Foram encontradas 110 questões.
Leia as opções que se seguem e assinale a resposta correta.
Provas
Nos termos da Lei n. 10.180, de 6 de fevereiro de 2001, as unidades de gestão interna da Advocacia-Geral da União integram o Sistema de Contabilidade Federal na qualidade de
Provas
Assinale a opção correta sobre os direitos e garantias fundamentais e o tratamento conferido pela Constituição Federal aos institutos da emenda, da reforma e da revisão constitucional.
Provas
"E preciso, pois, dizer o óbvio: a Constituição constitui (no sentido fenomenológico-hermenêutico); a Constituição vincula (não metafisicamente); a Constituição estabelece as condições do agir político-estatal. Afinal, como bem assinala Miguel Angel Pérez, uma Constituição democrática é, antes de tudo, normativa, de onde se extrai duas conclusões: que a Constituição contém mandatos jurídicos obrigatórios, e que estes mandatos jurídicos não somente são obrigatórios senão que, muito mais do que isso, possuem uma especial força de obrigar, uma vez que a Constituição é a forma suprema de todo o ordenamento jurídico." (STRECK, Lenio Luiz, Jurisdição constitucional e hermenêutica: uma crítica do direito. 2. ed. Rio de Janeiro: Forense, 2004, p.287).
Assinale a opção que indica com exatidão os princípios de hermenêutica constitucional utilizados no texto para sustentar a aplicabilidade das normas constitucionais.
Provas
O Banco do Brasil e a Caixa Econômica Federal são, respectivamente, sociedade de economia mista e empresa pública, cujos capitais votantes majoritários pertencem à União. Quanto a estas espécies de instituições, analise os itens a seguir e marque com V se a assertiva for verdadeira e com F se for falsa. Ao final, assinale a opção correspondente.
( ) A constituição de sociedades de economia mista e de empresas públicas decorre de um processo de descentralização do Estado que passa a exercer certas atividades por intermédio de outras entidades.
( ) Apesar de serem constituídas como pessoas jurídicas de direito privado, as sociedades de economia mista e as empresas públicas estão submetidas hierarquicamente à pessoa política da federação que as tenha criado.
( ) Somente por lei específica podem ser criadas sociedades de economia mista e empresas públicas, bem como necessária autorização legislativa, em cada caso, para a criação de suas subsidiárias.
( ) As empresas públicas e as sociedades de economia mista exploradoras de atividade econômica sujeitam-se ao regime próprio das empresas privadas, inclusive quanto aos direitos e obrigações civis, comerciais, trabalhistas e tributários.
( ) Quanto ao regime de compras, as empresas públicas e as sociedades de economia mista sujeitam-se aos princípios da administração pública e devem observar procedimento licitatório.
Provas
While Rome burns
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 25th, 2008 (Adapted)
American
plans to buy up assets that are clogging the financial system lack
detail but no one doubts that a massive government intervention is
coming. In Europe jittery investors have no such reassurance. European
governments have yet to respond publicly to calls from Hank Paulson, the
treasury secretary, to follow his lead. They look set to keep faith
with the approach that they have used to handle the crisis so far −
staving off liquidity worries by allowing banks to use facilities at
central banks to swap their assets in exchange for ready cash.
That
makes many watchers nervous. The crisis in America has dramatically
grown from one of liquidity to one of solvency as well. Lehman Brothers
had access to the Federal Reserve's discount window, after all, but
still went under. The burning question now is whether banks have enough
capital. On some measures, European banks look pretty well capitalized.
The average tier-one ratio, which measures capital based on the
riskiness of bank assets, stood at 8% in the first half of the year.
That looks solid enough, if you assume that banks have a good handle on
risk.
The author reminds the readers that banks are assumed to have a good handle on risk. In other words, they
Provas
While Rome burns
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 25th, 2008 (Adapted)
American
plans to buy up assets that are clogging the financial system lack
detail but no one doubts that a massive government intervention is
coming. In Europe jittery investors have no such reassurance. European
governments have yet to respond publicly to calls from Hank Paulson, the
treasury secretary, to follow his lead. They look set to keep faith
with the approach that they have used to handle the crisis so far −
staving off liquidity worries by allowing banks to use facilities at
central banks to swap their assets in exchange for ready cash.
