Exam Questions Income, Welfare, Education Policy Chapter 16 - We The People 13e Complete Test Bank by Thomas Patterson. DOCX document preview.

Exam Questions Income, Welfare, Education Policy Chapter 16

We The People, 13e (Patterson)

Chapter 16 Income, Welfare, and Education Policy: Providing for Personal Security

1) Who among the framers of the Constitution noted that no issue was more likely to provoke conflict than how society's resources are distributed?

A) John Adams

B) Alexander Hamilton

C) Benjamin Franklin

D) James Madison

E) Thomas Jefferson

2) Which of the following most accurately describes the American middle class between 1970 and 2015?

A) They have grown dramatically in number.

B) They have come to receive more than half the nation's income.

C) Their share of the nation's income has fallen by almost 20 percent.

D) Their numerical size and share of the nation's income have remained remarkably constant.

E) None of these answers is correct.

3) A tax where the marginal tax rate increases as income rises is a(n)

A) progressive income tax.

B) inflationary income tax.

C) regressive income tax.

D) capital gains tax.

E) entitlement-based income tax.

4) Which of the following is true of American unions in the 1950s?

A) The right to unionize was severely restricted by two important Supreme Court rulings.

B) Unionized workers saw their wages fall below the wages of their non-union counterparts.

C) Unions and union workers gained control of all major industries.

D) Union demands prevented the United States from benefitting from the manufacturing boom that had followed the end of World War II.

E) A third of America's workers were unionized.

5) What benefit was provided for veterans through the GI Bill?

A) free health care services, a precursor to what became Medicare

B) free housing in new manufacturing centers

C) a wage bonus for service members entering the civilian workforce

D) cash for college and vocational training; and nearly interest-free loans

E) None of these answers is correct.

6) The economic boom that followed the end of World War II saw incomes rise for most families in the United States. In what decade did this phenomenon come to an end?

A) 1960s

B) 1970s

C) 1980s

D) 1990s

E) 2000s

7) Which of the following has led to gains for top earners since 2001?

A) changes in tax policy

B) changes in the nation's job market

C) the "compression effect" described by economist Paul Krugman

D) a booming goods and services sector

E) All of these answers are correct.

8) Which of the following has led to wage stagnation among lower- and middle-income workers in recent decades?

A) changes in tax policy

B) changes in the nation's job market

C) the "compression effect" described by economist Paul Krugman

D) a booming goods and services sector

E) All of these answers are correct.

9) Today, most union members work as

A) teachers and farm laborers.

B) farm laborers.

C) factory laborers.

D) teachers, police, and civil servants.

E) transportation workers.

10) U.S. job growth since the 1970s has mostly occurred in which area(s)?

A) services

B) manufacturing

C) agriculture

D) construction and agriculture

E) the service sector

11) Poverty is a condition that today affects roughly one in ________ Americans.

A) two

B) three

C) seven

D) twenty

E) fifty

12) The poverty line is defined as

A) the income level below which 10 percent of the American people live.

B) three times the annual cost of a thrifty food budget.

C) the annual cost of all goods and services that a person can reasonably be expected to want.

D) the percentage of homeless people.

E) the income level below which 20 percent of the American people live.

13) In 2018, the poverty line was about ________ in annual income for a family of four.

A) $19,000

B) $25,000

C) $28,000

D) $33,000

E) $38,000

14) About one in ________ American children lives in poverty.

A) three

B) five

C) eight

D) twelve

E) twenty

15) Which of the following is a true statement about the visibility of poverty in American society today?

A) Rural women have a lower poverty rate than rural men.

B) In the 1960s, most Americans believed that government had no business trying to alleviate poverty.

C) Poverty is less common in the suburbs than in inner cities or rural areas.

D) Poverty has been virtually eliminated in the United States.

E) Poverty is most apparent in the case of elderly Americans.

16) Overall, child poverty rates are highest in the

A) Midwest.

B) West.

C) South.

D) Northeast.

E) Middle Atlantic.

