Exam Number. Section

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Exam Number. Section"

Transcription

1 Exam Number Section MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Core Course Professor Antonio Fatás Final Exam February 24, :00-12:00 Instructions: (PLEASE READ) SUGGESTED ANSWERS Space to answer the questions is limited. DO NOT WRITE IN THE BACK SIDE OF ANY PAGE (unless you have made a mistake in the space provided to answer the questions in that case you need to cross out the mistake and you are allowed to use the same amount of space in the back side of that page). You have three hours for the exam. The exam is open book. Make your assumptions and diagrams clear, reasonable, and explicit. If you are using graphs you must provide also an explanation and interpretation of the changes implied by your graphical presentation. Please read all questions before you start answering them! There are 70 points in the exam. After each question you can find the maximum number of points for the question. Good luck! Page 1

2 1. True/false/uncertain. (Total: 15 points). Explain whether each of the following statements is true, false, or could go either way depending on the circumstances. Explanation determines grade. Start your answer by selecting one of the three statements True, False, or Uncertain and then provide arguments to justify your selection. a) You are comparing data from two countries over the last ten years and you see that one of them has had a significantly higher nominal interest rate every year during that period. You should conclude that the risk premium in that country (the one with higher nominal interest rates) must be the only reason why nominal interest rates are high. (5 points) FALSE or UNCERTAIN. False because this is not the normal reason why nominal interest rates are different across countries. The main reason is that their inflation rates are different. And inflation rates are determined by central bank policies. You can say uncertain if you make the point that it is theoretically possible to think about two countries with the same inflation but different nominal interest rates because of country risk, but I cannot think of an example of this type. b) The rise in food prices across the world is the outcome of expansionary monetary policies in advanced economies (the US in particular). Large countries can export inflation to other countries if they have expansionary monetary policy. (5 points) FALSE or UNCERTAIN. False because domestic inflation is cause by domestic monetary policy. A country can decide to run more restrictive monetary policy than the US. This will lead to an appreciation of their currency and a lower inflation (so food prices in their currency will not be increasing that much). You can say uncertain if you talk about countries with fixed exchange rates to the US dollar. In that case you are obliged to follow US monetary policy. c) The ECB (European Central Bank) interest rate today is 1%, compared to the interest rate set by the US Federal Reserve, which is close to 0%. From this difference you learn that the ECB must be a tougher central bank when it comes to inflation (By tougher I mean that they raise interest rates by a larger amount when they see a threat of inflation.). (5 points) FALSE or UNCERTAIN. There are two potential reasons why the interest rate is higher in Europe. It is either because the economic climate is different (higher inflation or higher growth) or because the central bank is tougher. Strictly speaking it is not true that you learn that the ECB must be tougher because you cannot tell the two hypothesis apart. But if you explain clear that this is uncertain because both are possible, this is fine. Page 2

3 2. Growth. (Total: 10 points). Brazil has been growing fast over the last years and there are expectations that it will continue to grow fast. Below is a set of factors regarding the potential growth of Brazil. Comment on each of them giving your views on how each of these factors might affect the potential growth rate of the economy over the next two decades. The private consumption to GDP ratio in Brazil is relatively high (close to 65%). Some see this as a positive factor because it creates a large internal market for companies. At the same time, the share of investment in physical capital in GDP is less than 20%. Given this information, what is your forecast for GDP per capita growth? What are the other factors that are key to understand growth prospects in Brazil? (Justify your answer, the justification is more important than the actual forecast) For a country to grow it needs to invest. An investment rate of less than 20% is not high for Brazil. With that investment rate we expect a growth rate of about 2 or 2.5% in GDP per capita. To invest more Brazil needs to find more resources to fund the investment projects. It can fund those projects by saving more but this means consuming less, so in that sense the high consumption rate is not good news, it is bad news if it cannot go down. There is a second way to fund the investment without reducing consumption: by attracting foreign investment, which implies running a current account deficit or capital account surplus (Saving < Investment). This is fine temporarily. At some point Brazil will need to save some resources to pay back for the capital they borrowed from abroad. Regarding other factors: not only investment in physical capital is important but also investment in human capital and technology, innovation and knowledge. In addition, to ensure that investment happens we need to provide an institutional environment (legal system, absence of corruption and red tape) that favors investment. In class we saw that institutions are the main determinant of investment and growth. And in the case of Brazil we saw that there was the need for significant improvements in these institutions. 3. Interest rates. (Total: 15 points) During the last decade we have witnessed world real interest rates at levels that were very low by historical standards. a) Offer two explanations that could justify low real interest rates in the world during these years. (5 points) Real interes rates are determined by the intersection of saving and investment. Low real interest rates are the result of increased saving or decreased investment. We saw in class that there had been an increase in saving coming from China and also other emerging markets (such as oil producing countries). We also talked briefly about investment rates being weaker than in previous decades. Any explanation is fine as long as it is consistent with the savinginvestment equilibrium. Page 3

