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Chapter 16 Practice Quiz Tutorial The Public Sector

Chapter 16 Practice Quiz Tutorial The Public Sector. ©2004 South-Western. 1. Since 1975, total government expenditures as a percentage of GDP in the United States have a. fallen by half. b. remained fairly constant at about one-third. c. grown one fourth to one-half.

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Chapter 16 Practice Quiz Tutorial The Public Sector

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  1. Chapter 16Practice Quiz TutorialThe Public Sector ©2004 South-Western

  2. 1. Since 1975, total government expenditures as a percentage of GDP in the United States have a. fallen by half. b. remained fairly constant at about one-third. c. grown one fourth to one-half. d. grown from one quarter to one-third. B.

  3. Government Expenditures 1929 - 2004 50 45 Total government expenditures 40 35 30 25 Percent of GDP State & Local Gov. Expenditures 20 15 10 Federal government expenditures 5 Year 45 50 00 05 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 40 29 35

  4. 2. Which of the following accounted for the second largest percentage of total federal government expenditures as of 2004 (excluding other category)? a. Income security. b. National defense. c. Interest on the national debt. d. Education and health. B

  5. 3. Which of the following contributed the second largest percentage of total state and local government revenues in 2004 (excluding federal grants)? a. Corporate income taxes. b. Sales and excise taxes. c. Individual income taxes. d. Property taxes. D

  6. 4. Which of the following countries devotes about the same percentage of its GDP to taxes as the United States? a. Sweden. b. Italy. c. United Kingdom. d. Japan. D.

  7. 5. “The poor should not pay income taxes.” This statement reflects which of the following principles for a tax? a. Fairness of contribution. b. Benefits received. c. Inexpensive to collect. d. Ability to pay. D. Since the poor lack the ability to pay, the tax system should be designed so they pay less taxes than people with higher incomes.

  8. 6. Some cities finance their airports with a departure tax. Every person leaving the city by plane is charged a small fixed dollar amount that is used to help pay for building and running the airport. The departure tax follows the a. benefits-received principle. b. ability-to-pay principle. c. flat-rate principle. d. public-choice principle. A. Those persons who are gaining the most from the airport are the ones who are paying the most for it.

  9. 7. Which of the following statements is true? a. The most important source of revenue to the federal government is personal income taxes. b. The most important source of revenue for state and local governments is sales and property taxes. c. The second most important source of revenue for state and local governments is local property taxes. d. The taxation burden, measured by taxes as a percentage of GDP, is lighter in the U.S. than in most other advanced industrial countries. e. All of the above are true. E. All of the above are true statements.

  10. 8. Which of the following statements is true? a. A sales tax on food is a regressive tax. b. The largest source of federal government tax revenue is individual income taxes. c. The largest source of state and local government tax revenue is sales taxes. d. All the above are true statements. D. All the above are true statements.

  11. 9. A tax that is structured so that people with higher incomes pay a larger percentage of their income for the tax than do people with smaller incomes is called a (an) a. income tax. b. regressive tax. c. property tax. d. progressive tax. D. Answer a is not specific; b is the opposite principle, and c is based on property not income.

  12. 10. Generally, most economists feel that a ______type of income tax is a fairer way to raise government revenue than a sales tax. a. regressive. b. proportional. c. flat-rate. d. progressive. D. A progressive tax is argued to be fair because people with higher incomes pay more tax.

  13. 11. The federal personal income tax is an example of a (an) a. excise tax. b. proportional tax. c. progressive tax. d. regressive tax. C. Since the marginal tax rate increases with income, the federal personal income tax is a progressive tax.

  14. 12. A 5 percent sales tax on food is an example of a a. flat tax. b. progressive tax. c. proportional tax. d. regressive tax. D. A sales tax on food is a regressive tax because people with higher incomes do not spend proportionately more on food.

  15. 13. Margaret pays a local income tax of 2 percent, regardless of the size of her income. This tax is a. proportional. b. regressive. c. progressive. d. a mix of (a) and (b). A. Less tax is paid by a regressive tax and more tax is paid by a progressive tax as people’s incomes rise.

  16. 14. Which of the following statements relating to public choice is true? a. A low voter turnout may result when voters perceive that the marginal cost of voting exceeds its marginal benefit. b. If the marginal cost of voting exceeds its marginal benefit, the vote is unimportant. c. Special-interest groups always cause the will of a majority to be imposed on a minority. d. All of the above are true. A. This is the rational ignorance public choice theory.

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