ECON 102 Lecture 4: Economics 102 – Lecture 4 – GDP Theories
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Question 1 to 9. Choose TRUE or FALSE. WILL RATE 5 stars for a correct answer
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1. Flow of Funds Direct spending by the government on health care in 2012 was almost $ 4,500. |
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Flow of Funds Payments to hospitals and physicians account for about half of all health care spending in 2012. |
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Flow of Funds Over the past 100 years, out-of-pocket expenditures for health care services by individuals have decreased from over 75% to less than 5%. |
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Flow of Funds Third-party payers account for 60% of all health care expenditures in 2012 |
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Flow of Funds The dollar amount of health care expenditures paid by charitable organizations and individuals has remained roughly constant over the past 100 years if one adjusts for inflation |
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6. Flow of Funds Ranking everyone by the amount spent on medical care, 30 percent of the total (all expenditures for all people) is accounted for by the top 1 percent of patients. The top half of the population accounts for 90 percent of total spending. This is mostly due to cost-shifting. |
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7. Flow of Funds Not only is the share of GDP to health care higher in 2012 than in 1929, but the wages of health care workers have also risen concerning wages of other types of workers. The Flow of Funds idea emphasizes that total dollars spent by individuals, the government, and other third-party payers for health care must equal total income earned by health care providers, administrators, and other health care workers. |
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8. Equity and Distribution Socioeconomic differences in mortality found in the U.S. are most likely attributable to a lack of universal health insurance coverage. |
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9. Shifting Overhead When a drug company advertises it will provide a prescription drug at no charge to certain individuals who cannot afford a doctor prescribed drug, costs are most likely being shifted away from individuals who are paying high prices to those who are paying nothing.
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Question 1
The law of demand states that there is a direct relationship between supply and demand.
True
False
4 points
Question 2
Equilibrium is a state of balance between supply and demand.
True
False
4 points
Question 3
Goods are scarce for both rich and poor.
True
False
4 points
Question 4
"The big corporations in this country, like ExxonMobil and GM, have deep pockets and need to be hiring more people." This is a positive statement about economic policy.
True
False
4 points
Question 5
The law of supply states that there is a direct relationship between price and quantity demanded.
True
False
4 points
Question 6
In the circular flow model, firms own economic resources, and householdsbuy the manufactured products and services.
True
False
4 points
Question 7
Households play a dual role of providing the factors of production whilepurchasing the goods and services of firms.
True
False
4 points
Question 8
Opportunity cost is the lowest valued benefit that must be sacrificed asthe result of choosing an alternative.
True
False
4 points
Question 9
Scarcity denotes that our desire for a good exceeds the amount that isfreely available from nature.
True
False
4 points
Question 10
Economics is a social science concerned with satisfying man's unlimitedwants with limited resources.
True
False
4 points
Question 11
Joint output of individuals or nations will be maximized when goods areexchanged between parties in accordance with the law of"comparative advantage".
True
False
4 points
Question 12
The production possibilities frontier assumes that the level of technologyvaries when applying the model.
True
False
4 points
Question 13
Excess demand in the market will cause the price of a product to decline.
True
False
4 points
Question 14
Demand is measured on the vertical axis and supply on the horizontalaxis.
True
False
4 points
Question 15
A change in quantity demanded is a movement along the same demandcurve.
True
False
4 points
Question 16
As globalization and world trade proliferates, individual markets withincountries' economies become more competitive.
True
False
4 points
Question 17
Which growth theory compares a subsistence real wage rate to the actual real wage rate?
