Understanding the World Economy Final Exam Indicative answers

Similar documents
Master Economics & Business Understanding the World Economy. Sample Multiple choice

Final exam Non-detailed correction 3 hours

download instant at

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

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Solutions to the Final Exam

ophillips Curve Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

ECON 1000 D. Come to the PASS workshop with your mock exam complete. During the workshop you can work with other students to review your work.

Chapter 11. Market-Clearing Models of the Business Cycle. Copyright 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Business cycle fluctuations Part II

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

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

Long-Run Economic Growth

Final exam Non-detailed correction 3 hours. This are indicative directions on how structure the essay questions and what was expected.

EC202 Macroeconomics

Examination Period 3: 2016/17

Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment (FNCE 613) SAMPLE EXAM 1

Midsummer Examinations 2013

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Final Exam

Final Term Papers. Fall 2009 (Session 04) ECO401. (Group is not responsible for any solved content) Subscribe to VU SMS Alert Service

Test 1 Econ322 Section 002 Chappell February 16, 2009

3. TFU: A zero rate of increase in the Consumer Price Index is an appropriate target for monetary policy.

Midterm Examination Number 1 February 19, 1996

Econ / Summer 2005

Before discussing these, lets understand the concept of overnight interest rate.

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

ECON Drexel University Summer 2008 Assignment 2. Due date: July 29, 2008

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

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

Question 5 : Franco Modigliani's answer to Simon Kuznets's puzzle regarding long-term constancy of the average propensity to consume is that : the ave

ECON 1000 B. Come to the PASS workshop with your mock exam complete. During the workshop you can work with other students to review your work.

This paper is not to be removed from the Examination Halls UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

: Monetary Economics and the European Union. Lecture 8. Instructor: Prof Robert Hill. The Costs and Benefits of Monetary Union II

Can we have low unemployment and low inflation? 2015 Pearson

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

Test Review. Question 1. Answer 1. Question 2. Answer 2. Question 3. Econ 719 Test Review Test 1 Chapters 1,2,8,3,4,7,9. Nominal GDP.

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

Open economy macroeconomics and exchange rates Part II

Econ 330 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Final Exam

Macroeconomic Theory and Stabilization Policy. Multiple Choice Problems [Select the best alternative]

Homework 4 of ETP Economics

The Great Depression, golden age, and global financial crisis

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

Econ 102 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

Foreign Trade and the Exchange Rate

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year

UC Berkeley Fall Final examination SOLUTION SHEET

Suggested answers to Problem Set 5

Review. Question 1. Answer 1. Question 2. Answer 2. Question 3. Exam Review (Questions Beyond Test 1) True or False? True or False?

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

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

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS FIRST MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2007 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions

AP Econ Practice Test Unit 5

Name: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Fall 2009 Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko Final Exam (35 points). December 8.

10. Oferta y demanda agregada

1 Figure 1 (A) shows what the IS LM model looks like for the case in which the Fed holds the

Classes and Lectures

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

Disposable income (in billions)

IVY TECH STATE COLLEGE REGION 14-BLOOMINGTON ECN 101 ECONOMICS FUNDAMENTALS Fall 2006 Final Examination

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

Multiple Choice Questions (3 points each) Please answer the questions on the green scantron.

EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15

EC202 Macroeconomics

Questions and Answers

Macroeconomics Study Sheet

The Model at Work. (Reference Slides I may or may not talk about all of this depending on time and how the conversation in class evolves)

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

SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET

Final Term Papers. Fall 2009 (Session 03a) ECO401. (Group is not responsible for any solved content) Subscribe to VU SMS Alert Service

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory / Macroeconomic Analysis (ECON 3560/5040) Midterm Exam (Answers)

Please choose the most correct answer. You can choose only ONE answer for every question.

Nicolai Ellingsen (Adopted from Asbjørn Rødseth) ECON 4330 April 29, / 23

Chapter 19 Prices and Output in an Open Economy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

ECN 160B SSI Final Exam August 1 st, 2012 VERSION B

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

Part I (45 points; Mark your answers in a SCANTRON)

Why are some countries richer than others? Part 1

Chapter 4. Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work- Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply. Chapter Objectives. AD AS Model

14.02 Solutions Quiz III Spring 03

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND. Chapter 34

International financial crises

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand. Lecture

Come and join us at WebLyceum

5. An increase in government spending is represented as a:

Eastern Mediterranean University Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Economics Spring Semester

Economics 302 Intermediate Macroeconomic

Answers (if you think you see an error, please contact me ASAP.

