True. At least I'm pretty sure it's true. Hope this helped.
I believe the answer is:<span>the government can change real output </span> <span>only by making unexpected changes in aggregate demand.
Without making the unexpected changes, the market would most likely anticipate the movement of market equilibrium and adjust that output to obtain maximum profit. Because of this, the government has to utilize the element of surprise that prevent the people on the market to create their adjustment</span>
Marcus's behavior best illustrates the defense mechanism of <u>"projection".</u>
Defense mechanism, in psychoanalytic theory, any of a gathering of mental procedures that empowers the brain to achieve bargain answers for clashes that it can't resolve.
Projection is a type of defense in which undesirable sentiments are uprooted onto someone else, where they at that point show up as a danger from the outside world. A typical type of projection happens when an individual, undermined by his own furious emotions, blames another for harboring unfriendly considerations.
The centralists believed the federal government had to be strong