17) Which of the following Western democracies has the highest poverty rate?

A) Canada

B) Great Britain

C) France

D) Germany

E) the United States

18) Medicare was enacted into law during the administration of

A) Harry S. Truman.

B) John F. Kennedy.

C) Bill Clinton.

D) Richard Nixon.

E) None of these answers is correct.

19) ________ orchestrated the enaction of the largest set of antipoverty programs in the nation's history.

A) Franklin Roosevelt

B) John Kennedy

C) Dwight Eisenhower

D) Richard Nixon

E) Lyndon Johnson

20) An entitlement program refers to a program

A) that provides indirect payments to individuals, such as funding for public schools.

B) benefiting individuals, designed specifically to alleviate the hardships of old age.

C) that requires the payment of benefits to any individual who meets the eligibility criteria.

D) of social welfare for which citizenship is the only criterion of eligibility.

E) None of these answers is correct.

21) The defining characteristic of a social insurance program is that

A) eligibility is restricted to individuals who paid special payroll taxes during their working years.

B) it is administered jointly by the national government and the states.

C) it is targeted at those who are most in need of welfare assistance.

D) it is administered through private insurance companies.

E) None of these answers is correct.

22) What are the two broad groups that welfare programs fall into?

A) public assistance and in-kind assistance

B) equity and efficiency

C) positive and negative

D) social insurance and public assistance

E) subsidized and social insurance

23) Which of the following is a social insurance program?

A) TANF

B) Medicaid

C) food stamps

D) Medicare

E) All of these answers are correct.

24) The social insurance program Social Security was established in the

A) 1920s.

B) 1930s.

C) 1940s.

D) 1950s.

E) 1960s.

25) Social insurance programs have high levels of public support because

A) of the perception that recipients have earned the benefits.

B) they are based on an equality principle—all citizens are eligible for the benefits and all recipients receive the same level of benefits.

C) their cost is consistently below the spending level for public assistance programs.

D) of the necessity of increased taxes to fund them.

E) None of these answers is correct.

26) The Social Security benefits that retirees receive are funded primarily by

A) income tax contributions they made in the past, which were put into a trust fund from which current payments are made.

B) payroll taxes on those who worked or are now working.

C) equal contributions from the national and state governments.

D) borrowed funds, which contribute to the national debt.

E) None of these answers is correct.

27) Why are administrative costs relatively high for food stamp and Medicaid programs?

A) widespread eligibility that swells recipient rolls

B) the need to administer payroll taxes

C) the need for constant monitoring of means and means testing

D) constant public opposition to the programs

E) All of these answers are correct.

28) Medicare

A) is funded through general tax revenues.

B) is one of the least popular government programs.

C) is paid for through a payroll tax.

D) provides health care to all adults over age 50.

E) None of these answers is correct.

29) According to a Kaiser Family Foundation study, about ________ of Medicare spending is for expenses other than patient care, while some private insurance companies spend about ________ on similar nonpatient expenses.

A) 20 percent; 10 percent

B) 50 percent; 20 percent

C) 2 percent; 20 percent

D) 20 percent; 2 percent

E) None of these answers is correct.

30) Medicare was enacted in ________.

A) 1938

B) 1947

C) 1965

D) 1997

E) 2010

31) Public assistance programs are funded through

A) payroll taxes paid only by employees.

B) payroll taxes paid only by employers.

C) payroll taxes paid by both employees and employers.

D) general tax revenues.

E) sales taxes.

32) The term means test refers to

A) the tax on a portion of the social security benefits of upper-income retirees.

B) the need to prove that an applicant's income is low enough to qualify for public assistance.

C) the mandatory physical examination that Medicare and Medicaid applicants must undergo before they can receive benefits.

D) the mandatory psychological examination that Medicare and Medicaid applicants must undergo before they can receive benefits.

E) None of these answers is correct.

33) ________ was terminated in 1996.

