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Chapter 7
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Economic growth is best defined as an increase in:
either real GDP or real GDP per capita.
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Which best measures improvements in the standard of living?
growth of real GDP per capita
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For comparing changes in a nation’s power, the most meaningful measure of economic growth would be:
changes in total real output.
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The number of years required for real GDP to double can be found by:
dividing 70 by the annual growth rate.
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About ________ of U.S. economic growth comes from improved productivity (as opposed to added inputs). two-thirds.
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The phase of the business cycle in which real GDP declines is called:
a recession/contraction
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Market economies have been characterized by:
occasional instability of employment and price levels.
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A recession is a period in which:
real domestic output falls (2 consecutive quarters).
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In which phase of the business cycle will the economy most likely experience rising real output and falling unemployment rates? expansion
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The sectors in which output is likely to be most strongly affected by the business cycle are:
capital goods and durable consumer goods.
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The production of durable goods varies more than the production of nondurable goods because:
durables purchases are postponable.
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The labor force: # Employed + # Unemployed
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unemployment rate: #Unemployed #Labor Force
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To be officially unemployed a person must:
be in the labor force.
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Part-time workers are counted as: fully employed
therefore the official unemployment rate may understate the level of unemployment.
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If members of the underground economy are presently counted as part of the unemployed when in fact they are employed, the official unemployment rate is: overstated
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The natural rate of unemployment:
that rate of unemployment occurring when the economy is at its potential output.
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If the unemployment rate is 7 percent and the natural rate of unemployment is 5 percent, then the:
cyclical unemployment rate is ?
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Discouraged workers: may cause the official unemployment rate to understate the amount of unemployment.
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Unemployment involving a mismatch of the skills of unemployed workers and the skills required for available jobs is called: structural unemployment.
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The type of unemployment associated with recessions is called:
cyclical unemployment.
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The GDP gap measures the difference between:
actual GDP and potential GDP.
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Okun's law: for every 1% increase in the unemployment rate, a country's GDP will be roughly an additional 2% lower than its potential GDP
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In the United States, business cycles have occurred against a backdrop of a long-run trend of:
rising real GDP.
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Inflation means: prices in the aggregate are rising, although some particular prices may be falling.
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The rate of inflation can be found by subtracting:
last year's price index from this year's price index and dividing the difference by last year's price index.
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Demand-pull inflation:
occurs when total spending exceeds the economy's ability to provide output at the existing price level.
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Cost-push inflation: may be caused by a negative supply shock, i.e. oil and gas prices sharply rising
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Real income is found by:
dividing nominal income by the price index (in hundredths).
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real income: nominal income – price level increase (inflation)
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Inflation: arbitrarily redistributes real income and wealth.
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Who can best adapt to unanticipated inflation?
an owner of a small business Why?
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Cost-push inflation: reduces real output.
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During hyperinflation:
people tend to hold goods rather than money.
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The price index in the base year is
100.
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If your wages triple at the same time as the consumer price index goes from 100 to 400, you real wage falls
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If the cost of a market basket of goods increases from $100 in year 1 to $110 in year 2, the CPI in year 2 equals if year 1 is the base year. 110
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Consumer Price Index (CPI):
the most common measure of the price level measures the price of a typical market basket of goods does NOT measure the cost of all goods and services in an economy
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