NAME: Econ 302 Mid-term 3

Similar documents
NAME: ID Number: 3. Lump sum taxes cause effects. a) Do not; wealth b) do; wealth c) do; substitution d) both (b) and (c).

!!! Current account balance =!!!!!! + (!!!!!! ) Capital account balance =!!!!!!, which is also equal to current account balance when!! =!!!!

ECN 160B SSI Midterm Exam July 11 th, 2012

NAME: ID # : Intermediate Macroeconomics ECON 302 Spring 2009 Midterm 1

Midterm - Economics 160B, Spring 2012 Version A

Midterm - Economics 160B, Fall 2011 Version A

Economics Macroeconomic Theory. Spring Final Exam, Tuesday 6 May 2003

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

Homework Assignment #2, part 1 ECO 3203, Fall According to classical macroeconomic theory, money supply shocks are neutral.

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 13. Exchange Rates

Study Questions. Lecture 13. Exchange Rates

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 13. Exchange Rates

ECON0302 International Finance Midterm Exam Fall 2004

INSTRUCTIONS. TOTAL POINTS = 100. TOTAL TIME = 120 minutes

Study Questions. Lecture 13. Exchange Rates

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

1. Answer all parts. a) Answer parts (i)-(iii) assuming the following exchange rates hold:

Notes for Econ FALL 2010 Midterm 1 Exam

Midterm Exam I: Answer Sheet

FINAL EXAM. Name Student ID 1. C 2. B 3. D 4. B 5. B 6. A 7. A 8. D 9. C 10. B 11. C 12. B 13. A 14. B 15. C

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

SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Spring PROBLEM SET 1 (Solutions) Y = C + I + G + NX

Econ 100B: Macroeconomic Analysis Fall 2008

1. Consider the aggregate production functions for Wisconsin and Minnesota: Production Function for Wisconsin

18 INTERNATIONAL FINANCE* Chapter. Key Concepts

ECON 6022B Problem Set 1 Suggested Solutions Fall 2011

Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #3 ANSWERS

Queen s University Faculty of Arts and Science Department of Economics ECON 222 Macroeconomic Theory I Fall Term 2012

Econ 98- Chiu Spring 2005 Final Exam Review: Macroeconomics

14.05 Intermediate Applied Macroeconomics Problem Set 5

Name Student ID Summer Session II Midterm ECON160B There are 7 pages and 100 points. You have 100 minutes to complete the exam.

6 The Open Economy. This chapter:

::Solutions:: Problem Set #2: Due end of class October 2, 2018

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

Final exam Non-detailed correction 3 hours

1. Consider the aggregate production functions for Wisconsin and Minnesota: Production Function for Wisconsin

Econ 222 Midterm exam Spring 2011 Group A

David Youngberg ECON 201 Montgomery College LECTURE 08: TRADE I

ECON 102 Tutorial 3. TA: Iain Snoddy 18 May Vancouver School of Economics

1. Asymmetric Information and Financial Crises (45 points, 40 minutes)

Econ 202 Macroeconomic Analysis 2008 Winter Quarter Prof. Federico Ravenna ANSWER KEY PROBLEM SET 2 CHAPTER 3: PRODUCTIVITY, OUTPUT, AND EMPLOYMENT

OPEN-ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS: BASIC CONCEPTS

Chapter 13 Exchange Rates, Business Cycles, and Macroeconomic Policy in the Open Economy

Final Exam. Coconuts. Figure 1. a) fish, coconuts. b) coconuts, fish. c) fish, fish. d) coconuts, coconuts. e) fish, neither good.

Homework Assignment #2: Answer Sheet

Final Examination Semester 3 / Year 2012

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

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

ECO 328 SUMMER Sample Questions Topics I.1-3. I.1 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments

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.

SOCIAL ANALYSIS 10 HOURLY APRIL 14, 2004

Arbitrage is a trading strategy that exploits any profit opportunities arising from price differences.

Advanced Macroeconomics 6. Rational Expectations and Consumption

Ph.D. Preliminary Examination MICROECONOMIC THEORY Applied Economics Graduate Program June 2017

Intermediate Macroeconomics Instructed by: Ming Yi Midterm Exam I (Open-Book) Undergraduate Economics Program, HUST Wednesday, October/19/2016

National Income & Business Cycles

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2004

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

Rutgers University Spring Econ 336 International Balance of Payments Professor Roberto Chang. Problem Set 2. Deadline: March 1st.

