ECON- ch. 13-14

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

What are 3 major price indices?

1. Consumer Price Index 2. Producer Price Index 3. Implicit GDP Price Deflator

What are the causes of inflation? (5 causes)

1. Demand-pull 2. Deficit spending 3. cost-push 4. wage-price spiral 5. Excessive monetary growth

What are the five reasons for income inequality?

1. Education 2. Wealth 3. Discrimination 4. Ability 5. Monopoly power

What are the two phases of a business cycle?

1. Recession 2. Expansion

What are the three degrees of inflation?

1. creeping inflation 2. galloping inflation 3. hyperinflation

What are the three factors most likely to affect the population growth?

1. fertility rate 2. life expectancy 3. net immigration

the total of the prices of the goods in the market basket in the base year is assigned a percentage value of _____ percent. The same market basket of goods is viewed the next year and look at the percentage change. Greater than 100% is inflation, and less than 100% is deflation.

100%

What causes aggregate demand to increase and decrease?

Anything that causes a change in consumption, investment, government spendings or net exports

What causes the aggregate demand curve to shift?

Anything that causes consumption, investment, government spending or net exports to change will shift the aggregate demand curve

What is an example of structural unemployment?

Assembly lines being replaced with machines

What are the causes of the business cycles and how do they affect it?

Capital expenditures, inventory adjustments, innovation and imitation, monetary factors, external shocks

What causes aggregate supply to increase and decrease?

Changes in the cost of production for all firms

What is the largest sector of the macroeconomy?

Consumer sector

the output-expenditure model formula

Consumption (consumer consumption spending) + Investment (business investment spending) + Government (government spending) + (eXports-iMports)(net exports) = GDP

How are standard of living, government spending, domestic problems, and other nations benefiting from economic growth?

Economic growth causes standard living to increase, a larger tax base to fund government spending, alleviates domestic problems like poverty, and allows the United States to create jobs and incomes in other countries.

Why are nonmarket transactions excluded from GDP?

Excluded because it is impossible to estimate

What are the different types of unemployment?

Frictional, structural, cyclical, seasonal, and technological

What economic indicators are used to judge economic performance?

GDP unemployment Inflation

What were the economic indicators during the Great Depression? (Include GDP, unemployment, and wages)

GDP decline from $103 billion to $55 billion (about 50%), the unemployment rate was 25% and wages went from 55 cents and hour in 1929 to 5 cents an hour in 1933

What is the most important measure of economic performance?

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

What do the variables mean in the output-expenditure model?

Gross Domestic Product= consumption + investments + government + net imports(exports-imports)

What changes when you compare GDP over the long term?

In the short-run, population changes are relatively small, but in the long-run, increases in real GDP are being distributed over larger population. It becomes necessary to adjust GDP for changes in population and the price level

What is not included in GDP?

Intermediate products Secondhand sales Nonmarket transactions

What is not included in the calculation of GDP?

Intermediate products, secondhand sales, nonmarket transactions

How often is the census taken?

every 10 years, first census was 1790

What happens to the buying power of the dollar because of inflation?

It decreases

How is it expected the change in the next couple of decades? What effect will this have on the economy?

It is expected to continue to increase until 2040. This will again place an extra burden on the working age population and the government

What is the baby boom? What impact will the baby boomers' retirement have on the economy?

It is the high birth rate from 1946 to 1964 that makes up a large portion of the current population. It will place a large burden on the younger and smaller working population when they begin to collect pensions, social security, and Medicare

What is full employment? What do economics estimate the full employment rate to be?

It is the lowest possible unemployment rate, with the economy growing and all the factors of production being used as efficiently as possible. It is estimated at about 4.5%

What was considered "poverty" for a family of four in 2003?

Less than $18,400 for a family of four

Why is the aggregate demand curve downward sloping?

The economy can only have one money supply at a time. At a lower price level the purchasing power of that money supply is greater than at a higher price level and vise versa

What has characterized the business cycle since World War II?

The economy has experience short recessions followed by longer recoveries since WWII

What causes the aggregate supply curve to shift?

Most shifts are caused by changes in the cost of production for all firms

What are the characteristics of the economy at an economic peak, in a recession, at the trough, and during expansion?

Peak- real GDP stops increasing and starts decreasing Recession- GDP declines of at least 6 months Trough- real GDP stops decreasing and starts increasing Expansion- economic recovery from a recession

Who is most hurt by inflation?

People who have lent money

What is PPI?

Producer Price index- family of indexes that measures the average change in selling price received by domestic producers (measures price change)

The formula for converting GDP to real GDP is:

Real GDP = current GDP/implicit GDP Price Deflator x 100

How is Real GDP calculated?

Real GDP= current GDP/implicit GDP Price deflator x100

What is a example of frictional unemployment?

Recent college grad looking for work

What type of unemployment is caused by changes in consumer tastes?

Structural unemployment

When was the first census taken? When was the Census Bureau permanently established?

The census was first taken in 1790 and the Congress permanently established the Census Bureau in 1902

What is the center of population? What does it indicate about the change in the geographic regions in the country?

