Use "wars of attrition" to explain the debate about deficit reduction

What will be an ideal response?

When country is facing large budget deficits, both parties in congress want to reduce the deficit, but they disagree about the way to do it: One party wants to reduce deficits primarily through an increase in taxes; the other wants to reduce deficits primarily through a decrease in spending. Both parties may hold out on the hope that the other side will give in first. Only when debt has increased sufficiently, and it becomes urgent to reduce deficits, will one party give up. These situations are reffed as wars of attrition. The fights between Congress and the Obama administration on how to reduce the large deficits triggered by the crisis are mostly driven by disagreements on whether deficit reduction should be achieved mainly through spending cuts or mainly through tax increases.

Economics

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The market demand curve in a perfectly competitive market is ________ and the demand curve for a perfectly competitive firm's output is ________

A) downward sloping; downward sloping B) downward sloping; horizontal C) horizontal; downward sloping D) horizontal; horizontal E) downward sloping; upward sloping

Economics

When firms benefit from the results of research and development they didn't pay for, we say firms

A) maintain a level playing field. B) free ride. C) are litigious. D) invest in knowledge capital.

Economics