All GED Social Studies Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Relationships And Operation
The Panic of 1837 is an example of __________.
a loss of faith in the political system
America’s nineteenth-century isolationism
an economic collapse
the negative effects of the media
America’s worsening relations with Great Britain
an economic collapse
The Panic of 1837 was an economic crisis, or collapse, that lasted for several years and dramatically worsened the state of the American economy. The term, "panic," is frequently used to describe a period of economic recession, depression, or instability.
Example Question #221 : Content Areas
The economic system of European colonialism, whereby the colony exists solely to facilitate the redistribution of wealth, prosperity, and resources back to the mother country, is called __________.
progressivism
recidivism
socialism
mercantilism
restricted capitalism
mercantilism
Mercantilism was the prevailing economic theory of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries of European history. It was gradually replaced by free-market capitalism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as, essentially, the European nations realized they could make even more money this way. In the mercantilist system, the primary economic goal of government was to establish trade monopolies and colonies to help with the redistribution of wealth and resources back to the mother country. Mercantilism was particularly influential in the histories of the Dutch, French, English, and Spanish Empires.
Example Question #6 : Relationships And Operation
The British East India Company that would eventually come to effectively rule the whole Indian subcontinent started as a(n) __________.
combined venture with the Dutch East India Company
experiment in early socialism
religious group fleeing persecution
missionary mission to South East Asia
joint stock company
joint stock company
The English (later British) East India Company was founded in 1600 by Elizabeth I, who gave the company a trading monopoly on all trade with the East Indies (India and much of South Asia). The company was a combined venture of several investors who pooled their resources and shared in the profits, much in the way of a modern corporation owned by shareholders. This practice is called a joint stock company.
Example Question #1 : Inflation And Deflation
"If you make money scarce you make money dear. If you make money dear you drive down the value of everything, and when you have falling prices you have hard times. And who prosper by hard times? There are but few, and those few are not willing to admit that they get any benefit from hard times. No party ever declared in its platform that it was in favor of hard times, and yet the party that declares for a gold standard in substance declares for a continuation of hard times. It is hard to talk when all the conditions are favorable, and I must ask you to excuse me from talking any further in the presence of the noises against which we have to contend today."
-William Jennings Bryan
In the preceeding passage, the 1896 Democratic presidential nominee, William Jennings Bryan, is railing against which economic phenomenon which he associates with economic "hard times"?
Debt
Recession
Deflation
Investment
Inflation
Deflation
Deflation is the term in economics for a general fall in prices. This does not mean that a decrease in the price of single good signifies deflation. A "general fall" is a situation where prices across the economy are falling in aggregate. While in passing it might seem like falling prices seem obviously good (who doesn't like cheap stuff?!), deflation has proved to be a problematic phenomenon in practice. Falling prices, for instance, also necessitate falling wages. It is now widely accepted that most episodes of deflation are caused by fluctuations in the money supply. When the money supply shrinks, prices fall as the value of any single dollar is increased by the dollar's newfound rarity. When Bryan criticizes making "money dear" he is criticizing an inadequate supply of money that is unneccesarily driving prices down. When he mentions that there are a few who benefit from "hard times", he hints at what economists have identified as the biggest problem with a bout of deflation. Changes in the price level affect different people differently. For interest, those that have large cash holdings or those that have lent money out with large interest rates stand to gain from the money supply shrinking and their own holdings becoming more valuable. Deflation frequently implies a redistrubution of wealth away from the poor or debtors to the rich or creditors, which can be economically and socially destabilizing.
Example Question #2 : Inflation And Deflation
Most contemporary economists favor a __________.
high and fluctuating rate of inflation
low and steady rate of inflation
high and steady rate of inflation
complete lack of inflation
low, but fluctuating rate of inflation
low and steady rate of inflation
Inflation is the increase in the price of something, or the fall of the purchasing power of money over time. Most contemporary economists favor a low rate of inflation that is predictable and steady, rather than no inflation whatsoever, and certainly much more than high and fluctuating levels of inflation. A low and steady rate of inflation, according to the majority of economists, makes it much easier for the economy to recover after a recession or depression.
Example Question #1 : Gross Domestic Product
GDP is a measure of the total economic output of a given country. The most common GDP calculation, known as the expenditure definition, defines GDP (Y) as the sum total of all consumer expenditures (C) plus investment (I) plus government spending (G) plus net exports (X-M). This defintion is often written as the equation:
Which of the components of GDP accounts for the majority of economic output in a given country?
Government Spending
Net Exports
Investment
They are all equal.
Consumer Expenditure
Consumer Expenditure
Consumer expenditure, or simply consumption, measures the economic output that is devoted to satisfying the wants and needs of individual consumers within an economy. Investment measures the amount of output that is directed toward business or other producers in order to grow the productive capacity of the economy. Government spending measures the amount of output that is directed toward government provision of goods and services, such as roads or police protection. Net exports measure the amount of output that is traded with other countries, and since a country can run either a trade deficit or surplus, this component can be positive or negative. In most modern market or mixed economies, people are relatively free work and consume as they choose. As a result, a majority of economic output in most countries is devoted toward consumer expenditures. Some countries have especially large government sectors, where government spending comes close to matching the consumer sector of the economy. In the United States, consumer expenditure accounts for nearly 2/3 of economic output.
Example Question #1 : Taxes And Tariffs
In a progressive tax system __________
the greater an individual’s income, the higher proportion of tax they pay.
everyone is taxed at the same rate regardless of income.
the government cannot levy income taxes.
the government cannot tax anyone and must collect revenue by other means.
the greater an individual’s income, the lower proportion of tax they pay.
the greater an individual’s income, the higher proportion of tax they pay.
In a progressive tax system, the wealthier someone is the higher proportion of tax they must pay. This is the tax system that currently exists in most western countries, including the United States. On the opposite side of the spectrum is a regressive tax system, where the wealthier members of society pay taxes at a lower proportion than everyone else.
Example Question #2 : Taxes And Tariffs
What is the term for a tax on the production or sale of a specific good within a given territory?
Income tax
Property tax
Value-added tax
Sin tax
Excise tax
Excise tax
Excise taxes are taxes that are levied on a specific good. They differ from related taxes like sales taxes, which are levied at a set rate across all goods sold. Within the United States, gasoline taxes are a prime example of excise taxes. Every gallon of gasoline sold in the United States has 18.4 cents in tax added to its price that ends up paid to the federal government. Many states also levy their own gasoline taxes as well. Federal gasoline tax revenue is applied to the mainentance of the US highway system. Excise taxes are popular as policies that are designed to extract revenue for the upkeep of public systems from those that specifically benefit from said system. Those that pay gasoline taxes are, for example, very likely to benefit from driving their gasoline burning cars on publicly maintained highways.
Example Question #3 : Taxes And Tariffs
Tax that is paid to the government on the sale of land, stocks, and other such assets is called __________.
National Reserve Tax
Progressive Income Tax
Wall Street Tax
Capital Gains Tax
Inheritance Tax
Capital Gains Tax
Capital Gains Tax is a tax paid to the Federal government on the sale of things such as land, stocks, bonds, property. It is a tax on the profit, or the amount of money you made (the gain), in the sale of capital.
Example Question #4 : Taxes And Tariffs
A tax on goods produced or sold within a country is called a(n) __________.
property tax
income tax
excise tax
tariff
inheritance tax
excise tax
An excise tax is a tax issued on the production or purchase of goods sold within a country. Often, excise taxes are issued by the government to try and prevent certain dangerous or unhealthy forms of behavior, so there are excise taxes on cigarettes for example.