I- the skill limit
II- the savings gap
III- the fiscal gap
IV- the foreign exchange gap
A. I and II only
B. II and IV only
C. I, II and III only
D. I, II and IV only
I- the skill limit
II- the savings gap
III- the fiscal gap
IV- the foreign exchange gap
A. I and II only
B. II and IV only
C. I, II and III only
D. I, II and IV only
A. the capital accounts
B. the international balance of payments statements
C. the long-term current account
D. the trade accounts
A. own domestic savings and by inflows of capital from abroad
B. stock market and fiscal policy
C. savings from abroad and financial outflow
D. savings and financial liberalization
I- developments grants
II- loans with at least 25 percent grant element
III- military assistance
IV- technical cooperation
A. I and II only
B. I, II and III only
C. I, II and IV only
D. I, II, III and IV only
I- are understaffed politically muddled and administratively complex
II- are biased toward Asia
III- go primarily to less developed countries in Africa
IV- focus on loans and the grant element of aid is low
A. I, II and III
B. I, II and IV
C. II, III and IV
D. I, II, III and IV
A. During the 1980s OECD countries contributed four fifths of the world’s bilateral official development assistance to LDCs
B. In the early 1990s the OECD contributed 98 percent of all aid
C. The OECD aid increased from $6.9 billion in 1970 to $8.9 billion in 2001
D. In 2001, only Denmark Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg exceeded the aid target for LDCs
A. an economy more open to foreign trade and investment faces a more inelastic demand for unskilled workers
B. employers and consumers can more readily replace domestic workers with foreign workers by investing abroad or buying imports
C. globalization increases job insecurity
D. financial liberalization in LDCs leads to collapse of the economy
A. A government budget deficit
B. Capital flight
C. An increase in Private saving
D. A tariff
A. Eu consumers who buy electronics from Japan
B. EU farmers who export grain
C. employees of EU car manufacturers
D. holders of German carmaker BMW
A. A country’s trade policy has no impact on the size of its trade balance
B. None of these answers
C. A restrictive import quota decreases a country’s net exports
D. A restrictive imports quota increases a country’s net exports