4 b) If real interest rates were so low, how can it be that we have not seen inflation increasing? (5 points) Low real interest rates were the result of the equilibrium of saving and investment rates. This has no effect on inflation. Inflation can arise if the central bank lowers short term interest rates and increases liquidity but this is not what we are seeing here. As long as central banks keep liquidity in line with money demand, inflation will remain under control. c) Many governments around the world have today a high level of debt. In the next years they will make an effort to reduce these levels of government debt. If they are successful (i.e. if they implement policies to actually reduce the level of government debt), how will this affect real interest rates in the world? (When answering just consider the effect of this change, do not take into account other possible changes that might be happening at the same time in the world economy). (5 points) To reduce government debt government will have to turn large deficits into surpluses or at least smaller deficits through increasing in taxes or decreases in government spending. This means an increase in government saving (or a decrease in government borrowing). This should send interest rates down. 4. Fiscal Policy. (Total: 15 points) During the last recession not all countries were affected in the same way. Think about Germany or Greece as countries that suffered a deep recession and about Australia as a country that managed to avoid a recession and had higher growth rates than Germany or Greece. Answer the three questions below using the following assumptions: First, answer as if these are the only three countries in the world, ignore other countries. Second, assume that there is perfect capital mobility. Third, consider Germany as a large economy that can affect the world interest rate (i.e. think about Germany as setting the world interest rate). a) What is the impact for Greece of expansionary fiscal policy employed by the German government during the recession? (Remember that Greece and Germany share a currency) (5 points) If we just talk about fiscal policy, expansionary fiscal policy in Germany will lead to higher interest rates. Higher interest rates could have a negative consequence on Greece unless the government of Greece implements the same type of policy. So as long as there is coordination in fiscal policy we are likely to see similar outcomes in both countries. But if only Germany moves there could be some contractionary effects on the Greek economy. There is also a direct positive effect that runs through exports: if Germany grows faster because of fiscal policy, it will buy more goods from other countries including Greece. Page 4

5 b) What is the impact on Australia of expansionary fiscal policy employed by the German government? What was the likely response of the exchange rate? (Remember that the exchange rate between the Australian Dollar and the Euro is floating) (5 points) Some effects are similar: faster growth in Germany will increase exports of Australia. The big difference is that in the case of Australia it is unlikely that the government will be using aggressive discretionary fiscal policy. This means that Germany will be pushing interest rates higher than in Australia. As a result there will be a capital flow towards Germany that will lead to an appreciation of the Euro relative to the Australian Dollar. This will increase exports in Australia and make the economy grow faster which might not be what the government or central bank want. c) Does your answer to b) change depending on whether the ECB (European Central Bank) implements expansionary monetary policy at the same time? In which way? (5 points) Yes, it does. If the ECB is running expansionary monetary policy then interest in Germany do not go up. In fact, they could even go down if monetary policy is very aggressive (as it has been). In this case the capital will flow in the opposite direction leading to an appreciation of the Australian dollar relative to the Euro. (this matches more what we have seen in the data). 5. Monetary Policy. (Total: 15 points). During the Fall of 2010, the US Federal Reserve announced new measures of monetary policy to stimulate the economy. These measures are known as the second round of Quantitative Easing QE2. The Fed has committed to buy about $600 Billion of long- term government bonds from commercial banks. a) Why do we call the purchase of government bonds monetary policy? Isn t this fiscal policy? How does it affect the money supply? (5 points) This is standard monetary policy. The purchase and sell of securities by central banks is what we call open market operations and it is the main way monetary policy is conducted in advanced economies. When the central bank buys government securities from commercial banks it pays them by crediting their accounts at the central bank (what we call reserves). This increases the liquidity of commercial banks it is also an increase in the monetary base (currency + reserves). The total money supply is equal to the monetary base times the money multiplier. An increase in the monetary base generally leads to an automatic increase in the money supply. However, we can have the case (as we have seen in the last two years) that the increase in the reserves does not lead to a significant increase in the money supply because the money multiplier is decreasing. And this is a sign that the commercial banks hold to that liquidity and they do not pass it to the private sector in the form of loans. Page 5