The point where the country would balance if it could be laid flat and all the people weighted the same. It has moved farther west each time the census has been taken. In 2000, it was in Missouri.

What are the consequences of inflation? Who is most hurt by it?

The purchasing power of the dollar falls. This hurts those living on fixed income. People who have lent money are hurt and the borrowers are helped by unexpected inflation. Once inflation occurs it makes it harder for people to take out loans to buy durable goods

What are the limitations of the unemployment rate?

The unemployment rate does not count people who have become too frustrated or discouraged to look for work. Also, people are considered employed even when they hold part-time jobs. This is called "underemployment"

Why are intermediate products excluded from GDP?

They are excluded to prevent double counting when the final sale product is sold

What has happened to the growth rate of population since the colonial era? What is the rate of population growth now? Why do you think it has decreased?

U.S. population has grown considerably since the colonial era but has steadily declined. It was approx 3% a year until the Civil War but has fallen to approx 0.9% a year.

What caused the Great Depression?

Unequal distribution of income Easy credit U.S. Trade policy

According to the book, what were the causes of the Great Depression?

Unequal distribution of income, easy credit, and U.S. trade policy

What are the social costs of economic instability?

Wasted resources (unemployment), political instability (the political party in power usually changes during period of recession and instability), and crime.

How does labor productivity impact economic growth?

When labor productivity grows in encourages economic growth. An increase in productivity encourages domestic production because it keeps prices stable.

Lorenz Curve

a curve that shows how much the actual distribution of income varies from equal distribution of income. It has the percent of households on the x-axis and percent of total income on the y-axis

economic model

a macroeconomic model that uses algebraic equations to describe how the economy behaves

index of leading indicators

a monthly statistical index that predicts future changes in real GDP

recession

a period during which real GDP declines for at least two consecutive quarters, or six months

expansion

a period of economic recovery from a recession. Real GDP is expanding

stagflation

a period of stagnant growth (negative change in real GDP) and inflation

dependency ratio

a ratio of the number to children and elderly for every 100 persons in the working age bracket to 18 to 64 years-old

When does a recession begin? When does a recession end?

a recession begins at a peak and ends at a trough

market basket

a representative collection of goods and services used to compile a price index. Used to see how the prices of identical products change over time.

inflation

a rise in the general level of prices (the prices of most goods and services in an economy are increasing)

price index

a statistical series used to measure changes in the price level over time

base year

a year serving as point of comparison for other years in a price index

Demand-pull

all sectors of the economy are trying to buy more than the economy can produce

census

an official count of all the people and their place of residence that is taken every 10 years

You need to select a _________ and then you select a market basket to compare

base year

What is a base year?

base year is a year serving as point of comparison for other years in a price index

A shift in either the aggregate supply or aggregate demand curve will cause price level or real GDP to ________. Economic policies will try to achieve economic growth (higher real GDP) without causing an increase in price level.

change

What is creeping inflation?

creeping inflation is a term used to describe a gradual rather than drastic increase in prices, inflation between 1 and 3 percent a year

What is unemployment that is directly related to swings in the business cycles called?

cyclical unemployment

the total of the prices of the goods in the market basket in the base year is assigned a percentage value of 100%. The same market basket of goods is viewed the next year and look at the percentage change. Greater than 100% is inflation, and less than 100% is ________.

deflation

How does economic growth benefit the government?

economic growth causes standard living to increase larger tax base to fund government spendings, allieviates domestic problems like poverty, and allows us to create jobs and incomes

trend line

eliminates the peaks and troughs of recessions and expansions and shows the general upward trend of real GDP over time

tax base

incomes or properties that may be taxed. When economic growth occurs, people earn more income and acquire more property.

wage-price spiral

increasing wages cause prices to rise which causes wages to increase further

the total of the prices of the goods in the market basket in the base year is assigned a percentage value of 100% percent. The same market basket of goods is viewed the next year and look at the percentage change. Greater than 100% is ________, and less than 100% is deflation.

inflation

hyperinflation

inflation 500 percent or greater a year

creeping inflation

inflation between 1 and 3 percent a year

galloping inflation

inflation between 100 and 300 percent a year

Recession, unemployment and high inflation are all examples of economic ________.

instability

Implicit GDP Price Deflator

is an index of the average level of prices for all goods and services in the economy. It is computed quarterly with a base year of 2005

What is the study of macroeconomics?

is the field of economics that studies the behavior of aggregated economy, examines economy wide phenomena such as a change in economy

Why is real GDP per capita the single most important measure of long-term economic growth?

it adjusts for changes in both price level and population

business cycles

largely systematic ups and downs for real GDP

the output-expenditure model

macroeconomic model that uses the aggregate demand by consumers, businesses, the government and the foreign sector to calculate GDP

What is the consumer price index?

major price indices- consumer price index measures the price changes for about 80,000 items in 85 geographic areas around the country

you need to select a base year and then you select a ________ to compare

market basket

Producer Price Index

measures price changes paid by producers for their inputs. It is a sample of approx. 100,000 commodities. It is also compiled by the BLS. 1982 is used as the base year

