Chapter 24 Measuring The Cost of Living: Multiple Choice
Chapter 24 Measuring The Cost of Living: Multiple Choice
Chapter 24 Measuring The Cost of Living: Multiple Choice
Multiple Choice
1013
1014 ! Chapter 24/Measuring the Cost of Living
1. Babe Ruth, the famous baseball player, earned $80,000 in 1931. Today, the best baseball players can earn more than 300
times as much as Babe Ruth earned in 1931. However, prices also have risen since 1931. We can conclude that
a. the best baseball players today are about 300 times better off than Babe Ruth was in 1931.
b. because prices have risen also, the standard of living of baseball stars hasn't changed since 1931.
c. one cannot make judgments about changes in the standard of living based on changes in prices and changes in incomes.
d. one cannot determine whether baseball stars today enjoy a higher standard of living than Babe Ruth did in 1931 without
additional information regarding increases in prices since 1931.
2. When the consumer price index rises, the typical family
a. has to spend more dollars to maintain the same standard of living.
b. can spend fewer dollars to maintain the same standard of living.
c. finds that its standard of living is not affected.
d. can offset the effects of rising prices by saving more.
3. The consumer price index is used to
a. track changes in the level of wholesale prices in the economy.
b. monitor changes in the cost of living.
c. monitor changes in the level of real GDP.
d. track changes in the stock market.
4. The consumer price index is used to
a. differentiate gross national product from net national product.
b. turn dollar figures into meaningful measures of purchasing power.
c. characterize the types of goods and services that consumers purchase.
d. measure the quantity of goods and services that the economy produces.
5. The term inflation is used to describe a situation in which
a. the overall level of prices in the economy is increasing.
b. incomes in the economy are increasing.
c. stock-market prices are rising.
d. the economy is growing rapidly.
6. Economists use the term inflation to describe a situation in which
a. some prices are rising faster than others.
b. the economy's overall price level is rising.
c. the economy's overall price level is high, but not necessarily rising.
d. the economy's overall output of goods and services is rising faster than the economy's overall price level.
7. When the overall level of prices in the economy is increasing, we say that the economy is experiencing
a. economic growth.
b. stagflation.
c. inflation.
d. deflation.
8. The inflation rate is defined as the
a. price level.
b. change in the price level from one period to the next.
c. percentage change in the price level from the previous period.
d. price level minus the price level from the previous period.
9. The economy's inflation rate is the
a. price level in the current period.
b. change in the price level from the previous period.
c. change in the gross domestic product from the previous period.
d. percentage change in the price level from the previous period.
10. The CPI is a measure of the overall cost of
a. inputs purchased by a typical producer.
b. goods and services bought by a typical consumer.
c. goods and services produced in the economy.
d. stocks on the New York Stock Exchange.
11. Which of the following agencies calculates the CPI?
a. the National Price Board
b. the Department Of Weight and Measurements
c. the Bureau of Labor Statistics
d. the Congressional Budget Office
12. Which entity within the U.S. government is responsible for computing and reporting the consumer price index?
a. the Department of Commerce
b. the Department of Labor
Chapter 24/Measuring the Cost of Living ! 1015
c. the General Accounting Office
d. the Council of Economic Advisers
13. The CPI is calculated
a. weekly.
b. monthly.
c. quarterly.
d. yearly.
14. The CPI is calculated
a. monthly by the Department of Commerce.
b. monthly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
c. quarterly by the Department of Commerce.
d. quarterly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
15. What basket of goods is used to construct the CPI?
a. a random sample of all goods and services produced in the economy
b. the goods and services that are typically bought by consumers as determined by government surveys
c. only food, clothing, transportation, entertainment, and education
d. the least expensive and the most expensive goods and services in each major category of consumer expenditures
16. In the calculation of the CPI, coffee is given greater weight than tea if
a. consumers buy more coffee than tea.
b. the price of coffee is higher than the price of tea.
c. it costs more to produce coffee than it costs to produce tea.
d. coffee is more readily available than is tea to the typical consumer.