Classical growth theory | ||
Inflation growth theory | ||
Neoclassical growth theory | ||
New growth theory |
4 points
Question 18
Suppose the working age population in Tiny Town is 100 people. If 25 of these people are NOT in the labor force, the ________ equals ________.
unemployment rate; 25/100 Ã 100 | ||
employment rate; 25/75 Ã 100 | ||
labor force; 75 | ||
labor force; 25/100 Ã 100 |
4 points
Question 19
Suppose there is a rise in the real wage rate. As a result, the quantity of labor demanded:
increases. | ||
decreases. | ||
does not change because there is no change in the money wage rate. | ||
increases only if the price level also decreases. |
4 points
Question 20
GDP can be computed as the sum of:
all sales that have taken place in an economy over a period of time. | ||
the total expenditures of consumers and business over a period of time. | ||
the total expenditures of consumption, investment, and government expenditure on goods and services over a period of time. | ||
the total expenditures of consumption, investment, government expenditure on goods and services, and net exports over a period of time. |
4 points
Question 21
The real wage rate equals:
(100 x (money wage rate/price level) | ||
(100 x (price level/money wage rate) | ||
(money wage rate x (price level) | ||
(money wage + (number of hours worked/(price level) |
4 points
Question 22
If the CPI was 121.5 at the end of 2007 and 138.3 at the end of 2008, the inflation rate over these two years was:
10.2 percent. | ||
13.8 percent. | ||
12.2 percent. | ||
16.8 percent. |
4 points
Question 23
A movement along the production function is the result of a change in:
the quantity of labor. | ||
technology. | ||
capital. | ||
interest rates. |
4 points
Question 24
All of the following are part of fiscal policy EXCEPT:
setting tax rates. | ||
setting government spending. | ||
choosing the size of the government deficit. | ||
controlling the money supply. |
4 points
Question 25
Along a production possibilities frontier for real GDP and the quantity of leisure time, as leisure time increases, real GDP:
decreases. | ||
increases. | ||
stays the same. | ||
could increase, decrease or stay the same. |
10. | The long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is Y = Yf, which depends on the amounts of resources and the level of technology innovation. If a country has more resources and better technology, which of the following is true? | ||||||||||||||||
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11. | Suppose the wage rates of workers are based on the expected price level. If there is an unexpected increase in AD, it will cause the actual price level to increase. Then workers should raise their expected price level and negotiate a higher wage rate. Then which of the following is most likely to be true when the expected price increases? | ||||||||||||||||
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12. | Suppose the economy is in the long-run equilibrium, i.e., Y = Yf, and there is an unexpected decrease in AD. Assume that Yf is fixed, then which of the following is most likely to be true? | ||||||||||||||||
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13. | The short-run (SR) equilibrium is the intersection between AD and SRAS, and long-run (LR) equilibrium is the intersection between AD and LRAS. Every LR equilibrium is a SR equilibrium, but a SR equilibrium is not always the LR equilibrium. If an economy is operating at a SR equilibrium where Y > Yf, which of the following will occur in the process toward the new LR equilibrium when the economy corrects itself? | ||||||||||||||||
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14. | From the Keynesians, Y = C + I + G + NX can be transformed into a theoretical model. In particular, assume that the consumption C = A + mpc (Y-T), where A is a constant, mpc is the marginal propensity to consume, Y is national income and T is income taxes. Suppose in the goods market equilibrium, aggregate expenditure = national income such that the two Y's will be the same from Y = A + mpc (Y-T) + I + G+ NX. . Suppose C = 400 + 0.75(Y â T). G = 100, I = 100, T = 100, and NX = 150, what is the Y in the goods market equilibrium? (All of the variables are in terms of million dollars) | ||
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15. | Continue to assume that C = 400 + 0.75 (Y - 100), I = 100, and NX = 150. But the government now increases spending from 100 to 200, how much is the new Y in the goods market equilibrium? | ||||||||||||||||
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16. | Continue to assume that C = 400 + 0.75 (Y - 100). Then which of the following is true? | ||||||||||||||||
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17. | Suppose the federal government needs to balance the budget, which means that when the government spending increases, taxes must increase equally. In this case, government spending multiplier is called the balanced-budget multiplier, defined as the increase in real GDP/increase in government spending. By following the example from the previous question, how mcuh is the balanced-budget multiplier? | ||||||||||||||||
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