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Course: ECON 102, Fall 2007
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102 Econ - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 1 of 13 Form 0 ECON 102/100 March 23, 2004 Section 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 Day F W W W W W F W F Time 2:30-4 11:30-1 1-2:30 4-5:30 2:30-4 4-5:30 1-2:30 8:30-10 11:30-1 Location B239 EH 373 Lorch B239 EH B239 EH B239 EH 1068 EH 1372 EH 330 DENN 205 DENN GSI Jan Justin Naomi Mato Mato Naomi Nalin Justin Nalin Do NOT open this exam booklet until...

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102 Econ - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 1 of 13 Form 0 ECON 102/100 March 23, 2004 Section 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 Day F W W W W W F W F Time 2:30-4 11:30-1 1-2:30 4-5:30 2:30-4 4-5:30 1-2:30 8:30-10 11:30-1 Location B239 EH 373 Lorch B239 EH B239 EH B239 EH 1068 EH 1372 EH 330 DENN 205 DENN GSI Jan Justin Naomi Mato Mato Naomi Nalin Justin Nalin Do NOT open this exam booklet until instructed to do so! Please take a moment to complete the identification information on the scantron. Indicate your NAME, discussion SECTION number, FORM number, and UM ID number. THIS, and showing up in the correct exam room are WORTH TWO POINTS ON THE EXAM! The exam has 100 points and is designed to take about 60 minutes to complete. However, you'll have approximately 80 minutes. Check that you have all 10 pages of the exam. Read the questions and these instructions carefully! Use the space provided in this booklet and the back of the pages to work out the answers to the multiple choice problems. Use the space provided on the actual page for the short answer questions. You can use only NON-graphing calculators. For multiple choice questions, you get 3 points for a correct answer, 0 points for a blank, and 0 points for a wrong answer. There are NO penalties for guessing. Sign the honor code below! Honor Code: I did not use any unauthorized aid on this exam. Name: (PRINT) _______________________________ UM ID #: _______________________________ Signature: _______________________________ Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Multiple Choice: (26 questions, 3 pts each = 78 pts) Pick the best answer among the given choices. 1. Exam II Page 2 of 13 Form 0 Which of the following is not an effect of the rate of inflation being low, as opposed to high? a. Owners of capital benefit from paying lower capital gains taxes. b. Workers feel abused when their wages do not rise as fast as they feel they deserve. c. Consumers spend more time and effort managing their wealth, trying to keep it in forms that earn interest. d. Unemployment is increased because firms find it harder to reduce real wages when market conditions require it. e. For any given real rate of interest, the nominal interest rate is lower. During the 1990s, US imports grew faster than US exports. How, according to either of the articles that you read about this from the web, was this related to employment in the US? a. Increased imports created jobs because it requires workers to bring goods into the country. b. Increased employment caused imports to rise because shortages forced firms to go abroad for inputs. c. Exports of goods required export of jobs, and caused recession in the US economy. d. The booming US economy raised employment and income, causing high levels of investment and imports. e. High demand for labor raised US wages, causing employers to move jobs overseas. Which of the following is not one of the reasons suggested for the recent decline in US tax revenues? a. The tax cuts enacted by Congress at the request of the Bush administration. b. The rise in costs of health care, which causes a larger fraction of labor compensation to be untaxed. c. Shifts by wealthy people of their assets into forms that take advantage of recent tax cuts on dividends and capital gains. d. Globalization, which has permitted companies to move more income offshore. e. The value of national output, on which taxes are collected, has been falling. 2. 3. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 3 of 13 Form 0 4. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was recently reported to be considering a. Increasing its output of oil because the price of oil has increased recently. b. Decreasing its output of oil because the price of oil has increased recently. c. Increasing its output of oil because the price of oil has decreased recently. d. Decreasing its output of oil because the price of oil has decreased recently. e. Leaving its output of oil unchanged because the price of oil is within its target range. Quantity-1970 Love Beads 4 the Grateful Dead Concert Ticket 2 Price-1969 1.4 1 Price-1970 1.5 0.75 Price-1971 1.6 0.5 5. The base year is 1970. The quantities in the consumption basket are those listed for 1970, and all goods listed above are consumption goods. Which of the following is false? a. The economy was experiencing deflation. b. The percentage decrease in the price of the Grateful Dead concert ticket was greater than the increase