6 b) The Fed has justified the purchase of long- term government bonds (as opposed to simply increasing short- term lending to commercial banks) by arguing that given the current levels of short- term interest rates, the only thing they can do is make the yield curve flatter by bringing down long- term rates. Justify this logic. (5 points) Short-term nominal interest rates are zero they cannot go down anymore. One way to stimulate the economy is to influence long-term rates which are a reference for the loans that corporations get (they borrow long term not short term). You can also think about the central banks sending a message that the short term rates are going to be low for a long period of time (this is what low long-term rates indicate in the yield curve). In addition, providing liquidity at longer horizons is a commitment to keeping inflation higher than today (and closer to the target). c) Since they started this plan, nominal long- term interest rates have slightly increased. The Fed argues that this is not a sign of failure of their policy. Give two arguments why despite the fact that long- term nominal interest rates are increasing the Fed s action might still be helping the economy. (5 points) The central bank wants to keep real interest rates constant. What we might be witnessing is that inflation expectations are increasing and this is what nominal interest rates are higher. What matters to the Fed is the difference between the two. Even if nominal interest rates are higher, real interest rates might be decreasing. In addition, the central bank is trying to raise inflation expectation to avoid a deflation trap. If they are successful, this will at some point stimulate the economy. If the economy starts doing better then interest rates are likely to increase (both real and nominal). There is no failure here, this is the outcome that the Fed is looking for. You want to ensure that the economy does well and once it does, interest rates will increase and this will be a sign of strength. Page 6

7 DO NOT WRITE BELOW THIS LINE Page 7

MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY

MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Exam Number Section MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Professor Antonio Fatás Final Exam February 23, 2015 Instructions: (PLEASE READ) Space to answer the questions is limited. DO NOT WRITE IN THE BACK

More information

Exam Number. Section

Exam Number. Section Exam Number Section MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Core Course ANSWER KEY Final Exam March 1, 2010 Note: These are only suggested answers. You may have received partial or full credit for your answers

More information

Period 3 MBA Program January February MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Core Course. Professor Ilian Mihov

Period 3 MBA Program January February MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Core Course. Professor Ilian Mihov Period 3 MBA Program January February 2008 MACROECONOMICS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Core Course Professor SOLUTIONS Final Exam February 25, 2008 Time: 09:00 12:00 Note: These are only suggested solutions.

More information

Exam #3 (Final Exam) Solution Notes Spring, 2011

Exam #3 (Final Exam) Solution Notes Spring, 2011 Economics 1021, Section 1 Prof. Steve Fazzari Exam #3 (Final Exam) Solution Notes Spring, 2011 MULTIPLE CHOICE (5 points each) Write the letter of the alternative that best answers the question in the

More information

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer NOTES ON THE MIDTERM

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer NOTES ON THE MIDTERM UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer NOTES ON THE MIDTERM Preface: This is not an answer sheet! Rather, each of the GSIs has written up some

More information

Principles of Macroeconomics November 11th, Answer Key Midterm 2

Principles of Macroeconomics November 11th, Answer Key Midterm 2 EC132.01(02) Serge Kasyanenko rinciples of Macroeconomics November 11th, 2005 I. Multiple Choice Section (30 points). Select one correct answer. Answer all questions. 1. A stable inflation can be achieved

More information

University of Toronto January 25, 2007 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8

University of Toronto January 25, 2007 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2 L0101 L0201 L0401 L5101 MW MW 1-2 MW 2-3 W 6-8 Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto January 25, 2007 SOLUTION ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #2 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER Circle your section of the course:

More information

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Solutions Spring 2003

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Solutions Spring 2003 14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Solutions Spring 2003 Question 1 : Short answer (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) TRUE. Recall that in the basic model in Chapter 3, autonomous spending is given by c

More information

1. When the Federal government uses taxation and spending actions to stimulate the economy it is conducting:

1. When the Federal government uses taxation and spending actions to stimulate the economy it is conducting: 1. When the Federal government uses taxation and spending actions to stimulate the economy it is conducting: A. Fiscal policy B. Incomes policy C. Monetary policy D. Employment policy 2. When the Federal

More information

Prices and Output in an Open Economy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Prices and Output in an Open Economy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Prices and Output in an Open conomy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply chapter LARNING GOALS: After reading this chapter, you should be able to: Understand how short- and long-run equilibrium is reached

More information

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007 Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007 Answer all of the following questions by selecting the most appropriate answer on

More information

Session 8. Business Cycles in a Closed Economy.

Session 8. Business Cycles in a Closed Economy. Session 8. Business Cycles in a Closed Economy. Building a Model of Aggregate Demand Money Market: The LM Curve Goods Market: The IS Curve A Graphical Representation of the Equilibrium: The IS/LM Model

More information

University of Toronto July 27, 2012 ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #3

University of Toronto July 27, 2012 ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #3 Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto July 27, 2012 SOLUTIONS ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #3 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER INSTRUCTIONS: 1. The total

More information

Name: Student # : Section: RYERSON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics

Name: Student # : Section: RYERSON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics Name: Student # : Section: RYERSON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics ECN 204 (Section-7) TERM TEST 2 November, 2004 Instructor: Sharif F. Khan Time Limit: 50 minutes Total Pages Including the Cover Sheet:

More information

Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #2 ANSWERS

Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #2 ANSWERS Name: SID: Discussion Section: GSI: Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood Fall 2008 Exam #2 ANSWERS Please sign the following oath: The answers on this test are entirely my own work.

