Macro Practice

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policies to promote technological progress:

- patent laws - tax incentives or direct support for private sector in research and development - grants for basic research

"When workers already have a large quantity of capital to use in producing goods and services, giving them an additional unit of capital increases their productivity only slightly." This statement

- represents the traditional view of the production process - is an assertion that capital is subject to diminishing returns - is made under the assumption that the quantities of human capital, natural resources, and technology are being held constant.

population growth may affect living standards in 3 different ways:

1. stretching natural resources 2. diluting the capital stock 3. promoting technological progress

In one day Portal Computer Company made 400 laptops with 1200 hours of labor. What was its productivity?

1/3 laptop per hour

Over the past century in the United States, real GDP per person has grown, on average, by about

2% per year

Which of the following best states economists' understanding of the facts concerning the relationship between natural resources and economic growth?

Abundant domestic natural resources may help make a country rich, but even countries with few natural resources can have high standards of living.

production function formula

Y = AF (L, K, H, N)

Foreign direct investment:

a capital investment (ex: a factory) that is owned and operated by a foreign entity

Foreign portfolio investment:

a capital investment financed with foreign money but operated by domestic residents

Other things the same, if a country raises its saving rate, when is productivity growth higher?

as the economy moves toward the long run, but not in the long run.

Technological knowledge refers to

available information on how to produce things

"When workers have a relatively small quantity of capital to use in producing goods and services, giving them an additional unit of capital increases their productivity by a relatively large amount." This statement is consistent with the view that

capital is subject to diminishing returns.

K/L =

capital per worker

Saving means only one thing

consuming less out of a given amount of resources in the present in order to consume more in the future

political instability

creates uncertainty over whether property rights will be protected in the future

Daniel owns a coffee kiosk. All of his employees work 8 hours per day. In 2011, he employed 6 people who produced a total of 912 cups of coffee each day. In 2012, he hired a seventh employee and production increased to 1008 cups of coffee each day. In Daniel's kiosk, productivity

decreased by about 5.3 percent

Human capital includes the skills accumulated in

early childhood programs, grade school, high school, college, and on-the-job training for adults in the labor force

Saving and investment is one way that a government can

encourage growth and, in the long run, raise the economy's standard of living

the patent system

enhances the incentive for individuals and firms to engage in research

countries with inward-oriented policies have generally

failed to create growth

If over a short time a large number of teenagers become old enough to find employment and a much smaller number of people retire, then productivity

falls but real GDP per person rises.

despite its status as one of the richest countries in the world, Japan has

few natural resources

to raise K/L and hence productivity, wages, and living standards, the government can also encourage

foreign direct investment and foreign portfolio investment

In recent decades Americans have increased their purchase of stocks of foreign-based companies. The Americans who have bought these stocks were engaged in

foreign portfolio investment

example of political instability

frequent coups

education

government can increase productivity by promoting education - investment in human capital (H)

Suppose that the U.S. undertakes a policy to increase its saving rate. This policy will likely

gradually raise the level of real GDP per person

with the amount of capital per worker already so high, additional capital investment

has a relatively small effect on productivity

You bake cookies. One day you double the time you spend, double the number of chocolate chips, flour, eggs, and all your other inputs, and bake twice as many cookies. Your cookie production function

has constant returns to scale

Productivity is higher when the average worker

has more capital (machines, equipment, etc.)

in the long run, the higher saving rate leads to higher level of productivity and income, but not to

higher growth in these variables

Determinants of productivity:

human capital per worker, physical capital per worker, and natural resources per worker

public good

ideas can be shared freely, increasing the productivity of many

examples of inward-oriented policies

imposing tariffs, limits on investment from abroad, and other trade restrictions

If your firm's production function has constant returns to scale and you increase all your inputs by 60%, then your firm's output will

increase by 60%

in per-worker terms, an increase in N/L causes a(n)

increase in Y/L

If there are diminishing returns to capital, then increases in the capital stock

increase output by ever smaller amounts.

example of an opportunity cost of investment in human capital

increased earning potential

Matt is going to college to become a pharmacist. What he learns about existing information

increases human capital but not technological knowledge

According to studies using international data, an increase in the saving rate

increases the growth rate of output for several decades

if workers have little K, giving them more

increases their productivity a lot

if workers already have a lot of K, giving them more

increases their productivity fairly little

reducing consumption =

increasing saving; this extra saving funds the production of investment goods

examples of free trade

inward-oriented policies and outward-oriented policies

what does the production function measure?

it exhibits constant returns to scale

when production curve is linear:

it has a constant measure

when a production curve is circular:

it has a decreasing measure

propriety knowledge

it is known only by the company that discovers it

technological progress is the main reason why

living standards rise over the long run

Rapid population growth

may depress economic prosperity by reducing the amount of capital which each worker has to work with

L =

measures the amount of workers employed; quantity of labor

H =

measures the human capital (skills and training)

N =

measures the natural resources

A =

measures the technological knowledge; variable that reflects the available production of technology

Other things the same, higher population growth reduces the amount of physical capital per worker, but there is some evidence that it

raises the pace of technological progress.

Growth rate measures

rate of advance of the standard of living

A nation's standard of living is best measured by its

real GDP per person

Over the last ten years productivity grew faster in Mapoli than in Romeria while the population and total hours worked remained the same in both countries. It follows that

real GDP per person grew faster in Mapoli than in Romeria.