A) The Food Stamps program

B) Medicaid

C) Medicare

D) SSI

E) AFDC

34) The Welfare Reform Act of 1996 had overwhelming support from Republicans because it ended the

A) ability of most people to go on welfare and stay there.

B) lack of public concern for child welfare.

C) public opposition to locally administered welfare programs.

D) public opposition to welfare programs for the needy.

E) None of these answers is correct.

35) The passage of TANF has resulted in which of the following?

A) the reduction of the child poverty rate

B) a greater awareness of poverty in American society

C) a reduction in single parent households

D) a dramatic reduction in the size of the welfare rolls

E) a greater stigma associated with EITC

36) The number of families receiving assistance under TANF had dropped by ________ within five years of its enactment.

A) 10 percent

B) 25 percent

C) 50 percent

D) 75 percent

E) There was no measurable change.

37) All of the following are true of the Head Start program EXCEPT that it

A) began as part of Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty in the 1960s.

B) seeks to give children the tools to succeed by the time they reach kindergarten.

C) currently only enrolls less than half of eligible children.

D) is fully funded at the present time.

E) is designed to assist preschool children.

38) The EITC (Earned Income Tax Credit) represents a reallocation of income to

A) wealthy individuals.

B) lower-income working individuals.

C) middle-class taxpayers.

D) corporations.

E) all working families.

39) ________ is an example of an in-kind benefit.

A) The Food Stamps program

B) Social security

C) Unemployment insurance

D) Supplemental Security Income

E) None of these answers is correct.

40) The Food Stamps program is

A) criticized because some believe it allows undeserving people to get aid.

B) criticized because some think it stigmatizes its users by identifying them publicly as welfare cases.

C) an in-kind benefit.

D) criticized because some think it is too costly.

E) All of these answers are correct.

41) Which of the following statements is NOT true about Medicaid?

A) It is a public assistance program.

B) It is funded by general tax revenues.

C) It serves all Americans who cannot afford health insurance.

D) It lacks broad support among Americans.

E) Most Republicans opposed its creation.

42) In contrast with Medicare, the Medicaid program is

A) a public assistance program.

B) funded totally by the states.

C) funded by payroll taxes.

D) very popular with the general public.

E) None of these answers is correct.

43) Which of the following statements is true of American opinions about public assistance and social insurance programs?

A) Americans prefer money as the primary form of welfare assistance.

B) There is a widespread belief among Americans that the government spends more than it does on public assistance programs.

C) Americans prefer government jobs through government programs as the primary form of welfare assistance.

D) the vast majority of Americans believe there should be absolutely no government services for the poor of any kind.

E) None of these answers is correct.

44) The widespread use of means testing in the United States tends to match what cultural trait of Americans?

A) individualism

B) cruelty

C) preference for jobs in the service sector

D) a disinterest in reducing poverty

E) mistrust of foreign influences

45) Why are social security and Medicare considered highly efficient programs?

A) Their integrated vertical structure.

B) They have built-in sunset provisions.

C) They are administered at the local level where government is more responsive to changes in the needs of beneficiaries.

D) They do not require a large bureaucracy to administer them.

E) Costs are shared by the state and federal government.

46) Which of the following is true of Social Security and Medicare?

A) Eligibility requirements make sure that all Social Security beneficiaries have an absolute economic need for the benefit.

B) Spending on TANF and SSI exceeds the total of all spending of public assistance programs.

C) Most retirees are not eligible to receive Social Security benefits.

D) Social Security income is decided as follows: the lower your income while working, the larger your Social Security benefit upon retirement.

E) Families in the top fifth of the income population receive more in Social Security and Medicare benefits than the government spends in total on TANF, SSI, food stamps, and housing subsidies for the poor.

47) Americans are most likely to support equality of

A) opportunity.

B) outcome.

C) income.

D) achievement.

E) living standards.

48) The Supreme Court has ruled that

A) the federal government must provide at least half the cost of educating each child through public education systems.

B) the federal government is responsible for ensuring that each state provides an adequate education for each child.