More information

Econ 98- Chiu Spring 2005 Final Exam Review: Macroeconomics

Econ 98- Chiu Spring 2005 Final Exam Review: Macroeconomics Disclaimer: The review may help you prepare for the exam. The review is not comprehensive and the selected topics may not be representative of the exam. In fact, we do not know what will be on the exam.

More information

UGBA 101B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #2 ANSWERS

UGBA 101B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #2 ANSWERS Name: SID : UGBA 101B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood Summer 2008 Exam #2 ANSWERS Please sign the following oath: The answers on this test are entirely my own work. I neither gave nor received

More information

SOLUTION ECO 202Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER. University of Toronto June 18, 2002 INSTRUCTIONS:

SOLUTION ECO 202Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER. University of Toronto June 18, 2002 INSTRUCTIONS: Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto June 18, 2002 SOLUTION ECO 202Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER INSTRUCTIONS: 1. The total

More information

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 4

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 4 ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 4 Dennis C. Plott University of Notre Dame Department of Economics March 9, 2015 Email: dennis.plott@gmail.com 1 Name: 1. Due: Thursday 19 th March

More information

7. Refer to the above graph. It depicts an economy in the: A. Immediate short run B. Short run C. Immediate long run D. Long run

7. Refer to the above graph. It depicts an economy in the: A. Immediate short run B. Short run C. Immediate long run D. Long run CHAPTER 29 1. When the price level decreases: A. The demand for money falls and the interest rate falls B. Holders of financial assets with fixed money values decrease their spending C. Holders of financial

More information

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 5

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 5 ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 5 Dennis C. Plott University of Notre Dame Department of Economics March 25, 2015 Email: dennis.plott@gmail.com 1 Name: 1. Due: Thursday 2 nd April

More information

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Practice Exam II

ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Practice Exam II ECON 10020/20020 Principles of Macroeconomics Practice Exam II Dennis C. Plott University of Notre Dame Department of Economics Spring 2015 Name (print neatly and clearly): General Instructions 1. Read

More information

Principles of Macroeconomics December 17th, 2005 name: Final Exam (100 points)

Principles of Macroeconomics December 17th, 2005 name: Final Exam (100 points) EC132.02 Serge Kasyanenko Principles of Macroeconomics December 17th, 2005 name: Final Exam (100 points) This is a closed-book exam - you may not use your notes and textbooks. Calculators are not allowed.

More information

UC Berkeley Fall Final examination SOLUTION SHEET

UC Berkeley Fall Final examination SOLUTION SHEET Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas Econ182 Department of Economics International Monetary Economics UC Berkeley Fall 2004 Final examination SOLUTION SHEET WRITE YOUR ANSWERS TO QUESTION 1 ON PAGES 2-5. 1. [30 points,

More information

Practice Problems 30-32

Practice Problems 30-32 Practice Problems 30-32 1. The budget balance is calculated as: A. T G TR B. T + G TR C. T G + TR D. T + G + TR E. TR T G 2. The government budget balance equals: A. Taxes + Government purchases + Government

More information

International Money and Banking: 14. Real Interest Rates, Lower Bounds and Quantitative Easing

International Money and Banking: 14. Real Interest Rates, Lower Bounds and Quantitative Easing International Money and Banking: 14. Real Interest Rates, Lower Bounds and Quantitative Easing Karl Whelan School of Economics, UCD Spring 2018 Karl Whelan (UCD) Real Interest Rates Spring 2018 1 / 23

More information

University of Toronto June 17, 2002 ECO 208Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME

University of Toronto June 17, 2002 ECO 208Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto June 17, 2002 SOLUTION ECO 208Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER INSTRUCTIONS: 1. The total

More information

Suggested answers to Problem Set 5

Suggested answers to Problem Set 5 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS SPRING 2006 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY ECONOMICS 182 Suggested answers to Problem Set 5 Question 1 The United States begins at a point like 0 after 1985, where it is in

More information

Problem Set #2. Intermediate Macroeconomics 101 Due 20/8/12

Problem Set #2. Intermediate Macroeconomics 101 Due 20/8/12 Problem Set #2 Intermediate Macroeconomics 101 Due 20/8/12 Question 1. (Ch3. Q9) The paradox of saving revisited You should be able to complete this question without doing any algebra, although you may

More information

Module 31. Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate. What you will learn in this Module:

Module 31. Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate. What you will learn in this Module: Module 31 Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate What you will learn in this Module: How the Federal Reserve implements monetary policy, moving the interest to affect aggregate output Why monetary policy

More information

Macroeconomics in an Open Economy

Macroeconomics in an Open Economy Chapter 17 (29) Macroeconomics in an Open Economy Chapter Summary Nearly all economies are open economies that trade with and invest in other economies. A closed economy has no interactions in trade or