Y =

real GDP; the quantity of output produced

Which of the following statements is correct? In 2010,

real income per person in the US was about 6 times that in China, real income per person in China was more than 2 times that in India; the typical resident of India had less real income than the typical resident of England

it is easier for a country to grow fast if it starts out

relatively poor

natural resources take two forms:

renewable (forest) nonrenewable (oil)

Country A and country B both increase their capital stock by one unit. Output in country A increases by 12 while output in country B increases by 15. Other things the same, diminishing returns implies that country A is

richer than Country B. If Country A adds another unit of capital, output will increase by less than 12 units.

Accumulating capital requires that society

sacrifice consumption goods in the present.

On a production function, as capital per worker increases, output per worker increases. This increase is

smaller at larger values of capital per worker.

technological knowledge (A)

society's understanding of the best ways to produce goods and services

Level of real GDP per person measures

standard of living.

small amounts of capital investment can

substantially raise workers' productivity

producing human capital requires inputs in the form of

teachers, libraries, and student time

Thomas Malthus's predictions turned out to be wrong due to

technological advances such as those during the Industrial Revolution.

technological knowledge vs. human capital

technological knowledge refers to society's understanding of how the world works; human capital results from the effect people expend to acquire this knowledge

property rights

the ability of people to exercise authority over the resources they own

H/L =

the average worker's human capital

An economy's income is

the economy's output

examples of outward-oriented policies

the elimination of restrictions on trade or foreign investment

The inputs used to produce goods and services (labor, capital, etc.) are called

the factors of production

natural resources (N)

the inputs into the production of goods and services that are provided by nature, such as land, rivers, and mineral deposits

human capital (H)

the knowledge and skills that workers acquire through education, training, and experience

what is productivity?

the output per worker

diminishing returns

the property whereby the benefit from an extra unit of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases

Productivity

the quantity of goods and services produced from each unit of labor input

production function is used to describe

the relationship between the quantity of inputs used in production and the quantity of output from production

when productivity increases:

the standard of living increases

physical capital (K)

the stock of equipment and structures that are used to produce goods and services

investment from abroad is one way for poor countries

to learn the state-of-the-art technologies developed and used in richer countries

according to studies of international data on economic growth, increasing the saving rate can lead

to substantially high growth for a period of several decades

The level of real GDP person and the growth rate of real GDP per person...

vary widely across countries

The level of real GDP person and the growth rate of real GDP per person

vary widely across countries.

If your firm's production function has constant returns to scale, and if you double all your inputs, then your firm's productivity

will not change

If an economy with constant returns to scale were to double its physical capital stock, its available natural resources, and its human capital, but leave the size of the labor force the same, its output and productivity

would increase, but less than double

technological progress means

any advance in knowledge that boosts productivity (allows society to get more output from its resources)

K =

quantity of physical capital/capital; measures the amount of machines employed

A rapid increase in the number of workers, other things the same, is likely in the short term to

raise real GDP, but decrease real GDP per person

In the long run, an increase in the saving rate

raises the levels of both productivity and income.

If WarmWear, a U.S. manufacturer of winter clothing, opens a new factory in Austria, then Austrian GNP increases by less than Austrian GDP, because

GDP includes income earned by foreigners working in Austria.

_________ refers to the idea that it is easier for a country to grow fast and so catch-up if it starts out relatively poor

The catch-up effect

F ( ) =

a function that shows how the inputs are combined to produce output

An increase in a country's population may contribute to the rate of technological progress because

a larger population brings with it more scientists, inventors, and engineers.

human capital raises

a nation's ability to produce goods and services; it is a produced factor of production

common knowledge

after one person uses it, everyone becomes aware of it

inward-oriented policies

aim to raise living standards by avoiding interaction with other countries

When Chile experiences investment from abroad, it experiences, as a result,

an increase in productivity

other things equal, more N allows a country to produce

more Y

Productivity is higher when the average worker has

more human capital (education, skills, etc.)

As technology improves, A rises, so the economy produces

more output from any given combination of inputs

Productivity is the amount of goods and services produced for each hour of a worker's time. It is linked to a

nation's economic policies.

N/L =

natural resources per worker

countries with outward-oriented policies have

often succeeded to create growth

Country A and country B are the same except country A currently has more capital. Assuming diminishing returns, if both countries increase their capital by 100 units and other factors that determine output are unchanged, then

output in country A increases by less than in country B.

The saws, lathes, and drill presses that woodworkers at Cedar Valley Furniture use to produce furniture are called

physical capital

Investment in

physical capital, like investment in human capital, has an opportunity cost.

studies of international data on economic growth confirm this catch-up effect: controlling for other variables

poor countries tend to grow at faster rates than rich countries

Apple founder Steve Jobs received patents on many of his ideas. While the patents existed, his ideas were

private goods and propriety knowledge

Students can be viewed as "workers" who have the important job of

producing the human capital that will be used in future production

if every factor in the function doubled,

production would also double

if a single factor in the function doubled,

production would increase, but not double

The one variable that stands out as the most significant explanation of large variations in living standards around the world is

productivity

Y/L =

productivity (output per worker)

Suppose a country imposes new restrictions on how many hours people can work. If these restrictions reduce the total number of hours worked in the economy, but all other factors that determine output are held fixed, then

productivity rises and output falls

if the function increases/decrease by the factor x:

productivity variable and all other variables are divided by L

outward-oriented policies

promote integration with the world economy

the patent gives the inventor a property right over her invention, turning her new idea from a

public good to a private good


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