Circular Flow & GDP
Unemployment
Price Indices & Inflation
Costs of Inflation
Real vs. Nominal GDP & Business Cycle
Limits of GDP & GDP Questions
100

This is the dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country in one year.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

100

This is the natural rate of unemployment in the United States.

4%-6%

100

Inflation reduces this characteristic of money.

value / purchasing power

100

These people oftentimes benefit from inflation.

Borrowers / debtors

100

This is GDP not adjusted for inflation.

Nominal GDP

100

This may actually be a better way of measuring the standard of living than GDP

GDP per Capita

200

Macroeconomics was created in response to this historical event.

The Great Depression

200

These are the three types of Unemployment

Structural, Frictional, Cyclical 

200

This is the CPI of Year 1 given the market basket of the following:
Milk $3

Apples $2

Cheese $2

$7

200

These three groups of people are likely hurt by inflation.

Fixed income earners, lenders, & savers

200

This, adjusted for inflation, is the highest grossing film of all time.

Gone with the Wind

200

These are goods and services that provide value but do not count towards GDP.

Nonmarket Transactions

300

This is the formula for the change in GDP in any given year.

           


% Change in GDP = ((Year 2 - Year 1) / Year 1) X 100

300

Someone who looses their as a shoemaker is experiencing this type of unemployment.

structural

300

When people hoard money or assets, it may be an indicator that this is happening.

Deflation

300

Germany experienced Hyperinflation in the 1920s mainly as a result of this.

WWI & Treaty of Versailles 

300

This is the formula for calculating the GDP deflator.

           

GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100

300

This country, despite its large GDP, is actually not highly ranked in overall happiness.

China

400

This is a payment made by the government that redistributes wealth in the form of things like welfare and social security.

Transfer Payments

400

This is the formula for the unemployment rate.

           

Unemployment Rate = (#unemployed / # in labor force) X 100

400

This is the formula for calculating CPI.

           

(Price of Market Basket / Price of market Basket in Base Year) X 100

400

This is when money doesn’t reliably measure the value of goods/services.


Unit of Account Costs

400

The difference between a Peak and the Real GDP is called this.

Positive Output Gap.

400

In the Formula GDP=C+I+G+X, this is the biggest part of GDP.

C, Consumption, ~70% of the economy

I, Investment, ~15%

G, Government, ~19%

X, Net Exports, ~5%

500

Define and Explain the 3 ways of calculating GDP. 

Expenditures Approach-Add up all the spending on final goods and services produced in a given year.

Income Approach-Add up all the income earned from selling all final goods and services produced in a given year.

Value-added Approach-Add up the dollar value added at each stage of the production process. 

500

These are three big criticisms of the unemployment rate

Discouraged Workers

Underemployment

Racial/Age Inequalities

500

This is the inflation rate of this year if the CPI for this year is 240 and the CPI for last year is 200.

20%

500

This is a situation in which the inflation rate is high, the economic growth rate slows, and unemployment remains steadily high.

Stagflation

500

During an economic recession, producers of these good tend to suffer, but but producers of these goods tend to do okay.

durable; non-durable

500

These goods are not counted in GDP, as they would be double-counted in the final product.

Intermediate Goods

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