OPEN-ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS: BASIC CONCEPTS

S-18 Solutions Chapter 3 Exchange Rates I: The Monetary Approach in the Long Run

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012

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

Rutgers University Department of Economics. Midterm 1

Chapter 2 Foreign Exchange Parity Relations

2. Discuss the implications of the interest rate parity for the exchange rate determination.

Intermediate Macroeconomics: Economics 301 Exam 1. October 4, 2012 B. Daniel

Economics 3422 Sample Midterm examination. Part A: Multiple-choice questions. Choose the best alternative. The total for Part A is 25 points.

Final Exam. Name: Student ID: Section:

Final Exam Solutions

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

Rational Expectations and Consumption

Chapter 6. The Open Economy

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.

GLOBAL EDITION. Macroeconomics EIGHTH EDITION. Abel Bernanke Croushore

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

Table 9-2. Base Year (2006) 2013 Product Quantity Price Price Milk 50 $2 $3 Bread 100 $3 $3.50

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomics

Answer Key Testname: HOMEWORK 2

Final Examination Semester 2 / Year 2012

::Solutions:: Exam 1. You may use a calculator; you may not use any other device (cell phone, etc.)

International Trade. International Trade, Exchange Rates, and Macroeconomic Policy. International Trade. International Trade. International Trade

Economics Practice Final Exam

Assignment 1 Answers

Chapter 31 Open Economy Macroeconomics Basic Concepts

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

Study Questions (with Answers) Lecture 15 International Macroeconomics

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.

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

3. Money, Inflation, and Interest Rate Links with Currency Values

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

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Quiz # 1, Questions

Chapter 4: Consumption, Saving, and Investment

FINAL EXAM GROUP B. Instructions: EC and EC ID #: Spring May 26, 2015

Economics 456. International Macroeconomics and Finance: Section 4. Geoffrey Dunbar. UBC, Winter February 15, 2013

The Aggregate Expenditures Model. A continuing look at Macroeconomics

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

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

Midterm 2 - Economics 101 (Fall 2009) You will have 45 minutes to complete this exam. There are 5 pages and 63 points. Version A.

2. Interest rates in the United States rise faster than interest rates in Canada.

Transcription:

NAME: Econ 302 Mid-term 3 Instructions: This exam consists of two parts. There are twenty multiple choice questions, each worth 2.5 points (totaling 50 points). The second part consists of 2 problems, also totaling 50 points. Please write clear answers that tell the examiner exactly what you want him/her to know. Make sure you write your name and student ID # on this exam. Good Luck! 1. A temporary increase in government spending crowds out: a) private consumption spending b) private investment spending c) permanent government consumption d) private consumption and private investment spending 2. For the government, is a source of revenue, while is a use of funds. a) transfer payments; issuing new money b) issuing new money, issuing new bonds c) taxes; purchases of government consumption goods d) interest payments on the public debt, transfer payments 3. Lump sum taxes cause effects. a) Do not; wealth b) do; wealth c) do; substitution d) both (b) and (c). 4. For a unit change in government spending, suppose consumption decreases α and output increases β. Now, suppose when government spending increases temporarily, you observe a decrease in the real interest rate. What must be true about the relationship between α and β? a) α + β = 0 b) α + β = 1 c) α + β < 1 d) α + β > 1 5. With an income tax of rate τ, someone who saves an extra dollar receives in the next period: a) 1 + R b) 1 + R-τ c) 1 + R(1-τ) d) None of the above.

6. The impact in the current period of a temporary increase in the marginal tax rate the after tax real interest rate and investment. a) raises; raises b) lowers; lowers c) raises; lowers d) lowers; raises 7. Which of the following is the best example of a flat rate tax in the United States? a) Social security tax b) Medicare tax c) Federal income tax d) State income tax 8. The Ricardian Equivalence Theorem effectively states that a) spending by the government is considered by the public as equivalent to its own spending b) the timing of taxes does not matter c) people view government issued bonds and money as equivalent d) none of the above. 9. An open market purchase of bonds for money by the government a) lowers the real interest rate and increases private investment b) decreases the level of output c) has no effect on the price level d) increases the price level but has no effect on real GDP 10. Suppose that Thailand has a large debt denominated in Thai Bhat. Can Thailand just print a whole bunch of Bhat to pay off this debt? If so, what happens to the number of Bhat that $1 can buy on the foreign exchange market? a) No way, and no answer is necessary for part two. b) Yes, number of Thai Bhat per U.S. Dollar decreases. c) Yes, number of Thai Bhat per U.S. Dollar stays the same. d) Yes, number of Thai Bhat per U.S. Dollar increases. 11. Suppose that Madison issues $1 million in debt to pay for a bigger football stadium. It plans on paying off this debt by making interest payments and rolling the debt forward every year. Interest rates are expected to be 0% per year, there s no inflation in Madison, Madisonian taxes are lump sum, and there are no government transfers. The nominal interest rate is expected to be 4% every year. The population of Madison is 1 million and expects to remain at that level forever. Each consumer in Madison will theoretically react in the same manner as if taxes: a) had been raised $1 dollar this year b) had been raised $.04 every year c) Neither a nor b d) Both a and b