Consumer Price Index

measuring the price changes of approx. 80,000 items in 85 geographic areas around the country. It is complied by the Bureau of Labor Statics and they use 1982-1984 as their base year

How is the unemployment rate calculated?

number of unemployed individuals divided by the total number of persons in the civilian labor force

unemployed

people available for work who made a specific effort to find a job during the past month but worked less than one hour/week for pay

Urban Population

people living in incorporated villages, towns or cities of 2,500 inhabitants or more

demographers

people who study growth, density, and other characteristics of the population

What is the definition of a recession?

period which real GDP declines for a least two consecutive quarters (at least 6 months)

What is GDP designed to measure?

production

nonmarket transactions

production that does not take place in market. Excluded because it is impossible to estimate

intermediate products

products that are inputs into the production of another final product. They are excluded to prevent double counting when the final sale product is sold

Price level

relative magnitude of prices at a given point in time as measure by price index. Economists use changes in the price level to determine if we are experiencing inflation/deflation

renewable resources

resources that can be replenished for future use

business flactuations

rise and fall of real GDP in a nonsystematic manner

cost-push

rising input costs drive up the costs of production and prices

What is the most serious type of unemployment?

structural unemployment

How do you measure GDP?

the PRICES of all final goods and services x the QUANTITY of all final goods and services = GDP

labor productivity

the amount of output produced per unit of labor

life expectancy

the average remaining life span of people who reach a given age. The life expectancy in 2007 was 77.9 years. for females it was 80.4 years and for males it was 75.4

GDP Gap

the difference between actual GDP and potential GDP that could be achieved if the economy was at full employment

real GDP per capita

the dollar amount of GDP, adjusted for inflation, on a per person basis

Deficit spending

the federal government spending too much money drives up prices

Macroeconomic equilibrium

the level of real GDP consistent with the current price level. It is where aggregate supply and aggregate demand intersect.

net immigration

the net change in population from people moving into and out of the country

fertility rate

the number of births that 1,000 women are expected to undergo in their lifetime. It is estimated at 2,119 births per 1,000 women

unemployment rate

the number of unemployed individuals divided by the total number of person in the civilian labor forace

standard of living

the quality of life based on the possession of necessities and luxuries that make life easier

What factors influence economic growth? How do the resources influence economic growth?

the quantity and quality of the factors of production (land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship) has he greatest influence on economic growth. It is also important how efficiently the resources are used.

price level

the relative magnitude of prices

Rural Population

the remainder of the population, including those who live in areas along the fringes of cities

secondhand sales

the resale of used pr pre-owned products. They are excluded to prevent double counting because the product was counted when it was initially produced. GDP is designed to measure production, and nothing new was produced.

What marked the beginning of the Great Depression?

the stock market of October 1929 led to increase of unemployment

Misery Index

the sum of the inflation rate and the unemployment rate

capital-to-labor ratio

the total capital stock divided by the number of workers in the labor force. A high capital-to-labor ratio encourages economic growth

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

the total dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country's national boarder's in a year. It is the most important measure of economic performance

Aggregate Demand

the total quantity of goods and services demanded at different price levels. It is the sum of all consumption, investment, government spending and net exports

Aggregate Supply

the total value of goods and services that all firms would produce in a specific period of time at various price levels

Real GDP

the value of GDP when it has been adjusted for changes in the price level. This represents what the value of GDP would have been at base year prices

Current GDP

the value of GDP when it has not been adjusted for changed in the price level

Why are secondhand sales excluded from GDP?

they are excluded to prevent double counting because the product was counted when it was initially produced.

frictional unemployment

unemployment caused by workers who are between jobs for one reason or another. This is short-term unempolyment

technological unemployment

unemployment caused when workers are replaced by machines or other equipment. (a type of structural unemployment)

cyclical unemployment

unemployment directly related to swings in the business cycle (recessions)

structural unemployment

unemployment that occurs when a fundamental change in the operations of the economy reduce the demand for workers and their skills. This is the most serious type of unemployment

trough

when real GDP stops decreasing and starts increasing. Ends a recession and begins an expansion

peak

when real GDP stops increasing and starts decreasing. Ends an expansion and begins a recession

Excessive monetary growth

when the money supply grows at a faster rate than GDP. "Too many dollars chasing too few goods"

What is an example of seasonal unemployment?

working as Santa Clause in the mall or working at six flags


संबंधित स्टडी सेट्स

Walter Isaacson: "Benjamin Franklin: An American Life"

View Set

ulceratice colitis vs crohns disease practice questions

View Set

MKTG 409 Chapter 20 Practice Tests

View Set

Nouns referring to ways of thinking, processes and activities

View Set

Leadership Theory and Practice Final Exam

View Set

LSTM Programme Officer Interview Prep

View Set

chapter 9 & 10 social media quiz

View Set

Chapter 13: Nutrition for Infants, Children, and Adolescents PrepU Quiz Questions

View Set