Macro Tut 1
Macro Tut 1
Macro Tut 1
MULTIPLE CHOICE: Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
1. Which of the following questions is more likely to be studied by a microeconomist than a macroeconomist?
a. Why do prices in general rise by more in some countries than in others?
b. Why do wages differ across industries?
c. Why do production and income increase in some periods and not in others?
d. How rapidly is GDP currently increasing?
3. In a simple circular-flow diagram, firms use the money they get from a sale to
a. pay wages to workers.
b. pay rent to landlords.
c. pay profit to the firms’ owners.
d. All of the above are correct.
4. Suppose an apartment complex converts to a condominium, so that the former renters are now owners of
their housing units. Suppose further that a current estimate of the value of the condominium owners' housing
services is the same as the rent they previously paid. What happens to GDP as a result of this conversion?
a. GDP necessarily increases.
b. GDP necessarily decreases.
c. GDP is unaffected because neither the rent nor the estimate of the value of housing services is
included in GDP.
d. GDP is unaffected because previously the rent payments were included in GDP and now the rent
payments are replaced in GDP by the estimate of the value of housing services.
5. Darla, a Canadian citizen, works only in the United States. The value of the output she produces is
a. included in both U.S. GDP and U.S. GNP.
b. included in U.S. GDP, but it is not included in U.S. GNP.
c. included in U.S. GNP, but it is not included in U.S. GDP.
d. included in neither U.S. GDP nor U.S. GNP.
6. Household spending on education is included in
a. consumption, although it might be argued that it would fit better in investment.
b. investment, although it might be argued that it would fit better in consumption.
c. government spending, based on the fact that most higher-education students attend publicly-
supported colleges and universities.
d. None of the above is correct; in general, household spending on services is not included in any
component of GDP.
7. During the current quarter, a firm produces consumer goods and adds some of those goods to its inventory
rather than selling them. The value of the goods added to inventory is
a. not included in the current quarter GDP.
b. included in the current quarter GDP as investment.
c. included in the current quarter GDP as consumption.
d. included in the current quarter GDP as a statistical discrepancy.
9. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, exports were $500, GDP was $6400, government purchases were
$1500, imports were $600, and investment was $2000. What was Wrexington’s consumption in 2008?
a. $1800
b. $2800
c. $3000
d. $4000
10. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, consumption was $200, exports were $50, GDP was $325,
government purchases were $100, imports were $125, and investment was $100. What were Wrexington’s net
exports in 2008?
a. -$75
b. -$50
c. $50
d. $75
11. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, consumption was $3000, GDP was $5500, government purchases
were $1000, imports were $2000, and investment was $1000. What were Wrexington’s exports in 2008?
a. -$1500
b. $500
c. $1500
d. $2500
12. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, consumption was $2000, exports were $800, GDP was $4800,
government purchases were $840, and investment was $1400. What were Wrexington’s imports in 2008?
a. -$560
b. -$240
c. $240
d. $560
13. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, nominal GDP was $18 billion and the GDP deflator was 120. What
was Wrexington’s real GDP in 2008?
a. $6.7 billion
b. $15 billion
c. $21.6 billion
d. $38 billion
14. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, nominal GDP was $10 trillion and real GDP was $4 trillion. What
was Wrexington’s GDP deflator in 2008?
a. 25
b. 40
c. 250
d. 400
15. In the economy of Wrexington in 2008, nominal GDP was $28 trillion and real GDP was $32 trillion. What
was Wrexington’s GDP deflator in 2008?
a. 87.5
b. 114.3
c. 400
d. 896
Table 23-6
The table below contains data for the country of Togogo. The base year is 1974.
17. Many things that society values, such as good health, high-quality education, enjoyable recreation
opportunities, and desirable moral attributes of the population, are not measured as part of GDP. It follows
that
a. GDP is not a useful measure of society's welfare.
b. GDP is still a useful measure of society's welfare because providing these other attributes is the
responsibility of government.
c. GDP is still a useful measure of society's welfare because it measures a nation's ability to purchase
the inputs that can be used to help produce the things that contribute to welfare.
d. GDP is still the best measure of society's welfare because these other values cannot actually be
measured.
Problem 1
Suppose that an economy produces only three types of products: rice, milk and sugar. Quantity and price data for
these three products for two different years are shown in the table below:
Year Quantity of rice Price of rice Quantity of milk Price of milk Quantity of sugarPrice of sugar
2008
2009
Calculate the real GDP for each year (base year 2008)
2008
2009
Calculate the GDP deflator for each year (base year 2008)
2008
2009
Nominal GDP
Real GDP
Did economic well-being rise or fall in 2009? If it falled, why we still see nominal GDP rising in that year?
Problem 2
Identify the immediate effect of each of the following events on U.S. GDP and its components.
Problem 3
A farmer grows wheat, which he sells to a miller for $100. The miller turns the wheat into flour, which she sells to
a baker for $150. The baker turns the wheat into bread, which she sells to consumers for $180. Consumers eat the
bread.
a. a. What is GDP in this economy?
b. b. Value added is defined as the value of a producer’s output minus the value of the intermediate goods that the
producer buys to make the output. Assuming there are no intermediate goods beyond those described above,
calculate the value added of each of the three producers.
c. c. What us total value added of the three producers in this economy? How does it compare to the economy’s
GDP? Does this example suggest another way of calculating GDP?