12. Suppose a permanent negative shock to the production function affects one small country. That country s real interest rate will while its total expenditures on goods and services will. a) rise; fall b) not change; not change c) not change; fall d) none of the above 13. Suppose a permanent positive shock to the production function affects the entire world. Then in any small country, the real interest rate will while total expenditures on goods and services will. a) rise; fall b) not change; not change c) not change; fall d) none of the above 14. At time period 0, suppose that the rate of return on a 1-period bond is 14% in Germany, and 4% in the U.S. Further, suppose that at time period 0, the exchange rate is 2 German Marks / U.S. Dollar. All else equal, from what you know about purchasing power parity and interest rate parity, what would be reasonable expectations for you to have regarding the inflation rate in Germany and the U.S.? a) U.S. Inflation = 2%, German Inflation = 12% b) U.S. Inflation = 9%, German Inflation = -1% c) none of the above. d) both (a) and (b). 15. Suppose that the U.S. government consumption level rises temporarily by $10 billion. According to our model, how much would we expect private consumption to change by? a) C should go up, but less than $10 billion. b) C should go up exactly $10 billion. c) C should go down more than $10 billion. d) C should go down, since government is consuming more. 16. Interest rate parity implies that a) nominal interest rates in different countries are always equal b) countries with higher inflation rates will have lower nominal interest rates than countries with lower inflation rates c) the faster a country s exchange rate depreciates, the higher it its nominal interest rate d) none of the above 17. When a country devalues its exchange rate, it a) eliminates the flexibility in the exchange rate b) changes from fixed to flexible exchange rates c) lowers its fixed exchange rate d) raises its fixed exchange rate

18. An Econ PhD student has $1. He sees the following exchange rates on his Reuters terminal: Japanese Yen / U.S. Dollar = 300, British Pound / U.S. Dollar = 1, Japanese Yen / British Pound = 300. According to his macroeconomic analysis, he expects that the British Pound / U.S. Dollar rate will increase, but isn t totally sure. He d really like to make some money, since T.A.ing doesn t pay very much and he needs to buy an XBOX 360. Is there an arbitrage (risk-free profit) opportunity? If so, what is it? a) No way. The PhD student is stuck with his Super Nintendo, tough luck. b) Yes. Buy Yen with Dollars, then buy Pounds with Yen, then buy Dollars with Pounds. Repeat. c) Yes. Buy British Pounds. Wait until tomorrow, and hope that the Pound / Dollar rate rises. d) Yes. Buy Pounds with Dollars, then buy Yen with Pounds, then buy Dollars with Yen. Repeat. 19. In class, we learned about (absolute) purchasing power parity. Suppose I looked at the price (in foreign currency) of Big Macs across different countries, and then put those foreign currency prices into U.S. Dollar prices using spot currency prices. What would I expect to see according to (absolute) purchasing power parity? What would I really see? a) The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars should theoretically be the same The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars are in fact the same b) The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars should theoretically be different The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars are in fact the same c) The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars should theoretically be the same The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars are in fact different d) The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars should theoretically be different The prices of Big Macs in terms of U.S. Dollars are in fact different 20. The Ricardian Equivalence Theorem (as described in the text) relies on several assumptions. Which of these pairs of assumptions are important for deriving the Ricardian Equivalence Theorem? a) Everyone can borrow at the same real rate of interest, and the government never runs a deficit. b) People have convex preferences, and everyone can borrow at the same real rate of interest. c) People take account of events that will affect their children, and everyone can borrow at the same real rate of interest. d) People take account of events that will occur throughout the infinite future, and people have convex preferences.

Part 2: Answer the following three questions. 1. PPP and Interest Rate Parity: Derive the formulas for Purchasing power parity and Interest rate Parity in absolute form. Derive the IRP in relative form. Suppose that the return on domestic bonds held by foreigners in country i are taxed at the rate τ. Write down the interest parity condition (between countries i and j) as viewed by an investor in country j. (25 points)

2. Current Account Balance: The Current Account Balance is initially positive. Assume that a permanent positive shock to production affects a large country in an open economy. Assume that the shift increases the MPK. Draw two graphs indicating the short run and the long run responses. Be clear to indicate what happens to the real interest rate and the CA balance. Explain the intuition behind the graphs. (25 points)