QUEEN S UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 222 A&B Macroeconomic Theory I. Final Examination 20 April 2009

Final Term Papers. Spring 2009 (Session 02b) ECO401. (Group is not responsible for any solved content) Subscribe to VU SMS Alert Service

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

ECO 301 MACROECONOMIC THEORY UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS FALL 2008 Instructor: Dr. S. Nuray Akin MIDTERM EXAM I

Quiz I Topics in Macroeconomics 2 Econ 2004

Introduction to Economic Fluctuations

Session 16. Review Session

The Final Exam is Tuesday May 4 th at 1:00 in the normal Todd classroom

Answer key to the Second Midterm Exam Principles of Macroeconomics

Lecture 12: Economic Fluctuations. Rob Godby University of Wyoming

Transcription:

Nicolas Coeurdacier Master Economics & Business Spring 2017 Understanding the World Economy Final Exam Indicative answers I. Multiple choice [50 points = 2 per question] It is a multiple choice questionnaire. You have to select at LEAST one answer from the four proposed answers. You have to select ALL the correct answers, AND ONLY the correct answers to get the maximum number of points. 1. An economy produces apples and oranges. In year 0, 2 apples and 2 oranges are produced and sold at the price of $2 per apple and $2 per orange. In year 1, 3 apples and 1 orange are produced and sold at the price of $2 per apple and $1 per orange. Thus: A) Using year 0 prices, real GDP has increased B) Using year 1 prices, real GDP has increased C) Nominal GDP has increased. D) The consumption price index has decreased. 2. The same economy now produces apples, oranges and invents the fruit salad (a fruit salad is made with mixing 1 apple and 1 orange, cut in small pieces). The apple producer sells 2 apples to final consumers and 2 to the Fruit salad company at the price of 1$. The orange producer sells 2 oranges to final consumers and 2 to the Fruit Salad company at the price of 1$. Hence, the Fruit salad company produces 2 fruit salads, sold at a price of 3$ to final consumers. A) the value added of the fruit salad company is equal to 2$ B) the overall (nominal) GDP of the economy is equal to 6$ C) the overall (nominal) GDP of the economy is equal to 10$ D) the overall (nominal) GDP of the economy is equal to 14$. 3. If a country runs a current account deficit, this means that A) aggregate savings exceed domestic investment B) aggregate savings are below domestic investment C) the government is running a primary deficit. D) the government is running a primary surplus. 4. The participation rate is defined as: A) B)!"#$%& C) '()*+ (), ", D) The total number of participants in the labour market 5. In the Solow Growth model: A) Economies which reach their steady state start to have negative growth B) Investment equals depreciation of capital in the steady state C) TFP (Total Factor Productivity) growth is always smaller than total output growth D) The steady state is mostly a function of the size of the country.

6. In the Solow growth model, the following factors contribute to a higher steady state level of output per worker A) a higher investment rate B) a higher consumption to GDP ratio C) a higher level of TFP (Total Factor Productivity) D) a higher rate of inflation 7. In the Solow Growth Model, without technological change, A) The output per worker of countries converge to a steady state due to decreasing returns to capital. B) The output per worker of countries keeps on growing if the population is growing C) A poorer country grows faster than a richer one if it shares the same steady-state. D) A poorer country grows faster than a richer one if it is converging towards a higher steady-state of output per worker in the long-term. 8. The Okun s Law is typically defined as the negative relationship between: A) The unemployment rate and the output per worker B) The unemployment rate and the participation rate C) The unemployment rate and the output gap D) The unemployment rate and the rate of inflation 9. In the long-run, an improvement in TFP (Total Factor Productivity) in a country: A) usually increases the real wage of workers B) usually increases the demand for labor C) usually increases employment if the labor supply is downward sloping with respect to the real wage D) usually increases the output per worker 10. A higher real wage rate will A) increase the opportunity cost of leisure B) increase the ability of workers to consume leisure C) always increase the number of hours worked D) increase the number of hours worked if the substitution effect dominates 11. The natural rate of unemployment can increase because: A) The minimum wage increases above the marginal productivity of some low skilled workers B) Competition in the product market increases C) Labour becomes more mobile within the country and workers have to compete with a larger population of unemployed D) Unions are very uncoordinated in their wage demands 12. The government of your country decides to increase the firing costs for firms. As a consequence, we should observe A) Less flows into unemployment B) More flows out of unemployment C) An increasing level of long-term unemployed D) That people are changing jobs less often.