More information

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015 Answer sheet

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015 Answer sheet ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015 Answer sheet YOUR NAME: Student ID: Circle the TA session you attend: INSTRUCTIONS: Chris 10AM Michael -

More information

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 5

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 5 Economics 2 Spring 2016 Professor Christina Romer Professor David Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 5 1. The left-hand diagram below shows the situation when there is a negotiated real wage,, that

More information

AD-AS Analysis. Demand Management Polices

AD-AS Analysis. Demand Management Polices AD-AS Analysis Demand Management Polices Unit 2-The Exam 90 minutes long 50% AS Total 80 marks- 1 data response from a choice of 2. Each data response exercise contains 1 30 mark essay, which will require

More information

Macroeconomics I Exam Revision. Part A: Week Four Economic Growth Based on Week Three Lectures [Also refer to Chapter 20]

Macroeconomics I Exam Revision. Part A: Week Four Economic Growth Based on Week Three Lectures [Also refer to Chapter 20] Macroeconomics I Exam Revision Part A: Week Four Economic Growth Based on Week Three Lectures [Also refer to Chapter 20] Section 1: Lecture One 1. What is the difference between nominal GDP and real GDP?

More information

SOLUTION ECO 209Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER. University of Toronto June 22, 2004 INSTRUCTIONS:

SOLUTION ECO 209Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER. University of Toronto June 22, 2004 INSTRUCTIONS: Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto June 22, 2004 SOLUTION ECO 209Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER INSTRUCTIONS: 1. The total

More information

FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 SECTION #

FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 SECTION # COURSE 180.101 MACROECONOMICS FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 NAME TA Part I (20 points) SECTION # 1 POINT EACH QUESTION 1. China s GDP appears to be roughly 55% of U.S. GDP, if we use what currency

More information

Module 4: Applications of Supply and Demand

Module 4: Applications of Supply and Demand The following list shows a summary of the topics covered in the macroeconomics course. Module 1: Economic Thinking Understanding Economics and Scarcity The Concept of Opportunity Cost Labor, Markets, and

More information

ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY

ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto December 4, 2013 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY Term Test #2 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER Indicate your section of the

More information

Opening the Economy. Topic 9

Opening the Economy. Topic 9 Opening the Economy Topic 9 Goals of Topic 9 What is the exchange rate? NX is back!! What is the link between the exchange rate and net exports? What is the trade deficit? How do different shocks affect

More information

MACROECONOMICS. Section I Time 70 minutes 60 Questions

MACROECONOMICS. Section I Time 70 minutes 60 Questions MACROECONOMICS Section I Time 70 minutes 60 Questions Directions: Each of the questions or incomplete statements below is followed by five suggested answers or completions. Select the one that is best

More information

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 6

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 6 ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 6 The Open Economy Imports and exports of selected countries, 2010 60 50 Exports Imports Percent of GDP 40 30 20 10 0 Australia China Germany Greece S. Korea

More information

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number 1. Assume that the economy is contracting and unemployment is rising. Which of the following would be a logical explanation for a sudden fall in the unemployment

More information

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012 Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012 COURSE : MACROECONOMICS COURSE CODE : ECON1013 TIME : 2 1/2 HOURS DEPARTMENT : MANAGEMENT LECTURER : CHING YANN PENG Student s ID : Batch No. : Notes to candidates:

More information

2. Why is it important for the Fed to know the size and the rate of growth of the money supply?

2. Why is it important for the Fed to know the size and the rate of growth of the money supply? KOFA HIGH SCHOOL SOCIAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT AP ECONOMICS EXAM PREP WORKSHOP # 4 > MONEY, MONETARY POLICY, AND ECONOMIC STABILITY NAME : DATE : All About The Ms : 1. What are the three basic functions of

More information

Fiscal Policy. Changes in federal taxes and purchases

Fiscal Policy. Changes in federal taxes and purchases Fiscal Policy Changes in federal taxes and purchases Where does the government spend its money? Federal Government Spending, 2010 Fiscal Policy An Overview of Government Spending and Taxes The Federal

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Econ 330 Spring 2017: FINAL EXAM Name ID Section Number MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Tobin's q theory suggests that monetary

More information

EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15

EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15 EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15 Remaining material till the end of the semester: Finish Chp 14 (1 subsection left) Open economy version of IS-LM (Chp 6.1&6.3+13) Chp 16 OR Dynamic macro models (As time permits)

More information

The Mundell-Fleming Model

The Mundell-Fleming Model The Mundell-Fleming Model How international capital mobility alters the effects of macroeconomic policy Lecture 14: Mundell-Fleming model with a fixed exchange rate Fiscal expansion Monetary expansion

More information

B.Sc. International Business and Politics International Economics Copenhagen Business School. Final Exam October 22, 2010

