Fiscal Policy
Monetary Policy
GDP
Inflation
Unemployment
100

Who determines fiscal policy at the national level?

Congress and the president

100

What is a reserve requirement?

The percentage of a deposit banks actually have to keep in the bank. The rest they can send out as loans.

100

What happens to GDP growth rates during a large recession (like in 2009?)

GDP growth will approach zero OR be negative (GDP will slow or shrink)

100

What is a healthy inflationary target for a year?

Between 1 and 3%

100

What is cyclical unemployment?

During a business cycle (called a recession), companies lose money and are forced to lay off workers

200

Why do governments sometimes use stimulus checks?

To boost spending - people spend money in businesses - businesses hire people + improve the economy

200

What is the discount rate?

How easy or hard it is for banks to borrow money from the federal reserve

200

What is GDP?

Gross Domestic Product - The value of all goods and services produced in a country in a year

200

What is hyperinflation?

When prices rise too quickly in an uncontrolled manner

200
What is structural unemployment?

When technology or other changes eliminate certain jobs

300

What is contractionary fiscal policy?

It slows down an economy when it is out of control (particularly due to inflation)

300

What is the Federal Reserve or the Fed?

It is the central bank of the US - it controls the money supply and has a strong impact on the Economy
300
How does GDP measure inequality within a country (hint: trick question)

It does not - GDP is a measure of what is produced in a country but it does not measure WHO is producing those things. A country can have high GDP but wealth could be concentrated with a few people.

300

What is negative inflation called?

Deflation

300

What is frictional unemployment?

People who are between jobs

400

What are examples of contractionary fiscal policy?

Cutting government spending, increasing taxes, or both. The opposite actions are called expansionary policies

400

Explain the multiplier effect of banks

When someone deposits money in a bank, the bank is able to put most of that money out into the economy through loans - this increases money in the economy and expands the economy

400

What is per capita GDP?

The average GDP or production per person

400

If a country has an inflation rate that is too high, what happens?

Prices rise too quickly, there is an affordability crisis

400

What is unemployment?

People looking for work who cannot find work

500

How does government spending boost the economy?

People spend with businesses -> business owners hire people and spend that money on other businesses

500

What does a low discount rate mean?

It is easier for banks to borrow money from the federal reserve - this is an EXPANSIONARY policy that increases the money supply and boosts the economy. High discount rate = contractionary

500

What is the formula for GDP per capita? (something divided by something)

GDP / Population
500

What is the CPI?

It is an index or mix of different goods in a society (such as rent, groceries, gas) used to measure inflation

500

What is the formula for unemployment? (hint: something divided by something)

People looking for work who cannot find work divided by the total labor force
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