A) avoid high unemployment.
B) facilitate competitive currency devaluations.
C) widen balance-of-payments gap between countries.
D) increase money supply and thereby price inflation.
E) avoid balance-of-trade equilibrium between countries.
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) It is free from government intervention.
B) It is free from volatile movements in exchange rates.
C) It has increased foreign exchange risk for businesses.
D) It has made it easier to get insurance coverage against exchange rate changes.
E) Instruments like forward market and swaps have lost their importance in the present system.
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Multiple Choice
A) U.S. macroeconomic policy package of 1965-1968.
B) inflexibility of the fixed exchange rate system that led to high unemployment.
C) Marshall Plan, under which the United States lent money heavily to European nations.
D) failure of the International Monetary Fund to impose monetary discipline.
E) increased taxes in the United States to finance its welfare programs.
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Essay
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Systemic risk
B) Moral hazard
C) Ethical dilemma
D) Tragedy of the commons
E) Risk compensation
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Multiple Choice
A) Maintaining order in the international monetary system
B) Financing the building of Europe's economy by providing low-interest loans
C) Taking over as the successor to the International Monetary Fund
D) Reviving the gold standard system
E) Enforcement of the floating exchange rate system
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True/False
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True/False
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) not be accountable to anyone as it is a powerful institution.
B) bail out banks that have rash lending policies.
C) have a "one-size-fits-all" approach to macroeconomic policy.
D) keep its operations open to greater outside scrutiny.
E) lend only to countries with safe credit ratings.
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Multiple Choice
A) It prints the required currencies, thereby increasing money supply in those countries.
B) It acts as a market, buying goods from these countries and selling them to developed countries.
C) A pool of gold and currencies contributed by its members provides the resources for lending operations.
D) The World Bank lends the required amount to the IMF at a low interest rate.
E) It collects money from those countries that wish to devaluate their currencies.
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Multiple Choice
A) It leads to individuals and companies withdrawing their deposits from banks.
B) It results in a sharp appreciation in the value of the currency.
C) It happens due to a decline in domestic borrowing.
D) It occurs due to asset price deflation.
E) It results in low government deficits.
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Multiple Choice
A) The United States lent money directly to European nations to help them rebuild their economies.
B) Member countries of the International Monetary Fund were free to engage in competitive currency devaluations.
C) The World Bank lent funds to reconstruct the war-torn economies of Europe.
D) The United States lent money to third-world nations to support their public-sector projects.
E) The World Bank lent money to the International Monetary Fund so that it could finance deficit-laden countries.
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Multiple Choice
A) Reduced government intervention in the foreign exchange market
B) Increased foreign investments in U.S. financial assets
C) Low real interest rates in the United States compared to the rest of the world
D) Increased exports as opposed to imports
E) Increased communism in the United States
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) It could be wrecked by heavy borrowings from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
B) It could not work if the U.S. dollar was under speculative attack.
C) The inflexibility of the system resulted in high unemployment.
D) It forced fiscal and monetary discipline on participating nations.
E) It allowed the countries to engage in competitive currency devaluations.
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Multiple Choice
A) Expansion in the volume of international trade due to the Industrial Revolution
B) Inability of governments to convert gold into paper currency on demand at a fixed rate
C) Widening gap between the developed and the developing nations
D) Failure of the Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate system
E) Failure of the U.S. dollar to act as a reference currency
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Multiple Choice
A) exercise tight controls on fiscal policy of the borrowing countries.
B) encourage activities that prevent high inflation rates.
C) display inflexibility in policy responses.
D) urge countries to adopt policies that included fiscal stimulus and monetary easing.
E) adopt a "one-size-fits-all" approach to macroeconomic policy.
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