B.Sc. International Business and Politics International Economics Copenhagen Business School. Final Exam October 22, 2010 B.Sc. International Business and Politics International Economics Copenhagen Business School Final Exam October, 00 Note: Your grade depends not just on the right answer but on the quality of the explanation

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM Summer Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM Summer Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM Summer 2014 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER ASSIGNMENT 2 INTERMEDIATE MACRO ECONOMICS IMA612S

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER ASSIGNMENT 2 INTERMEDIATE MACRO ECONOMICS IMA612S FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER 2 nd SEMESTER 2017 ASSIGNMENT 2 INTERMEDIATE MACRO ECONOMICS 1 ASSIGNMENT 2 SECTION A [20 marks] QUESTION 1 [20 marks, 2 marks each] For each of the following questions, select

More information

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2014 Answer sheet

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2014 Answer sheet ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2014 Answer sheet YOUR NAME: Student ID: Circle the TA session you attend: Chris - 3PM Andreas - 3PM Hugh - 3PM

More information

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2013 Answer sheet

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2013 Answer sheet ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2013 Answer sheet YOUR NAME: Student ID: Circle the TA session you attend: Chris - 10AM Chris - 1PM Andreas -

More information

Final Exam Macroeconomics Winter 2011 Prof. Veronica Guerrieri

Final Exam Macroeconomics Winter 2011 Prof. Veronica Guerrieri Final Exam Macroeconomics Winter 2011 Prof. Veronica Guerrieri Name (print): Name (signature): Section Registered (circle one): T 1:30 T 6:00 W 1:30 As always, the honor code rules are in effect. You know

More information

ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY

ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto March 14, 2007 ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY SOLUTION Term Test #3 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER Circle the section of

More information

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, November 2016 Quiz, Unit VI, Stabilization Policies

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, November 2016 Quiz, Unit VI, Stabilization Policies Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The federal budget tends to move toward _ as the economy. A. deficit; contracts B. deficit; expands C.

More information

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number 1. Which of the following is not an accurate statement of core capital goods? A) proxy for business investments B) does not include transportation equipment C)

More information

Use the following to answer question 15: AE0 AE1. Real expenditures. Real income. Page 3

Use the following to answer question 15: AE0 AE1. Real expenditures. Real income. Page 3 Chapter 10 1. An example of an autonomous consumption policy is a policy that A) lowers tax rates to stimulate additional consumer spending. B) makes credit more widely available to consumers in order

More information

LECTURE XIII. 30 July Monday, July 30, 12

LECTURE XIII. 30 July Monday, July 30, 12 LECTURE XIII 30 July 2012 TOPIC 15 Exchange Rates BIG PICTURE How do we evaluate currency across countries? How is the exchange rate determined? What is the relationship of the foreign exchange market

More information

Course Map Economics

Course Map Economics Course Title: Economics Course Map Text: Thinking Economics (National Council on Economic Education) Duration: one semester Frequency: one class period daily Year: 2013-2014 Other materials: Areas to be

More information

ECON 110, Professor Hogendorn. Problem Set 7

ECON 110, Professor Hogendorn. Problem Set 7 ECON 110, Professor Hogendorn Problem Set 7 1. OldGermans. In Germany, the birth rate is low and the population is ageing. As a result, the working age population is falling at about 0.2% per year. It

More information

National Income & Business Cycles

National Income & Business Cycles National Income & Business Cycles accounting identities for the open economy the small open economy model what makes it small how the trade balance and exchange rate are determined how policies affect

More information

The Economics of the Federal Budget Deficit

The Economics of the Federal Budget Deficit Order Code RL31235 The Economics of the Federal Budget Deficit Updated January 24, 2007 Brian W. Cashell Specialist in Quantitative Economics Government and Finance Division The Economics of the Federal

More information

Tutorial letter 102/3/2018

Tutorial letter 102/3/2018 ECS2602/102/3/2018 Tutorial letter 102/3/2018 Macroeconomics 2 ECS2602 Department of Economics Workbook: Activities for learning units 1 to 9 Define tomorrow 2 IMPORTANT VERBS As a student, you should

More information

Open Economy AS/AD: Applications

Open Economy AS/AD: Applications Open Economy AS/AD: Applications Econ 309 Martin Ellison UBC Agenda and References Trilemma Jones, chapter 20, section 7 Euro crisis Jones, chapter 20, section 8 Global imbalances Jones, chapter 29, section

More information

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2004

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2004 14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2004 Quiz 1 Thursday, October 7, 2004 7:30 PM 9 PM Please, answer the following questions. Write your answers directly on the quiz. You can achieve a total of 100

More information

Queen s University Department of Economics ECON 222 Macroeconomic Theory I Fall Term Section 001 Midterm Examination 31 October 2012

