Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 349 questões.

180575 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:

Classifique como certo ou errado a afirmativa abaixo:

Item 2 - Fazendo-se a integração por partes de !$ \int\limits x.e^x.dx !$ obtém-se como resultado !$ (x - 1)e^x + C !$ onde !$ C !$ é uma constante.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
180535 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Com relação a situação de monopólio, é correto afirmar que:
Item 3 - Um monopólio natural é caracterizado quando as economias de escala tornam excessivamente dispendioso que mais de uma firma abasteça o mercado.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179691 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Marque certo ou errado:
Item 3 - o nível de utilidade de um consumidor individual não varia ao longo de uma curva de demanda de mercado do tipo Marshalliana.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179690 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:

Based on your interpretation of the text you are about to read, determine whether each statement is right or wrong.

Part-I

“Trade, Jobs, and Wages” in Pop Internationalism, by Paul Krugman, Chapter 3, pp.-35-37.

The MIT Press, 1996.

The real wage of the average American worker more than doubled between the end of World War II and 1973. Since then, however, those wages have risen only 6 percent. Furthermore, only highly educated workers have seen their compensation rise; the real earnings of blue-collar workers have fallen in most years since 1973.

Why have wages stagnated? A consensus among business and political leaders attributes the problem in large part to the failure of the U.S. to compete effectively in an increasingly integrated world economy. This conventional wisdom holds that foreign competition has eroded the U.S. manufacturing base, washing out the high-paying jobs that a strong manufacturing sector provides. More broadly, the argument goes, the nation's real income has lagged as a result of the inability of many U.S. firms to sell in world markets. And because imports increasingly come from Third World countries with their huge reserves of unskilled labor, the heaviest burden of this foreign competition has ostensibly fallen on less educated American workers.

Many people find such a story extremely persuasive. It links America's undeniable economic difficulties to the obvious fact of global competition. In effect, the U.S. is (in the words of President Bill Clinton) "like a big corporation in the world economy" -- and, like many big corporations, it has stumbled in the face of new competitive challenges.

Persuasive though it may be, however, that story is untrue. A growing body of evidence contradicts the popular view that international competition is central to U.S. economic problems. In fact, international factors have played a surprisingly small role in the country's economic difficulties. The manufacturing sector has become a smaller part of the economy, but international trade is not the main cause of that shrinkage. The growth of real income has slowed almost entirely for domestic reasons. And -- contrary to what even most economists have believed -- recent analyses indicate that growing international trade does not bear significant responsibility even for the declining real wages of less educated U.S. workers.

The fraction of U.S. workers employed in manufacturing has been declining steadily since 1950. So has the share of U.S. output accounted for by value added in manufacturing. (Measurements of "value added" deduct from total sales the cost of raw materials and other inputs that a company buys from other firms.) In 1950 value added in the manufacturing sector accounted for 29.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and 34.2 percent of employment; in 1970 the shares were 25.0 and 27.3 percent, respectively; by 1990 manufacturing had fallen to 18.4 percent of GDP and 17.4 percent of employment.

Before 1970 those who worried about this trend generally blamed it on automation -- that is, on rapid growth of productivity in manufacturing. Since then, it has become more common to blame deindustrialization on rising imports; indeed, from 1970 to 1990, imports rose from 11.4 to 38.2 percent of the manufacturing contribution to GDP.

Yet the fact that imports grew while industry shrank does not in itself demonstrate that international competition was responsible. During the same 20 years, manufacturing exports also rose dramatically, from 12.6 to 31.0 percent of value added. Many manufacturing firms may have laid of workers in the face of competition from abroad, but others have added workers to produce for expanding export markets.

To assess the overall impact of growing international trade on the size of the manufacturing sector, we need to estimate the net effect of this simultaneous growth of exports and imports. A dollar of exports adds a dollar to the sales of domestic manufacturers; a dollar of imports, to a first approximation, displaces a dollar of domestic sales. The net impact of trade on domestic manufacturing sales can therefore be measured simply by the manufacturing trade balance -- the difference between the total amount of manufactured goods that the U.S. exports and the amount that it imports. (in practice, a dollar of imports may displace slightly less than a dollar of domestic sales because the extra spending may come at the expense of services or other nonmanufacturing sales. The trade balance sets an upper bound on the net effect of trade on manufacturing.)

Item 2 - The author suggests that the U.S. businesses should be more competitive to maintain the good paying jobs.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179689 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Com relação a situação de monopólio, é correto afirmar que:
Item 1 - A relação entre o preço praticado pelo monopolista e o seu custo marginal depende da elasticidade da demanda.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179688 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Estatística
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:

Com base na teoria da estimação, pode-se fazer a seguinte afirmação:

Item 1 - Se x é uma variável aleatória com !$ E(X) = μ !$ e variância !$ σ^2 !$, então a média amostral, !$ \overline X !$, será um estimador consistente da média populacional !$ μ !$.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179687 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
A seguir listamos um fato que influencia a demanda de moeda. Classifique-o como certo, caso o fato possa ter contribuído para a redução de demanda real por moeda durante o período de aceleração inflacionária no Brasil. Caso contrário, classifique-o como errado:
Item 1 - Aumento do nível de renda da economia.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179455 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
Com relação às preferências do consumidor, é correto afirmar que:
Item 2 - Quando a taxa marginal de substituição é constante, os bens são complementos perfeitos.
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179453 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Economia
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:
No item marque certo ou errado:
Além da relativa estabilização de preços, quais das características abaixo correspondem ao comportamento da economia no período 1994/97:
Item 2 - aumento generalizado, e em ritmos mais ou menos equivalentes, dos coeficientes de importação e de exportação dos diferentes ramos da indústria de transformação;
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
179452 Ano: 1997
Disciplina: Estatística
Banca: ANPEC
Orgão: ANPEC
Provas:

Considere a distribuição de probabilidade conjunta de (X,Y), de acordo com a tabela abaixo:

X

-1

0

1

Y

-1

1/8

1/8

1/8

0

1/8

0

1/8

1

1/8

1/8

1/8

Pode-se afirmar que :

Item 0 - O coeficiente de correlação, !$ ρ_{xy} !$, entre X e Y é igual a zero.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas