Econ Midterm 2 Questions
Econ Midterm 2 Questions
Y = C + I + G + NX
• Real interest rates are nominal interest rates adjusted for inflation
Yt = Y0(1+ %) ^ t
When its a rate or percentage they can add or subtract themselves, when
its decimal values they multiply or divide themselves.
2. Did real GDP per capita grow in a sustained way before the 1800s?
No it didn’t have sustained growth before 1800
Output
# of Workers
72 / Growth rate %
10. In which country has real GDP per capita doubled every 10 years
on average since 1980?
South Korea
11. What is the equation that relates output per capita to average labor
productivity?
Y / Pop = (Y/N)(N/POP)
12. What is an approximate equation that relates growth in output per
capita to the growth in
average labor productivity?
Technology
Entrepreneurship
Physical Capital
Institutions
Capitalist Countries:
15. Give examples where the key technological progress was invention
of new goods, not just reducing the cost of existing goods.
Information transmission across U.S ( telephones, telegrams, etc)
Transportation across US (Airplanes, cars, trains)
16. What government policies help raise the average product of labor?
S=Y-C
3. If a household pays off some debt, does its net worth rise or fall?
Their Net Worth rises
4. If I use $500 of my income to pay off my credit card debt, is that
saving or consumption?
Consumption
Private Saving = Y - T - C
Public Saving = T - G
National Saving = Y - C - G
11. How does the primary deficit differ from the overall government
budget deficit?
12. What are the three main motives for household saving?
14. If a person hears that their income will rise permanently next year,
what will happen to (i)
their consumption and (ii) saving this year?
Their consumption this year will go up because people adjust their
consumption based on changes in the permanent future income
20. Does the effect of the real interest rate on national saving come
through its effect on
private saving or public saving?
Public Saving
21. What is the user cost of capital? What factors affect it?
The user cost of capital is the price of capital services. The user cost of
capital describes the amount of money which would have been needed
during the year to cover the use of capital good services
Interest rates, depreciation rate, and the purchase price of the good.
You can make money as long as the marginal benefit is more than the
marginal cost.
23. List the key factors that affect the benefits to buying capital.
Lower taxes
• If the variable appears on one of the axes the movement is along the
curve
Tax policies
Price of output
• Unit of Account
• Store of Value
2. What is barter?
Advantages - Untraceable
The Indian government said it will take out of circulation the 500 and
1000 bills and replace them with new 500 and 2000 denominations with
hopes of reducing illegal activity.
Recalibrate the use of cash so people can keep using it, but also diminish
illegal activity like tax evasion, racketeering, etc. By removing high
denomination bills from the market to make money.
Liabilities - Deposits
Reserve
11. Suppose that the Fed buys $1 million of bonds from the public.
Does the public’s
decision of how much to hold in currency versus in checking
accounts influence the
change in the money supply (M1)?
Yes
12. What is the relationship between money, currency, reserves, and
the reserve-deposit
ratio?
14. What are the main roles of the Federal Reserve (“Fed”)?
Jerome Powell
17. How does the Fed typically raise the money supply? How does it
typically lower the
money supply?
18. What institutional feature makes banking panics more likely? How
does deposit
insurance help prevent banking panics?
The average number of times a dollar is used annually to buy the goods
and services of GDP
V = (P*Y)/M
MV = PY
21. How are money growth and inflation related in the long-run?
According to the quantity Theory the amount of money circulating in an
economy and inflation are closely linked in the long run.
• Principal Amount
• Coupon Rate
• Coupon Payment
• Term to Maturity
• Credit Risk
• Tax Treatment
• Price
4. Why does a fall in market interest rates raise current bond prices?
Because when interest rates fall the old bonds with previous interest
rates pay more than the new bonds being offered with the new interest
rates.
5. What does the financial press call the rate of return on bonds?
Yield
Coupon rate is the interest in which the bonds was emitted and that and
yield is the current interest rate on the bond.
U.S government bonds are considered some of the safest and the interest
rates on bonds is determined by the risk of defaulting so U.S government
bonds have lower interest rates than other bonds because there is less
risk of defaulting.
(You are not responsible for international capital flows for the 2nd
midterm.)
Current events:
1. What was the U.S. unemployment rate in January?
3.4%
Tight
Debt = 31.46