Queen s University Department of Economics ECON 222 Macroeconomic Theory I Fall Term Section 001 Midterm Examination 31 October 2012 Queen s University Department of Economics ECON 222 Macroeconomic Theory I Fall Term 2012 Section 001 Midterm Examination 31 October 2012 Please read all questions carefully. Record your answers in the

More information

Macroeconomics, Spring 2007, Final Exam, several versions, Early May

Macroeconomics, Spring 2007, Final Exam, several versions, Early May Name: _ Days/Times Class Meets: Today s Date: Macroeconomics, Spring 2007, Final Exam, several versions, Early May Read these Instructions carefully! You must follow them exactly! I) On your Scantron card

More information

Answers and Explanations

Answers and Explanations Answers and Explanations 1. The correct answer is (E). A change in the composition of output causes a movement along the production possibilities curve. A shift in the curve is caused by changes in technology,

More information

ECON Drexel University Winter 2009 Assignment 4. Due date: Mar. 11, 2008

ECON Drexel University Winter 2009 Assignment 4. Due date: Mar. 11, 2008 ECON 202-005 Drexel University Winter 2009 Assignment 4 Due date: Mar. 11, 2008 Instructor: Yuan Yuan Name This homework has up to 5 points bonus. Question 1 (40 points, 2 points each): MULTIPLE CHOICE.

More information

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 15 International Macroeconomics

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 15 International Macroeconomics Study Questions (with Answers) Page 1 of 5 Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 15 International Macroeconomics Part 1: Multiple Choice Select the best answer of those given. 1. If the aggregate supply

More information

Principle of Macroeconomics, Summer B Practice Exam

Principle of Macroeconomics, Summer B Practice Exam Principle of Macroeconomics, Summer B 2017 Practice Exam 1) If real GDP in a small country in 2015 is $8 billion and real GDP in the same country in 2016 is $8.3 billion, the growth rate of real GDP between

More information

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number 1. Over time, contractionary monetary policy nominal wages and causes the short-run aggregate supply curve to shift. A) raises; leftward B) lowers; leftward C)

More information

Econ / Summer 2005

Econ / Summer 2005 Econ 3560.001 / 5040.001 Summer 2005 INTERMEDIATE MACROECONOMIC THEORY / MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS FINAL EXAM Name (Last) (First) Signature Instructions The exam consists of 30 multiple-choice questions (Part

More information

Chapter 17: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy

Chapter 17: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy Chapter 17: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy Yulei Luo SEF of HKU April 16, 2012 Learning Objectives 1. Explain how the balance of payments is calculated. 2. Explain how exchange rates are determined

More information

The Impact of an Increase In The Money Supply and Government Spending In The UK Economy

The Impact of an Increase In The Money Supply and Government Spending In The UK Economy The Impact of an Increase In The Money Supply and Government Spending In The UK Economy 1/11/2016 Abstract The international economic medium has evolved in the direction of financial integration. In the

More information

ABSTRACT. Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy with Income-sensitive Capital Flows. J.O.N. Perkins, University of Melbourne

ABSTRACT. Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy with Income-sensitive Capital Flows. J.O.N. Perkins, University of Melbourne 1 ABSTRACT Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy with Income-sensitive Capital Flows J.O.N. Perkins, University of Melbourne This paper considers some implications for macroeconomic policy in an open

More information

Econ 102/Lecture 100 Final Exam Form 1 April 27, Answers

Econ 102/Lecture 100 Final Exam Form 1 April 27, Answers Econ 102/Lecture 100 Final Exam Form 1 April 27, 2005 Answers 1. The Wall Street Journal reports that 2004 saw an increase in the real interest rate and a simultaneous depreciation of the real exchange

More information

Exam 3 ECON Thurs. Nov. 14, :30 a.m. Form A

Exam 3 ECON Thurs. Nov. 14, :30 a.m. Form A Exam 3 ECON 2105 Thurs. Nov. 14, 2002 9:30 a.m. Name: ID #: Form A There are 30 multiple choice questions, worth 2.5 points each (for a total of 75 points). The short answer questions are worth 25 points.

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

Introduction. ECON204 Notes. Response to the GFC Crisis Monetary policy Cut interest rates Quantitative easing

Introduction. ECON204 Notes. Response to the GFC Crisis Monetary policy Cut interest rates Quantitative easing Introduction ECON204 Notes Response to the GFC Crisis Monetary policy Cut interest rates Quantitative easing Fiscal policy Governments spent and borrowed a lot Fiscal deficits funded by debt Many have

More information

5 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND INFLATION. Part Review. Reading Between the Lines WHERE WILL INTEREST RATES GO IN 2002?

5 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND INFLATION. Part Review. Reading Between the Lines WHERE WILL INTEREST RATES GO IN 2002? Part Review 5 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND INFLATION Reading Between the Lines WHERE WILL INTEREST RATES GO IN 2002? On May 6, 2002 the FOMC met in Washington D.C. To combat the recession that started in 2001,

More information

FISCAL POLICY* Chapt er. Key Concepts

FISCAL POLICY* Chapt er. Key Concepts Chapt er 13 FISCAL POLICY* Key Concepts The Federal Budget The federal budget is an annual statement of the government s outlays and receipts. Using the federal budget to achieve macroeconomic objectives

More information

Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL , Saturday 10:00 TYPE A

Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL , Saturday 10:00 TYPE A NAME: NO: SECTION: Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL 21.05.2016, Saturday 10:00 TYPE A Turn off your cell phone and put it away. During

More information

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. University of New Hampshire. ECON 401 Principles of Macroeconomics FINAL EXAM. O. Kozlova. Spring 2011

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. University of New Hampshire. ECON 401 Principles of Macroeconomics FINAL EXAM. O. Kozlova. Spring 2011 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS University of New Hampshire ECON 401 Principles of Macroeconomics FINAL EXAM O. Kozlova Spring 2011 INSTRUCTIONS: 1. Before you begin, make sure you have all pages of examination

More information

Economics Higher School Certificate Art of Smart Mock Examination. Total marks 100. Section I Pages marks Attempt Questions 1 20

Economics Higher School Certificate Art of Smart Mock Examination. Total marks 100. Section I Pages marks Attempt Questions 1 20 2017 Higher School Certificate Art of Smart Mock Examination Economics Total marks 100 General Instructions Reading time 5 minutes Working time 3 hours Write using black pen Board approved calculators

More information

3 Macroeconomics LESSON 8

3 Macroeconomics LESSON 8 3 Macroeconomics LESSON 8 Fiscal Policy Introduction and Description Fiscal policy is one of the two demand management policies available to policy makers. Government expenditures and the level and type

More information

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 3

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 3 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 3 1. Automatic stabilizers a. Expenditure curve becomes flatter Government

More information

Midsummer Examinations 2013

Midsummer Examinations 2013 Midsummer Examinations 2013 No. of Pages: 7 No. of Questions: 34 Subject ECONOMICS Title of Paper MACROECONOMICS Time Allowed Two Hours (2 Hours) Instructions to candidates This paper is in two sections.

More information

University of Toronto July 21, 2010 ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2

University of Toronto July 21, 2010 ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2 Department of Economics Prof. Gustavo Indart University of Toronto July 21, 2010 SOLUTIONS ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY Term Test #2 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER INSTRUCTIONS: 1. The total

More information

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012 Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012 COURSE : ECONOMICS COURSE CODE : ECON1023 TIME : 2 1/2 HOURS DEPARTMENT : IT AND JOURNALISM & COMMUNICATION STUDIES LECTURER : CHING YANN PENG Student s ID : Batch

More information

Answers to Questions: Chapter 8

Answers to Questions: Chapter 8 Answers to Questions in Textbook 1 Answers to Questions: Chapter 8 1. In microeconomics, the demand curve shows the various quantities of a specific product that a consumer wants at various prices for

More information

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11 Objectives: To apply IS-LM analysis to understand the causes of short-run fluctuations in real GDP and the short-run impact of monetary and fiscal policies on the economy. To use the IS-LM model to analyse

More information

Exam 2 Answers EC 302 Intermediate Macroeconomics Prof. Michael McElroy Spring 2017

Exam 2 Answers EC 302 Intermediate Macroeconomics Prof. Michael McElroy Spring 2017 Exam 2 Answers EC 302 Intermediate Macroeconomics Prof. Michael McElroy Spring 2017 Brief answers to the 6 questions on Exam 2. Each is either an explicit application of IS-LM, AD/AS or based on one of

More information

Econ 340: Money, Banking and Financial Markets Midterm Exam, Spring 2009

Econ 340: Money, Banking and Financial Markets Midterm Exam, Spring 2009 Econ 340: Money, Banking and Financial Markets Midterm Exam, Spring 2009 1. On September 18, 2007 the U.S. Federal Reserve Board began cutting its fed funds rate (short term interest rate) target. This

More information

Session 16. Review Session

Session 16. Review Session Session 16. Review Session The long run [Fundamentals] Output, saving, and investment Money and inflation Economic growth Labor markets The short run [Business cycles] What are the causes business cycles?

More information

Gehrke: Macroeconomics Winter term 2012/13. Exercises

Gehrke: Macroeconomics Winter term 2012/13. Exercises Gehrke: 320.120 Macroeconomics Winter term 2012/13 Questions #1 (National accounts) Exercises 1.1 What are the differences between the nominal gross domestic product and the real net national income? 1.2

More information

Consumption expenditure The five most important variables that determine the level of consumption are:

Consumption expenditure The five most important variables that determine the level of consumption are: The aggregate expenditure model: A macroeconomic model that focuses on the relationship between total spending and real GDP, assuming the price level is constant. Macroeconomic equilibrium: AE = GDP Consumption

More information