Macroeconomics Test 2
GDP = $100,000; taxes = $22,000; government purchases = $25,000; national saving = $15,000. This economy's government is running a
budget deficit of $3,000
The logic behind the catch-up effect is that
new capital adds more to production in a country that doesn't have much capital than in a country that already has much capital.
Proprietary technology is technology that is
not widely used because it is known or controlled only by the company that discovered it.
Amy is working part-time. Tavaris is on temporary layoff. Who is included in the Bureau of Labor Statistics' "employed" category?
only Amy
Greater scarcity of a natural resource is indicated
only by an increase in the price of the resource that is greater than the rate of inflation.
Babe Ruth's 1931 salary was $80,000. Government statistics show a consumer price index of 15.2 for 1931 and 229.6 for 2012. Ruth's 1931 salary was equivalent to a 2012 salary of about
$1,208,421
GDP = $100,000; taxes = $22,000; government purchases = $25,000; national saving = $15,000. Refer to Scenario 26-1. For this economy, investment amounts to
$15,000.
GDP = $100,000; taxes = $22,000; government purchases = $25,000; national saving = $15,000. For this economy, private saving amounts to
$18,000
Refer to Figure 28-4. If the government imposes a minimum wage of $6, how many workers will be unemployed?
$4,000
The table below shows the prices of baseballs and baseball bats for three years. Assume the typical consumer's basket consists of 6 baseballs and 2 baseball bats. Year Price of a Baseball Price of a Baseball Bat 2008 $3.25 $75 2009 $3.75 $82 2010 $4.50 $96 5) Refer to Table 24-10. The inflation rate was
10.03 percent in 2009 and 17.43 percent in 2010
The table below pertains to Iowan, an economy in which the typical consumer's basket consists of 4 pounds of pork and 3 bushels of corn. Year Price of Pork Price of Corn 2012 $20 per pound $12 per bushel 2013 $25 per pound $18 per bushel 3) Refer to Table 24-3. If 2012 is the base year, then the CPI for 2013 was
132.8
The table below lists the per gallon prices of gas and milk for the months of April, May, and June. Assume that the typical consumer buys 60 gallons of gas and 4 gallons of milk each month, and that April is the base period. Month Price of Gas Price of Milk April $2.00 $3.50 May $3.50 $3.25 June $3.85 $3.58 4) Refer to Table 24-9. What is the consumer price index for May
166
We would expect the interest rate on Bond A to be higher than the interest rate on Bond B if the two bonds have identical characteristics except that
Bond A was issued by a financially weak corporation and Bond B was issued by a financially strong corporation. Bond A was issued by the Exxon Mobil Corporation and Bond B was issued by the state of New York. Bond A has a term of 20 years and Bond B has a term of 1 year.
Which of the following is considered human capital? Knowledge acquired from
Early childhood education programs, job training, and on-the-job experience
Fran buys 1,000 shares of stock issued by Miller Brewing. In turn, Miller uses the funds to buy new machinery for one of its breweries.
Fran is saving; Miller is investing.
If Samantha quits her job voluntarily and actively searches for other work, then she is considered
Frictionally unemployed.
Outward-oriented policies
allow countries to take advantage of gains from trade, have generally led to high growth for the countries that pursued them and receive widespread support from economists.
The natural rate of unemployment is the
amount of unemployment that the economy normally experiences.
Which of the following is correct? a. The GDP deflator is better than the CPI at reflecting the goods and services bought by consumers. b. The CPI is better than the GDP deflator at reflecting the goods and services bought by consumers. c. The GDP deflator and the CPI are equally good at reflecting the goods and services bought by consumers. d. The GDP deflator is more commonly used as a gauge of inflation than the CPI is.
b. The CPI is better than the GDP deflator and reflecting the goods and services bought by consumers.
Suppose a person receives an education in her home country. Which of the following will tend to make the increase in GDP of the person's home country larger than the increase in this person's income?
externalities but not brain drain
One of the widely acknowledged problems with using the consumer price index as a measure of the cost of living is that the CPI
fails to account for the introduction of new goods.
Consider a small economy in which consumers buy only two goods: pretzels and cookies. In order to compute the consumer price index for this economy for two or more consecutive years, we assume that
neither the number of pretzels nor the number of cookies bought by the typical consumer changes from year to year.
Suppose government expenditures on goods and services and net taxes both decrease, and expenditures fall by more than net taxes. The effects of these changes on the budget deficit cause
the equilibrium interest rate to fall and the equilibrium quantity of loanable funds to rise.
Assume that consumers consider rice and potatoes to be substitutes, so that when the price of rice rises, consumers purchase less rice and more potatoes. When the CPI is computed following the increase in the price of rice, it takes into account
the increase in the price of rice.
A nation's standard of living is determined by
the productivity of its workers
If the government institutes policies that diminish incentives to save, then in the loanable funds market
the supply of loanable funds shifts leftward.