GDP/NATIONAL INCOME
INFLATION
UNEMPLOYMENT
FISCAL POLICY
MONETARY POLICY
100

Explain the meaning of GDP in macroeconomics


Total value of final goods and services produced in a country in a given period.


100

Tell us the general idea of inflation in an economy


Prices of goods and services increase over time.


100

There is a situation where people want jobs but cannot find one. To what situation am i referring?


Unemployment


100

Government changes spending or taxes to influence economy, and this is a policy which is called(…). Complete the answer.


Fiscal policy

100

Name the central bank tool used to control money supply


Monetary policy. Central banks mainly use interest rates and money supply controls.


200

A country reports higher GDP after prices rise but production stays the same. What is happening?


This is nominal GDP increase caused by inflation, not real growth.


200

If wages rise faster than productivity, what pressure appears in the economy?


Cost-push inflation pressure


200

A worker quits job to search for a better one. What type of unemployment is this?


Frictional unemployment


200

Explain what effect is appearing when tax reduction leads to more household consumption.


Disposable income increases, so spending rises. Simply, People have more money left after taxes to buy goods and services.


200

Interest rates fall, borrowing becomes cheaper. So what happens to investment?


Investment increases since businesses are more willing to borrow money for projects and expansion.


300

Explain how GDP changes when exports increase but imports remain unchanged


GDP increases because exports add to domestic production while imports are subtracted.


300

A basket of goods becomes more expensive compared to last year’s base year. What does CPI show here?


Inflation rate based on increased consumer prices


300

When factories close due to new automation technology, what type of unemployment appears?


Structural unemployment (Workers lose jobs because technology changes the demand for skills)


300

Extra government spending causes income to rise more than initial amount. Can you name this effect?


Multiplier effect or your answer is correct if you gave it in the form like “One person’s spending becomes another person’s income, creating repeated economic activity”


300

Higher interest rates reduce borrowing demand. Explain outcome on economy


Consumers and firms spend less because loans become expensive. As a result, aggregate demand(AD) decreases.


400

After a flood, construction activity increases sharply. GDP also rises. Interpret this situation


Reconstruction spending raises measured GDP even though welfare may not improve.


400

Savings kept in cash lose value during continuous inflation. Explain the mechanism


Purchasing power of money decreases over time like even if the amount of money stays the same, rising prices reduce what it can buy.



400

Explain the time wheb long jobless period reduces worker’s future employability. 


Skills and experience decline, reducing chances of re-employment, or employers may also prefer workers with recent experience who are younger when compared.


400

When high government debt builds up over time, what concern arises?


Future tax burden and interest payment pressure(Governments may need higher taxes or more borrowing later)


400

If money supply increases in short run, what happens to interest rates?


Interest rates decrease because banks tend to have more money available to lend in the economy


500

Two countries have equal GDP but different living standards. Explain this difference


GDP ignores inequality, population size, and quality of life differences.


500

Workers expect inflation next year and demand higher wages now. What economic process is forming?


A wage-price inflation spiral where higher wages increase business costs, and firms respond by raising prices again



500

Economy is near full employment, but wages start rising quickly. What risk happens next?


Inflation pressure due to tight labor market. In other words, businesses may increase prices to cover rising labor costs


500

In a deep recession, even strong fiscal stimulus fails to increase demand significantly. Why?



Private sector confidence and spending remain very low, or in simple words, people and businesses may continue saving instead of spending during uncertainty.

500

Even when interest rates are near zero, people still do not spend or invest. Situation name


Liquidity trap (People prefer holding cash because they expect weak economic conditions)