C) states have no official responsibilities in the field of education.

D) states are obliged to give all children an education that is "equal" across communities.

E) states are obliged to give all children an "adequate" education.

49) Of the following countries, which has the lowest educational performance, as based on standardized tests?

A) Canada

B) Britain

C) Germany

D) Japan

E) United States

50) The best predictor of how well schools perform on standardized tests is the

A) salary levels of the teachers.

B) population density of the community.

C) level of local school board control over policy.

D) community's wealth.

E) ratio of private to public schools in the community.

51) ________ was called "the great leveler" when it began in the early nineteenth century.

A) Social welfare

B) Public education

C) The federal government

D) The Internal Revenue Service

E) Social Security

52) More than 90 percent of the funding for public education comes from

A) the federal government.

B) state governments.

C) local governments.

D) state and local governments.

E) private sources.

53) Which of the following is true of the federal government's role in education?

A) The federal government provides roughly 25 percent of total school funding throughout the country.

B) The federal government provides roughly 70 percent of total school funding throughout the country.

C) The federal government's role in education was relatively small before the 1960s.

D) The 1965 Higher Education Act devolved a good deal of education policy back to the states.

E) Pell grants remain the states' largest source of financial control over school policies.

54) The Department of Education

A) is one of the largest executive departments.

B) was created to give the federal government a majority control over school funding.

C) was created in the 1930s as part of the New Deal.

D) dictates school curriculum across the country.

E) None of these answers is correct.

55) In which of the following ways does education in the United States differ from education in western European countries?

A) Schools are more even in quality, though of lower quality overall.

B) Local and state government has less control over schools.

C) There are fewer institutions of higher education.

D) Per-pupil spending is much higher.

E) There is a greater diversity of income among students within each school.

56) How did passage of the Every Student Succeeds Act improve on the provisions of the former No Child Left Behind Act?

A) It eliminated the sanctions on underperforming schools.

B) It eliminated the requirement for national standardized testing.

C) It gives states more control over the form of student testing.

D) It reduces state control over the nature of curricula.

E) It establishes a single uniform national standard for what constitutes "underachievement."

57) Charter schools

A) are publicly funded and have no more freedom in choosing students than do public schools, though they have greater freedom in determining curricula.

B) are privately funded and have total freedom in determining curricula.

C) are publicly funded but have more freedom in determining curricula than public schools.

D) are promoted primarily by Democrats as a strong, publicly-funded method of improving education.

E) have been opposed by President Obama, through executive orders to drain their funding.

58) In which of the following ways has the student loan issue changed since the 1970s?

A) Colleges have shifted much of their costs to students, making student loans bigger and more common.

B) States have helped keep public college costs down by providing low-interest student loans.

C) The federal government has essentially stopped offering Pell grants, which has increased use of private student loans.

D) The student loan issue has not changed much, as it still requires massive borrowing by most college students.

E) Student loan debt has decreased and is now exceeded by credit card debt.

59) To what was political scientist Robert Lane referring when using the term market justice?

A) Americans prefer that society's material benefits be allocated through the economic marketplace rather than through government policies.

B) Government should not use fiscal policy to attempt to flatten the ups and downs of a market economy.

C) Americans should increase the size of the federal welfare state in order to mitigate the harmful influences of the market.

D) The market tends to eliminate weak businesses and reward strong ones.

E) The strength of the market economy of the United States is precisely what provides the welfare state with the revenue it needs to help the most underprivileged citizens.

60) What is meant by the poverty line? Which Americans are most likely to live in a household with an income below the poverty line? What is meant by "the feminization of poverty"?

61) Discuss what is meant by a social insurance program, and provide examples.

62) Discuss what is meant by a public assistance program, and provide examples.

63) Discuss the history of public education in the United States and who today is responsible for education funding and policies.

64) Why is growth in service sector jobs less desirable than growth in manufacturing industry jobs?

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
16
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 16 Income, Welfare, Education Policy
Author:
Thomas Patterson

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