13. According to the quantity theory, in the long run an increase in the money supply will A) increase the rate of inflation in the economy B) increase the level of GDP in the economy C) increase the amount of investment in the economy D) none of the above 14. Higher expected inflation is costly because: A) it transfers resources from lenders to borrowers B) it requires more frequent adjustments in costs and prices C) nominal interest rate is also higher which reduces investment D) nominal interest rate is lower which reduces incentives to save 15. The Laffer curve A) is a downward sloping curve: the higher the tax rate, the lower the tax revenues B) suggests that it is possible to decrease the tax rate and to increase tax revenues C) has an inverted U shape: a certain level of public spending maximizes the growth rate D) has a U shape: taxes must be low or high to generate significant tax revenues 16. Can a government run fiscal deficits without finding its debt running out of control (exploding with respect to GDP)? A) No, in no circumstances B) Yes, if the inflation rate is very low. C) Yes, if real GDP growth is higher than the real interest rate D) Yes, if the real interest rate is higher than real GDP growth 17. If a government lowers taxes on its wealthy residents, A) After-tax income inequalities within the country tend to fall. B) Fiscal revenues always falls. C) aggregate demand and output usually improves but less so than a tax cut on poorer residents. D) Private savings tend to increase if wealthy tax payers are forward-looking. 18. In the US data, A) Investment is more volatile than consumption. B) Government spending is very procyclical. C) Employment is very procyclical. D) Inflation is very countercyclical. 19. In the Aggregate demand-aggregate supply model, a rise in oil prices should lead to E) a fall in both output and prices. F) a fall in output and an increase in prices. G) an increase in output and a fall in prices. H) an increase in both output and prices. 20. In the Aggregate demand-aggregate supply model, an increase in government spending should lead to A) lower output and lower inflation. B) higher output and higher inflation. C) higher output and lower inflation. D) none of the above

21. Which of the following statements about inflation and monetary policy are true: A) In the long-run, there is always a tradeoff between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate B) A higher rate of inflation lowers unemployment when not expected. C) A higher expected inflation increases inflation. D) When unemployment is above its natural rate due to low aggregate demand, inflation tends to increase. 22. According to Purchasing Power Parity: A) we should observe a convergence of the output per worker across countries. B) the nominal exchange rate of country should be constant. C) countries with higher domestic inflation than the US should see a depreciation of their currency with respect to the US dollar. D) countries with lower nominal interest rates than the US should see a depreciation of their currency with respect to the US dollar. 23. Suppose that yearly nominal interest rates for Treasury bills in Bigland and in Smalland are equal. This can mean that: A) The currency of Smalland is expected to depreciate against the currency of Bigland in the following year. B) The currency of Smalland is expected to appreciate against the currency of Bigland in the following year. C) Expected inflation is the same in both countries and markets form their exchange rate expectations over a year based on purchasing power parity. D) Smalland has credibly fixed its exchange rate to the currency of Bigland. 24. What are the three components of the impossible trinity of Mundell that cannot hold together at the same time? A) Floating exchange rate, free capital movements and independent monetary policy B) Fixed exchange rate, constrained capital movements and independent fiscal policy C) Fixed exchange rate, free capital movements and independent monetary policy D) Floating exchange rate, constrained capital movements and independent fiscal policy 25. Suppose France has a negative shock to aggregate demand but the rest of the Eurozone does not: A) the ECB should raise interest rates to cushion the shock. B) the ECB should lower interest rates to cushion the shock. C) the shock would be partially cushioned by a higher rate of inflation in France. D) the shock would be partially cushioned by a depreciation of the euro. II. Short questions & essays [50 points] a. Debt sustainability in Southland [10 points --- (i)=3pts, (ii)=3pts, (iii)=4pts] Southland was facing the following fiscal situation in 2007: Public Debt-to-GDP ratio = 50%; Primary fiscal surplus over GDP = -1%; Real interest rate = 3%; Real growth rate of GDP = 1%.