in the price of Love Beads. c. The CPI in 1969 was 101.3 d. Inflation from 1970 to 1971 was negative 1.3 percent. e. Inflation from 1969 to 1971 was negative 12.5 percent Which of the following could cause a leftward shift in the supply of loanable funds curve? a. A decrease in the real interest rate. b. A decrease in consumer confidence about the future. c. A decrease in taxes with no change in government expenditures. d. An decrease in taxes with an identical decrease in government expenditures. e. None of the above. Which of the following statements is true? a. Structural unemployment can be a consequence of workers leaving existing jobs to find ones they like better. b. Efficiency wages do not cause unemployment. c. The natural rate of unemployment includes cyclical unemployment. d. Discouraged workers are able and willing to work, yet they are not part of the labor force. e. Most spells of unemployment are long, but most unemployment observed at any given time is short term. 6. 7. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 4 of 13 Form 0 8. Your father is going through a mid-life crisis and wants to buy a fast sports car. You are concerned about the impact of his decision on U.S. GDP. If he buys a Maserati (made in Italy) instead of a Chevy Camaro (made in the U.S.), then which of the following statements is true? a. You are concerned for no reason, because the actions of one person (your father) do not impact GDP. b. Italy's exports and GDP increase; US imports increase, but US GDP falls. c. Italy's net exports increase and consumption decreases; US net exports decrease and consumption increases. d. Italy's investment decreases and its GDP remains unchanged; US investment and net exports increase. e. None of the above. A risk-averse individual should a. always prefer a sure payment of $100 over a gamble in which she can win $110 with 90% probability and $10 with 10% probability. b. always invest in bonds rather than stocks. c. always prefer a less risky stock over a more risky stock. d. always prefer an investment with lower return and less risk to one with a higher return and more risk e. always be insured. 9. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 10. Exam II Page 5 of 13 Form 0 Suppose we have the following data for four countries giving their levels and growth rates of GDP per capita. All of the following are false except: GDP per capita in 2004 $6,000 $3,000 $5,000 $2,500 Annual growth rate of GDP per capita 0.90% 0.50% 1.00% 2.50% Lucastan People's Republic of Nash United States of Friedman Democratic Socialist Republic of Arrow a. The Democratic Socialist Republic of Arrow will never catch up to Lucastan. b. The People's Republic of Nash will catch up to Lucastan in approximately 175 years. c. The GDP per capita of the United States of Friedman will be approximately $7,500 in 70 years. d. People's Republic of Nash has a low growth rate due to diminishing returns to scale. e. The Democratic Socialist Republic of Arrow will catch up to the United States of Friedman in approximately 47 years. 11. Suppose the required reserve ratio is 10%, and the commercial banking system has $5 million of deposits and holds no excess reserves. If the required reserve ratio is reduced to 8% and banks still do not want to hold any excess reserves and nonbanks hold no cash, then banks will initially make new loans of _______, which will lead to an eventual increase in the money supply by ______. a. $100,000; $100,000 b. $100,000; $1 million c. $100,000; $1.25 million d. $400,000; $400,000 e. $400,000; $4 million Which of the following statements is true? a. The Federal Reserve has precise control over the US money supply. b. Credit limits on credit cards are considered to be part of the money supply. c. Goods that are not specifically intended to be used as money can never be used as money. d. Stocks and bonds are more liquid than savings accounts. e. The discount rate is the interest rate that the Federal Reserve charges on its loans to banks. 12. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 13. Hyperinflation is usually caused by... a. banks making an excessive amount of loans. b. supply shortages that drive up the costs of business inputs. c. excessive government and spending printing money. d. insatiable consumer demand for more goods. e. speculative bubbles in asset markets. Exam II Page 6 of 13 Form 0 14. If we assume that the velocity of money is fixed, then according to the quantity theory an increase in the money supply must cause a proportionate increase in... a. nominal GDP. b. real GDP. c. real investment. d. the real interest rate. e. none of the above. Due to more stringent requirements and controls upon entering the U.S. foreigners become more apprehensive about traveling to the U.S as tourists. According to the long run open economy model, the real exchange rate will ______ and the U.S. trade deficit will ______ . a. fall; remain the same b. fall; fall c. rise or fall; fall d. rise; remain the same e. rise; rise Japan reduces its budget deficit by reigning in its spending. According to the long run open economy model, the quantity of U.S. domestic investment will _______ and the quantity of U.S. national saving will _______ . a. fall; rise b. fall; fall c. fall; remain unchanged d. rise; fall e. rise; rise 15. 16. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 17. Exam II Page 7 of 13 Form 0 The prime minister of Tuvalu is considering the following policies to increase net exports in the long run: I. Export subsidies II. Import quotas III. Decrease in government expenditures According to the open economy model, which of these policies will accomplish the goal? a. only I b. only II c. only III d. I and II e. I, II and III According to the long run open economy model, which of the following is false? a. A decrease in the money supply decreases the nominal exchange rate. b. A tax cut causes the real interest rate to rise. c. Restricting trade will leave net exports unchanged. d. Political instability causes a country's currency to depreciate. e. Capital flight leads to an increase in the real interest rate. Suppose that the exchange rate is 10 Moroccan dirhams per U.S. dollar. Also suppose that you can buy a crate of oranges for 300 dirhams in the Moroccan capital of Rabat and can buy a similar crate of oranges in Miami for $35 dollars. Assuming that there are no transport costs, the real exchange rate based on oranges is ______ . a. greater than one and arbitrageurs could profit by buying oranges in the United States and selling them in Morocco. b. greater than one and arbitrageurs could profit by buying oranges in Morocco and selling them in the United States. c. less than one and arbitrageurs could profit by buying oranges in the United States and selling them in Morocco. d. less than one and arbitrageurs could profit by buying oranges in the Morocco and selling them in the United States. e. equal to one and arbitrageurs cannot profit from shipping oranges between the two countries. 18. 19. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 8 of 13 Form 0 Currency per U.S. dollar 4 125 10 1.25 1.2 U.S. Price Index 200 200 200 200 200 Country Price Index 204 250 2,000 160 200 Country Brazil Japan Mexico Canada Switzerland 20. Currency Real Yen Peso Dollar Franc The following question is based on the table above, in which the "price indexes" measure the price of a common basket of goods in each country. For which country in the table does purchasing-power-parity hold? a. Brazil b. Japan c. Mexico d. Canada e. Switzerland Suppose a U.S. resident buys a Jaguar car from Great Britain and the British exporter uses the U.S. dollar revenue to buy stock in the American corporation General Electric from a Japanese shareholder, who then deposits it into a dollar denominated bank account in Japan. Which of the following statements is true from the perspective of the United States? a. NX, FDI b. imports, NFI c. NX, FPI d. NX, NFI e. NX, NFI unchanged Consider the following data related to the GDP of the country Macromedia: GDP=5,000 Consumption= 3,000 Government purchases= 500 Macromedia's investment abroad =700 Exports =1,500 Domestic Investment = 1,000 Private Savings = 300 Which of the following is not true? a. Imports = 1000 b. Net exports = 500 c. The world's investment in Macromedia = 200 d. Net tax revenues = 1,700 e. National Savings = 2,000 21. 22. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 9 of 13 Form 0 23. Consider an economy which is in long run equilibrium with all nominal and real variables constant over time. Then, unexpectedly, the central bank decides to increase the required reserve ratio. Once the new long run equilibrium is reached, which variables will be lower in the new long run equilibrium compared to the initial equilibrium? I. The money supply. II. The price level. III. The real interest rate IV. The inflation rate V. The nominal exchange rate (the foreign-currency price of domestic currency) a. I only b. I, II only c. II, V only d. I, II, V only e. None of these variables is lower in the new equilibrium than initially. In the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply an increase in consumer optimism will I. shift aggregate demand to the right II. cause a short run increase in unemployment III. cause a short run increase in prices IV. cause a long run increase in output a. I and II only b. I and III only c. I, II and III only d. II, III and IV only e. I, II, III and IV According to The Nalin Report on Matostan's economy, 3400 people are employed. 600 people are unemployed and looking for a job. The cyclical rate of unemployment is currently at 2.5 percentage points. Then it must be true that the natural rate of unemployment is ________ 15% and, in the long run, the rate of job finding is approximately _______ than the rate of job separation. a. greater than; 4.7 times larger b. greater than; 4.7 times smaller c. equal to; 5.7 times smaller d. less than; 7.0 times larger e. less than; 7.0 times smaller 24. 25. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 10 of 13 Form 0 26. The long-run aggregate supply curve is vertical, because a. the natural rate of unemployment does not vary over the business cycle. b. a rising price level raises marginal cost along with price of output. c. net foreign investment does not depend on the real exchange rate. d. the central bank controls the money supply. e. perfectly competitive firms increase output when price rises. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Short Answer: (20pts) Write a solution to each of the following problems. Exam II Page 11 of 13 Form 0 1. Let's go back to the Island of Yap to a time when everybody was still rolling along their stone wheels. After a stormy night, Pacificus comes up with the idea to set up a commercial bank. He wishes to keep 12.5% of all deposits in his safe as reserves. All the assumptions we have made in class, on homeworks, and in sections for the model of fractional reserve banking apply. Pacificus' mother-in-law, Omi-Na, is the last islander not to have deposited her stone wheels, and she holds out long enough that the system is in long-run equilibrium without her deposit. Eventually though, pressure from Jusgar Tinosi, the bank's security officer, convinces Omi-Na to deposit her entire life saving of 75 fei and, like everyone else in Yap, never again to hold stone wheels. a) By how much do the amounts of i) reserves, ii) loans, iii) deposits, and iv) money supply eventually increase as a result of Omi-Na making this deposit? After a year or so, the line for loans is still endless, and nobody has withdrawn or deposited any money for many months. Pacificus figures that he can reduce his reservedeposit ratio to 5%. Just before this decision, he has 8,000 fei in deposits. b) After lending out all of the excess reserves, by how much do of i) reserves, ii) loans, iii) deposits, and iv) money supply eventually change? Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 12 of 13 Form 0 2. a) An article in The New York Times (Apr. 14, 1995) regarding a decline in the value of the dollar reported that "the president was clearly determined to signal that the United States remains solidly on a course of deficit reduction, which should make the dollar more attractive to investors." Would deficit reduction in fact raise the value of the dollar? Illustrate your answer in a well-labeled diagram and explain. Econ 102 - Deardorff Winter Term 2004 Exam II Page 13 of 13 Form 0 b) In 1998 the Russian government defaulted on its debt payments, leading investors worldwide to increase their preference for U.S. government bonds, which are considered very safe. What effect do you think this flight to safety had on the U.S. economy? Be sure to note the impacts on i. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. national saving, domestic investment, net foreign investment, the interest rate, the exchange rate, and the trade balance.
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Presidency by Birthright?D. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008Fears of the Framers Questioned Loyalties of the foreign-born Feared European Meddling in US Politics Feared a Restoration of Monarchy only 31% of Americans support th
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POLS 1101 Presidential Election Assignment, Part II(Due Date: March 21st) Retype questions and provide your typed answers on a separate sheet. Some answers only ask for data. Some only ask you to name the election years and persons who won. Others a
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The Early Contests in Presidential NominationsIowa & New Hampshire Part 2D. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008Pfiffner (2008, 23) wrote, "The earlier Iowa caucuses occasionally play an important role, as they did for Jimmy Carter in
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The Presidential VetoD. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008Regular Package Veto Power After receiving bill from Congress: President can Sign bill in 10 days-becomes law (Sundays excluded) No presidential signature in 10 days-bill
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U.S. Political PartiesD. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008What is a Political Party? It is fundamentally an electoral organization field and finance candidates educate and mobilize voters win electionsParty-in-the-Electorate
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www.desmoinesregister.com | Printer-friendly article pagePage 1 of 4December 18, 2007Caucus history: An early test of strengthBy DAVID YEPSEN REGISTER POLITICAL COLUMNIST Editor's note: David Yepsen covered the Iowa caucuses for some 25 years
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Who Gets to be President?The Formal and Informal QualificationsD. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008Informal Qualifications None were only children Age: 24/42 inaugurated in their 50s (8-40s; 10-60s) youngest nominated: Willi
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What Many Separate, U.S. UnitesThe American President as Head of State & Head of Gov'tD. Jason Berggren University of Georgia Spring 2008Presidential Preeminence The President sits at the summit of political power. "Presidents remain preeminent