QCM : Market Policies and Taxation Fundamentals — 9 questions

Questions et réponses du QCM

1. According to the principles of tax fairness, which of the following best describes vertical equity?

Treating all taxpayers the same regardless of income.
Ensuring that those with higher ability to pay contribute more.
Applying the same tax rate to all income levels.
Providing tax breaks to low-income households.

Ensuring that those with higher ability to pay contribute more.

Explication

Vertical equity means that individuals with greater ability to pay should bear a larger share of the tax burden. This principle supports progressive taxation, where tax rates increase with income.

2. What happens when the government sets a price ceiling below the market equilibrium?

A shortage occurs because the maximum price is lower than what buyers are willing to pay at equilibrium.
A surplus occurs because producers are willing to supply more at the ceiling price.
Market equilibrium price stabilizes despite the ceiling.
The market becomes perfectly competitive.

A shortage occurs because the maximum price is lower than what buyers are willing to pay at equilibrium.

Explication

A price ceiling below equilibrium prevents prices from adjusting to the natural market level, leading to excess demand or shortages because more consumers want the good at the lower price, while producers supply less.

3. How does a tax impact market activity and welfare, and what is a common result called?

It increases market activity, resulting in consumer surplus.
It shifts supply or demand, creating a tax wedge and causing deadweight loss.
It decreases taxes on producers, leading to an increase in supply.
It always benefits consumers by lowering prices.

It shifts supply or demand, creating a tax wedge and causing deadweight loss.

Explication

Taxes shift the supply or demand curves, creating a tax wedge between what buyers pay and what sellers receive. This distortion reduces the quantity traded and causes deadweight loss, which is a loss of overall economic welfare.

4. How does a tax impact the market when demand is inelastic and supply is elastic?

Most of the tax burden is borne by consumers because demand is less responsive to price changes.
Most of the tax burden is borne by producers because supply is more responsive.
Tax incidence is evenly split regardless of elasticities.
The tax will not affect market outcomes if demand is inelastic.

Most of the tax burden is borne by consumers because demand is less responsive to price changes.

Explication

When demand is inelastic, consumers are less responsive to price changes, so they bear a larger share of the tax burden, making the burden fall more on buyers.

5. What is typically a consequence of implementing a price ceiling below the market equilibrium?

It causes a surplus of goods.
It leads to shortages of goods.
It increases the market equilibrium price.
It has no impact on the market.

It leads to shortages of goods.

Explication

A price ceiling set below the market equilibrium price prevents prices from rising to a level where supply equals demand. This often results in a shortage, as demand exceeds supply at the artificially suppressed price.

6. Which statement correctly describes the deadweight loss caused by taxation?

It is the loss of total surplus due to decreased efficiency in the market from a tax.
It only occurs in markets with elastic supply and demand.
Deadweight loss increases as tax rates decrease.
It is always smaller than the tax revenue collected by the government.

It is the loss of total surplus due to decreased efficiency in the market from a tax.

Explication

Deadweight loss reflects the inefficiency and loss of total economic welfare because of decreased transactions in the market due to taxation.

7. What is the main theoretical purpose of a subsidy in a market?

To increase production or consumption and correct market failures.
To raise tax revenue for government funding.
To create surpluses in the market.
To strictly decrease the quantity supplied or demanded.

To increase production or consumption and correct market failures.

Explication

Subsidies are designed to encourage increased production or consumption, often to correct market failures or support certain sectors, despite potential fiscal costs.

8. According to the principles of an effective tax system, which principle focuses on the certainty of how much tax an individual must pay?

Certainty
Equity
Convenience
Efficiency

Certainty

Explication

The principle of certainty ensures taxpayers know with confidence the amount they owe, which helps in compliance and administration.

9. Which of the following best illustrates the concept of elasticity in market analysis?

The responsiveness of quantity demanded to a 1% change in price.
The total quantity supplied at equilibrium.
The fixed amount of tax imposed per unit.
The government’s ability to regulate market prices.

The responsiveness of quantity demanded to a 1% change in price.

Explication

Elasticity measures how much quantity demanded or supplied responds to a change in price, with demand elasticity specifically reflecting responsiveness to price changes.

Révisez avec les flashcards

Mémorisez les réponses avec 10 flashcards sur Market Policies and Taxation Fundamentals.

What is market equilibrium?

Market equilibrium is the point where the quantity of goods supplied equals the quantity demanded, resulting in a stable price and quantity in the market.

Market equilibrium — definition?

Supply equals demand, sets market price.

What are price ceilings and their typical effects?

Price ceilings are maximum prices set by the government, usually below the equilibrium price, which can lead to shortages as demand exceeds supply.

Voir les flashcards →

Approfondir avec la fiche

Consultez la fiche de révision complète sur Market Policies and Taxation Fundamentals.

Voir la fiche →

Cours similaires

Crée tes propres QCM

Importe ton cours et l'IA génère des QCM avec corrections en 30 secondes.

Générateur de QCM