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San Jose State | ECON 102
Professors
  • Shieh, Yeung-nan
 
 
 

20 sample documents related to ECON 102

  • 1H1
    San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 1. Due: 2/22/10. (Honor the due date) According to Mankiw To understand the economy, economists use models theories that simplify reality in order to reveal how exogenous variables influence endogenous variables. The art in the science
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    A Note on Chapter 3: The effects of a change of a, c, G and T on r Comparative static analysis is a basic method of analysis in economics. It begins by examining the equilibrium of the subject of analysis - the individual consumer, the market, the economy
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    1 Econ. 102. Chapter 4. Money, Inflation, Interest Rate, Quantity Theory of Money 1. The cost of living is the number of dollars it takes to buy the goods and services that achieve a given standard of living. A rising cost of living, which is called infla
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    1 Econ. 102. Spring 2010 Review Questions for Final. *. 1. Final: Monday, May 24, 2010. 6:30pm 10:00 pm. 2. You can have 8 pages cheat sheets. 3. Please review your homework carefully. *. I. Consider a small country economy described by the following equa
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Economics Department, SJSU. Spring 2010 Econ 102-1-20453 Macroeconomic Analysis Class Mtg: M: 18:30 - 21:15 DMH 160 Office Hours: MW 09:00 - 11:30. 15:00 15:30 M 15:00 17:00, or by appointment Material required for Class: 1. Text: N. Gregory Mankiew. Macr
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 3. Due: March 8, 2010. (Honor the due date) *. 1. Show your calculation explicitly. Otherwise only partial credit will be given. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer wil
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
     
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 10. Due: Monday, May 17, 2010. *. 1. Show your derivation and calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy someone e
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 5. Due: March 22, 2010. (no late answer) *. 1. Show your derivation and calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
     
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 6. Due: April 12, 2010. No late answer. *. 1. Show your derivation and calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 2. Due: March 1, 2010. [1. Honor the due date. 2 No e-mail submission.] NGM (N. Gregory Mankiw) points out that GDP, CPI and the unemployment rate quantify the performance of the economy in the standard of living, cost of living and bu
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
     
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Fine arts in Solow model: a clarification Jason (Jen-Shan) Kao Taiwan Institute of Economic Research Yeung-Nan Shieh Department of Economics, San Jose State University Abstract This paper shows that the Saito version of Solow growth model contains an erro
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 9. Due: May 3, 2010 *. 1. Show your derivation and calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy someone else\'s answe
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 7. Due: April 19, 2010. *. 1. Show your derivation and calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy someone else\'s a
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    Econ. 102. Homework 4. Due: Monday. March 15, 2010 (No late answer) *. 1. Show your calculation explicitly. 2. Use the ruler to draw graphs. (Also show the scale explicitly). 3. E-mail submission of your answer will not be accepted. 4. Do not copy someone
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    1 Econ. 102. Chapter 2. Data of Macroeconomics: GDP, CPI and Unemployment 1. Economic activity arises from scarcity, i.e., the available resources are insufficient to meet all wants. Economics studies the choices people make to cope with scarcity. These c
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    The Origin of Modern Macroeconomics Economists began to study long-run economic growth, inflation and international payments as long ago as the 1750s, and this work was the origin of macroeconomics. But modern macroeconomics did not emerge until the Great
     
  • San Jose State ECON 102
    I Econ. 102. Chapter 3: Classical Theory: The Economy in the Long-run of the economy, economists divide all the variables that describe macroeconomic performance into real variables and nominal variables: Real variables: RGDP, the real wage rate, the real
     
 
 
 
 
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