17. In the CPI, goods and services are weighted according to
a. how long a market has existed for each good or service.
b. the extent to which each good or service is regarded by the government as a necessity.
c. how much consumers buy of each good or service.
d. the number of firms that produce and sell each good or service.
18. The steps involved in calculating the consumer price index, in order, are as follows:
a. Choose a base year, fix the basket, compute the inflation rate, compute the basket's cost, and compute the index.
b. Choose a base year, find the prices, fix the basket, compute the basket's cost, and compute the index.
c. Fix the basket, find the prices, compute the basket's cost, choose a base year and compute the index.
d. Fix the basket, find the prices, compute the inflation rate, choose a base year and compute the index.
Table 24-1
Year Peaches Pecans
2005 $11 per bushel $6 per bushel
2006 $9 per bushel $10 per bushel
19. Refer to Table 24-1. Suppose the typical consumer basket consists of 10 bushels of peaches and 15 bushels of pecans.
Using 2005 as the base year, the CPI for 2006 is
a. 100.
b. 120.
c. 200.
d. 240.
20. Refer to Table 24-1. Suppose the typical consumer basket consists of 10 bushels of peaches and 15 bushels of pecans.
Using 2005 as the base year, what was the inflation rate in 2006?
a. 20 percent
b. 16.7 percent
c. 10 percent
d. 8 percent
Table 24-2
Year Price of pork Price of corn
2005 $20 $12
2006 $25 $18
1016 ! Chapter 24/Measuring the Cost of Living
21. Refer to Table 24-2. Suppose the basket of goods in the CPI consisted of 3 units of pork and 4 units of corn. What is the
consumer price index for 2006 if the base year is 2005?
a. 73.47
b. 109.22
c. 136.11
d. 150.00
22. Refer to Table 24-2. Suppose the basket of goods in the CPI consisted of 3 units of pork and 4 units of corn. What is the
inflation rate for 2006 if the base year is 2005?
a. 21.33 percent
b. 25.00 percent
c. 28.89 percent
d. 36.11 percent
23. The market basket used to calculate the CPI in Aquilonia is 4 loaves of bread, 6 gallons of milk, 2 shirts and 2 pants. In
2005, bread cost $1.00 per loaf, milk cost $1.50 per gallon, shirts cost $6.00 each and pants cost $10.00 per pair. In 2006,
bread cost $1.50 per loaf, milk cost $2.00 per gallon, shirts cost $7.00 each and pants cost $12.00 per pair. Using 2005 as
the base year, what was Aquilonia’s inflation rate in 2006?
a. 30 percent
b. 24.4 percent
c. 21.6 percent
d. It is impossible to determine without knowing the base year.
In the country of Shem, the CPI is calculated using a market basket consisting of 5 apples, 4 loaves of bread, 3 robes and 2
gallons of gasoline. The per-unit prices of these goods have been as follows:
Table 24-3
Year Apples Bread Robes Gasoline
2002 $1.00 $2.00 $10.00 $1.00
2003 $1.00 $1.50 $9.00 $1.50
2004 $2.00 $2.00 $11.00 $2.00
2005 $3.00 $3.00 $15.00 $2.50
24. Refer to Table 24-3. Using 2002 as the base year, what was the inflation rate between 2002 and 2003?
a. -8.89 percent
b. -7.14 percent
c. 3.75 percent
d. 11.25 percent
25. Refer to Table 24-3. Using 2002 as the base year, what was the inflation rate between 2003 and 2004?
a. 28.5 percent
b. 34.2 percent
c. 47 percent
d. It is impossible to determine without knowing the base year.
26. Refer to Table 24-3. Using 2002 as the base year, what was the inflation rate between 2004 and 2005?
a. 40.00 percent
b. 40.25 percent
c. 46.46 percent
d. 48.56 percent
Table 24-4
The table below pertains to an economy with only two goods -- books and calculators. The fixed basket consists of 5 books and
10 calculators.