CFM
GDP
Unemployment
Inflation
Business Cycle
100

Three economic actors of the CFM

households, firms, government

100

Which of the following IS counted towards GDP? (There may be more than one)

value of a used textbook sold through an online auction in 2006

rent paid in 2006 by residents in an apartment building built in 2000

commissions earned in 2006 by a stockbroker

value of automobiles produced in 2006 entirely in South Korea by a firm fully owned by US citizens

rent payment and commissions

100

Are discouraged workers included in unemployment?

No

100
Does CPI understate or overstate inflation?

overstate - substitute goods, change in quality

100

An economy is in a recessionary gap if

actual GDP < potential GDP

200

The CFM depicts

the flow of money and products

(total expenditure and total income)

200

True or False: the value of cars produced in Japan in 2018 by a US company would NOT be included in US GDP for 2018.

true

200

Alice left her job in New York and is moving to Atlanta. What type of unemployment is Alice?

Frictional

200

Who benefits from unexpected inflation:

retiree living on a fixed pension, a landlord receiving fixed lease payments, a student saving $10 each month in a piggy bank, a creditor lending out $1,000 as a fixed-rate loan, a debtor making payments on existing fixed-rate loans

a debtor making payments on existing fixed-rate loans

200

Unexpected increases in inventories usually happen before a

recession / contraction

OR

decrease in production (recessionary gap)

300

Short run increase in national income would be a result of a decrease in which of the following: consumption, investment, government spending, imports, exports

imports

300

State 3 limitations of GDP

nonmarket transactions, distribution of income, underground activities (black market), environmental damage, quality of life (standard of living)

300

What types of unemployment are included in the NRU? When is an economy at the NRU?

frictional and structural

equilibrium/full employment output

300

If a worker's nominal wage increases from $10 to $12 per hour and at the same time, the general price level increases by 10%, what happened to the worker's real wage (percent)?

increased by about 10%

(12-10/10) *100 = 20% increase in nominal wage

if inflation is 10%, 20%-10% = real wage

300

In an expansionary gap, what happens with inflation, unemployment, and GDP

Unemployment decreases

GDP and inflation increases

400

State one leakage and one injection of the CFM

Leakage: savings, imports, taxes

Injection: investment, exports, gov spending

400

CPI in 2006 was 100 and real GDP was $1,000.

CPI in 2010 was 110 and nominal GDP was $2,200.

Calculate the nominal GDP in 2006 and real GDP in 2010. How much did real GPD actually grow?

IF nominal GDP fell and real GDP grew, what is happening with inflation?

Nominal GDP 2006: $1,000

100 = (x/1,000) *100

(100*1,000)/100 = x

Real GDP 2010: $2,000

110 = (2,200/x) * 100

x = [2,200 / (110/100)]

Grew by $1,000

Inflation rate would be negative (deflation)

400

Canada's civilian working-age population is 60 million, the labor force participation rate in Canada is 75% and the unemployment rate is 20%. What is the number of employed people in Canada?

36 million

20% = x / (75% * 60M)

.2 (.75 * 60M) = x

80% of x = employed

400

CPI in 2008 is 80, 100 in 2009, and 105 in 2010.


What is the base year? What is the inflation rate for 2010? Did all prices rise from 2009 to 2010?

base year: 2009

inflation rate: 5%

[(105-100) / 100] * 100

all prices did NOT rise

400

At what point on the business cycle is the economy in equilibrium?

potential GDP = actual GDP 

OR

potential GDP and actual GDP intersect

500

Draw out the CFM and include the following:

all three economic actors, resource and product market, flow of goods, flow of money

Households demand goods in product market and supply labor in the resource market

Firms demand resources in the resource market and supply goods in the product market

Government demand and supply (goods and labor) in both the resource and product markets

500

For Country X, Consumption Spending is $1 billion Investment Spending is $300 million Government Spending is $400 million, Net Exports is -$100 million, and the GDP Deflator is 160.

What is the nominal GDP? What is the real GDP? If Country X sold all their crops domestically and farmer's sales is now $10million, miller's sales is $25 million, and bakery's sales is $65million, how much would the nominal GDP change?

nominal GDP $1.6 billion

1B +3M +4M -1M = 1.6 B

real GDP $1 billion

160 = 1.6/x

x = 1.6/160

increase in nominal GDP by $65 million (only final goods count)

500

Zeta's civilian noninstitutional population aged 16 and over is 1,000,000, the labor force participation rate is 70%, the unemployment rate is 9%, and the NRU is 5%.

What is the number of unemployed people? Is the economy in a gap? Explain. What would happen to both the labor force participation rate and the unemployment rate if individuals counted towards unemployed stopped looking for work?

63,000 unemployed

9% = x /70% of 1,000,000

.09 * (.7 * 1,000,000) = x

recessionary gap: current unemployment > NRU

labor force participation rate decrease and unemployment rate decreases

500

Market Basket in base year is $75. In 2020, 10 dozen eggs were purchased for $2 a dozen, 15 loaves of bread were purchased for $1 each, and 25 gallons of milk were purchased for $4 each.

Calculate the CPI and Inflation rate for 2020.

Market Basket 2020: $135

(15*1) + (25*4) + (10*2) = 135

CPI 2020: 180

(135/75) * 100 

Inflation Rate 2020: 80%

[(180-100)/100] *100

500
Draw out a Business Cycle with 2 cycles and label the following: time, output, potential GDP, actual GDP, peak, trough, expansion, contraction, expansionary gap, recessionary gap, and one point of equilibrium.

x-axis: time

y-axis: output/production

2 peaks (highest part) 2 expansions (upward slopes) 2 contractions (downward slopes) 2 troughs (lowest point)

squiggly line: actual GDP

diagonal upward sloping line: potential GDP

expansionary gap (between peak and potential GDP), recessionary gap (between trough and potential GDP), equilibrium (potential and actual GDP lines intersect)