That
makes many watchers nervous. The crisis in America has dramatically
grown from one of liquidity to one of solvency as well. Lehman Brothers
had access to the Federal Reserve's discount window, after all, but
still went under. The burning question now is whether banks have enough
capital. On some measures, European banks look pretty well capitalized.
The average tier-one ratio, which measures capital based on the
riskiness of bank assets, stood at 8% in the first half of the year.
That looks solid enough, if you assume that banks have a good handle on
risk.
As regards investors in Europe at the moment, they are feeling
Provas
While Rome burns
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 25th, 2008 (Adapted)
American
plans to buy up assets that are clogging the financial system lack
detail but no one doubts that a massive government intervention is
coming. In Europe jittery investors have no such reassurance. European
governments have yet to respond publicly to calls from Hank Paulson, the
treasury secretary, to follow his lead. They look set to keep faith
with the approach that they have used to handle the crisis so far −
staving off liquidity worries by allowing banks to use facilities at
central banks to swap their assets in exchange for ready cash.
That
makes many watchers nervous. The crisis in America has dramatically
grown from one of liquidity to one of solvency as well. Lehman Brothers
had access to the Federal Reserve's discount window, after all, but
still went under. The burning question now is whether banks have enough
capital. On some measures, European banks look pretty well capitalized.
The average tier-one ratio, which measures capital based on the
riskiness of bank assets, stood at 8% in the first half of the year.
That looks solid enough, if you assume that banks have a good handle on
risk.
In paragraph 1, the author refers to a massive government intervention which
Provas
While Rome burns
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 25th, 2008 (Adapted)
American plans to buy up assets that are clogging the financial system lack detail but no one doubts that a massive government intervention is coming. In Europe jittery investors have no such reassurance. European governments have yet to respond publicly to calls from Hank Paulson, the treasury secretary, to follow his lead. They look set to keep faith with the approach that they have used to handle the crisis so far − staving off liquidity worries by allowing banks to use facilities at central banks to swap their assets in exchange for ready cash.
That makes many watchers nervous. The crisis in America has dramatically grown from one of liquidity to one of solvency as well. Lehman Brothers had access to the Federal Reserve's discount window, after all, but still went under. The burning question now is whether banks have enough capital. On some measures, European banks look pretty well capitalized. The average tier-one ratio, which measures capital based on the riskiness of bank assets, stood at 8% in the first half of the year. That looks solid enough, if you assume that banks have a good handle on risk.
The author refers to "assets that are clogging the financial system", which means they
Provas
Half the nation, a hundred million citizens strong
Source: www.economist.co.uk
Sep 11th, 2008 (Adapted)
It remains hard to define, and
attempts to do so often seem arbitrary. But in Brazil, the middle class
describes those with a job in the formal economy, access to credit and
ownership of a car or motorbike. According to the Fundação Getúlio
Vargas (FGV), a research institute, this means households with a monthly
income ranging from 1,064 reais ($600) to 4,561 reais. Since 2002,
according to FGV, the proportion of the population that fits this
description has increased from 44% to 52%. Brazil, previously notorious
for its extremes, is now a middle-class country.
This social climbing is a feature mainly of the country's cities,
reversing two decades of stagnation that began at the start of the
1980s. Marcelo Neri of FGV suggests two factors behind the change. The
first is education. The quality of teaching in Brazil's schools may
still be poor, but those aged 15-21 now spend on average just over three
more years studying than their counterparts did in the early 1990s.
The second is a migration of jobs from the informal "black" economy to
the formal economy. The rate of formal job creation is accelerating,
with 40% more created in the year to this July than in the previous 12
months, which itself set a record. Together with cash transfers to poor
families, this helps to explain why − in contrast with economic and
social development in India or China − as Brazil's middle class has
grown, so the country's income inequality has lessened.
According to paragraph 3, Brazil's income inequality has lessened. Therefore, it has
Provas
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