and a system of taxes and fiscal transfers across
countries. | d. | A fiscal system in which fiscal policy is jointly determined by local and national
politicians. | e. | A fiscal system for a group of countries in which fiscal policy is set by the central
bank. |
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22.
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Which of the following is a problem for fiscal policy in a currency
union?
a. | The central bank controls interest rates on long-term bonds issued by the governments
of the member countries of the currency union. | b. | Governments of the member countries of the
currency union may run large budget deficits and so crowd out private investment. | c. | Governments of the
member countries of the currency union may run large budget deficits and so impose costs on other
countries by pushing up interest rates on the bonds these countries’ governments
issue. | d. | It is difficult to raise enough tax revenue to pay for the operation of the currency
union. | e. | Governments of the member countries of the currency union may run large budget
deficits and so force taxes to be increased across all countries of the currency
union. |
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23.
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To try to overcome the free rider problem, the members of EMU signed the
a. | stability and growth pact. | b. | European solidarity pact. | c. | exchange rate
mechanism pact. | d. | responsibility and growth pact. | e. | fiscal stability
pact. |
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24.
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Which of the following is a problem for monetary policy in a currency
union?
a. | Money supply is more difficult to control in a currency union. | b. | The
inflation-unemployment trade-off is more unstable in a currency union. | c. | All of these answers
describe problems for monetary policy in a currency union. | d. | The interest rate
may be higher than is appropriate for economic conditions in some countries while it’s lower
than is appropriate in some others – monetary policy must be “one size fits
all”. | e. | Monetary policy will affect the economy with a longer time lag in a large currency
union than in a single country. |
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25.
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Which one of the following is not an argument in support of the UK joining the
EMU?
a. | None of these arguments – they are all arguments in support of the UK joining
the EMU. | b. | The characteristics of the UK housing market make UK consumers’ expenditure
very sensitive to changes in interest rates. | c. | The UK risks exclusion from the Euroland
capital market with damaging consequences for the City of London. | d. | The UK needs to be a
member of the EMU in order to continue to attract such a large share of foreign direct investment in
EU countries. | e. | The UK would benefit from increased trade with the eurozone countries, boosting
GDP. |
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