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100 200 300 400 500 3 GoalsNaked Economics Unemploy ment Misc. GDP 100 Inflation 200 300 400 500
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THIS IS
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With Host... Your
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What are the 3 main Goals of Macroeconomics? A 100
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1.Full Employment (low unemployment) 2.Stable prices 3.Economic Growth A 100
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What are the “optimal” rates for the following: 1.Full employment 2.Stable Prices 3.Economic Growth A 200
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1.Full employment- 95-96% employed (4-5% unemployed) 2.Stable Prices- 2% inflation 3.Economic Growth- 3.5% real GDP A 200
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This is the value of all final goods and services produced inside a country’s borders within one year’s time. A 300
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Gross Domestic Product (GDP) A 300
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This is a sustained and continuous increase in the average of all prices over time. A 400
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Inflation A 400
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List the 3 problems with using GDP to measure economic growth. A 500
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1.It doesn’t measure non-market or illegal activities, like drug dealing and babysitting 2.It doesn’t measure well-being and quality of life 3.Negative outcomes, such as economic depletion, are rewarded A 500
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B 100 $100 in $1 dollar bills is used to explain this distinction in GDP
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Real GDP adjusted for inflation instead of nominal GDP B 100
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Most accurate comparative measure of economic wealth India vs. Israel B 200
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Per Capita GDP B 200
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13 minutes B 300
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The time it takes to “earn” the value of a chicken today B 300
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GDP + Life expectancy + literacy + educational attainment B 400
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Human Development Index created by UN B 400
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B 500 Country ranked 1 st by Human Development Index
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Norway Next Australia and Iceland US ranked 13 B 500
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Total number of people employed or seeking employment in a region C 100
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Labor Force C 100
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Workers who are moving between jobs, careers and locations– Temporary Unemployment C 200
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Frictional Unemployment C 200
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Not enough demand to employ all those who want to work C 300
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Cyclical Unemployment C 300
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DAILY DOUBLE C 400 DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager
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Workers have permanently lost their jobs in a certain industry because the skills are obsolete C 400
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Structural Unemployment C 400
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Structural unemployment + Frictional Unemployment = C 500
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Natural Rate of Unemployment C 500
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Proportion of total non- institutionalized civilian population 16 years of age and over in the civilian labor force D 100
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Labor Force Participation Rate D 100
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Negative economic growth for a period of a least 6 months is this. D 200
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A Recession D 200
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Workers who “drop out” of the Labor Force D 300
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Discouraged Workers D 300
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3 Reasons for decline in Labor Force Participation Rate D 400
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More people in jails, hospitals, treatment centers. More people in military/gov jobs Boomers retiring/teens entering college D 400
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Impact of Decrease in Labor Force on Productions Possibilities Curve D 500
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Shift Left-- Inward D 500
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Tires sold to Big O vs. Tires Sold to Ford E 100
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Final vs. Intermediate Goods Only Final Goods Produced– count in GDP E 100
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Upward slope in Business Cycle Graph E 200
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Expansionary Cycle E 200
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Lowest point in Business Cycle Graph E 300
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Trough E 300
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Downward slope in Business Cycle Graph E 400
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Contractionary Cycle E 400
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Real GDP = C+I+G+(X-M) E 500
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Real GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Purchases + Net Exports E 500
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If Price Level is the Balloon, Inflation is the F 100
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The Flame F 100
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The Rate at Which Price Level Rises. F200
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Inflation F 200
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When the inflation rate rises at a rate that has been incorrectly forcasted F300
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Unanticipated Inflation F300
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Reasons debtors and governments running deficits ---win with a rise in unanticipated inflation F 400
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Dollars repaid over time are worth less in terms of purchasing power F 400
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Savers, Retirees, Creditors, Variable Rate Mortgage Holders, long term Bond Holders F500
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Purchasing power is less than when money was first stashed awayPurchasing power is less than when money was first stashed away Banks lending money, that is worth more in 10 years than original contract amountBanks lending money, that is worth more in 10 years than original contract amount Real rate of return is less F500
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Final Jeopardy Define Consumer Price Index and explain it’s usesDefine Consumer Price Index and explain it’s uses
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CPI measures changes in the price level of consumer goods and services purchased by households.consumer goods and services purchased by households. a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer goods and services.market basket of consumer goods and services. The annual percentage change in a CPI is used as a measure of inflation. A CPI can be used to index (i.e., adjust for the effect of inflation) the real value of wages, salaries, pensions, for regulating prices and for deflating monetary magnitudes to show changes in real values. inflation. A CPI can be used to index (i.e., adjust for the effect of inflation) the real value of wages, salaries, pensions, for regulating prices and for deflating monetary magnitudes to show changes in real values.
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