(i) What is the size of the fiscal adjustment that Southland needs to implement to stabilize the debt to GDP ratio to 50%? r-g=2%. Fiscal surplus necessary to stabilize the debt over GDP = 2%*50%=1%. Currently, fiscal deficit = -1%. Southlands needs a 2% fiscal adjustment. As Southland did not adjust its fiscal stance over ten years, the debt to GDP ratio increased to 100% while the primary fiscal surplus fell to -2% of GDP in 2017. (ii) In 2017, what is the size of the fiscal adjustment needed to stabilize the debt over GDP to 100% --- assuming that the real interest rate and the real growth rate remained the same over the period 2007-2017? Similary: r-g=2%. Fiscal surplus necessary to stabilize the debt over GDP = 100%*2%=2%. Needs a primary surplus of 2% and a 4% fiscal adjustment. iii) In 2017, as investors starts to anticipate a default in Southland, real interest rates increase to 10% while the real growth rate decreases to zero. What is now the size of the necessary fiscal adjustment to stabilize the debt to GDP ratio to 100%? Comment. r-g=10%. Fiscal surplus necessary to stabilize the debt over GDP = 10%*100%=10%. Needs a primary surplus of 10%! And a much higher fiscal adjustment of 12%. Very large effect of changes in r-g on the stability of public debt. The doubling of public debt and of the fiscal deficit over 10 years had a small effect on the necessary adjustment but movements in r-g have a huge effect in this example. Explain why some countries can be very quickly on an unsustainable fiscal path once risk of default materializes: as investors anticipate default and ask for higher rates, default becomes more likely as debt is quickly unsustainable (self-fulfilling outcome). b. Inflation and unemployment [15 points] In the post-world war II US data, depending on the time period or the horizon considered, the correlation between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate is negative, positive or roughly zero. Comment. [Hint: Describe the possible relationships between inflation and unemployment in theory] (please be concise, limit your answer to 350 words) Answers: see mostly lectures 6 and 8 (a bit lecture 5 for money neutrality). Phillips curve and movements along the curve due to shocks to aggregate demand: higher aggregate demand lowers unemployment and increases inflation: negative correlation between inflation and unemployment. Think of most recessions in developed countries since the 90s Shifts upwards of the Phillips curve due to negative aggregate supply shocks: negative supply shocks (rising oil prices for instance) increase inflation and reduce output, increasing unemployment. Negative supply shocks generate a positive correlation between inflation and unemployment. Think of oil shocks in the 70s. This is the conventional view of business cycles driven by demand or supply shock, keeping inflation expectations given. At longer horizon, the level of inflation change inflation expectations: no trade-off between inflation and unemployment in the long-run. The Phillips curve is vertical = zero correlation at longer horizons. c. Housing prices, household debt and consumption [25 points, Q1=10 pts, Q2= 15 pts] Panel A shows, across developed countries, the link between the % change in household leverage over the period 1997-2007 (x-axis) and the change in housing prices over the same period (y-axis). Panel B shows for the same countries the link between the % change in household leverage over 1997-2007 (xaxis) and the subsequent fall in consumption (in %) at the heart of the Great Recession (2008Q2-2009Q1) (y-axis).

1) How is the relationship between the % change in household leverage over the period 1997-2007 and the change in housing prices (Panel A)? Explain this relationship. [10 points] (please be concise, limit your answer to 250 words) 2) How is the relationship between the % change in household leverage over the period 1997-2007 and the subsequent decline in consumption (Panel B)? Explain this relationship. What are the implications for your understanding of the severity of the Great Recession across countries [15 points] (please be concise, limit your answer to 300 words) Panel A: Household leverage and the run-up in housing prices Panel B: Household leverage and subsequent decline in consumption Source: Glick and Lansing (2010), Federal Reserve San Francisco

1) Panel A positive relationship between the two variables. Causality runs both ways: higher housing prices triggers more borrowing through collateral channel: higher housing prices increase the value of collateral making it easier to borrow and increasing household leverage. As borrowing rises, demand for housing rises, which triggers higher housing prices. Circular mechanism on the boom illustrated below (left panel). Other potential channels: Financial innovation/deregulation. Financial innovation (think securitization) increases credit supply which triggers higher borrowing for mortgages (households previously excluded have better access to credit, at better rates). This in turn fuels housing prices. Low world interest rates (high world supply of savings = savings glut) also might have contributed to increasing household debt and increasing housing prices. (Too) optimistic expectations about future housing prices are self-fulfilling: higher expected prices lead to higher demand for housing (and higher leverage), validating ex-post the expectations (housing bubble). The collateral channel 2)Panel B: countries with higher increase of leverage on the booming period saw a sharper decline in aggregate consumption on the burst. [ This can be tied to the collateral channel playing on the burst when housing prices are falling. Falling collateral value reduces the ability to borrow for households, both for housing goods but also other consumption goods (mechanism illustrated above on the right panel). This falls in borrowing (deleveraging) reinforces the fall in housing prices and so on and so forth. Fall in consumption triggers by the deleveraging of households. Deleveraging can be further amplified due to the necessity of banks to deleverage, which reduces further the supply of credit on the burst (credit crunch). Alternative channel: wealth effect. Falling housing wealth triggers falling consumption as households consume partly out of their wealth. In the short/medium-run with rigid prices, the fall in aggregate consumption translates in to a fall in aggregate demand, generating a recession. The recession should been more severe in the countries experiencing a higher rise of leverage on the booming period --- even though this depends on the fiscal and monetary responses in these countries.