ECON 291 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1-10: Human Capital, Golden Rule, Amedeo Modigliani

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Junjie Liu – Econ 291 Practice Multiple Choice
1
Measuring the Macroeconomy
1. An intermediate good is a good that is
A) neither normal nor inferior.
B) used as an input.
C) a stand-in for all goods.
D) is tangible good that includes substantial services.
2. Jim's Nursery produces and sells $1100 worth of flowers. Jim uses no intermediate inputs. He
pays his workers $700 in wages, pays $100 in taxes and pays $200 in interest on a loan. Jim's
contribution to GDP is
A) $900.
B) $1000.
C) $1100.
D) $1800.
3. Acme Steel Co. produces 1000 tons of steel. Steel sells for $30 per ton. Acme pays wages of
$10,000. Acme buys $15,000 worth of coal, which is needed to produce the steel. Acme pays
$2,000 in taxes. Acme's contribution to GDP is
A) $15,000.
B) $20,000.
C) $30,000.
D) $45,000.
4. You are a baker. You paid $150K in wages, $50K for dough, $20K for utilities, $5K in
interest for a business loan, $25K in taxes, and made a profit of $10K. How much did you
contribution to GDP using the product approach?
A) $80K
B) $85K
C) $190K
D) $260K
5. Suppose we have the following information about a plumber: wages $30,000, repair sales
$200,000, taxes $5,000, loan interest $15,000, plumbing materials $20,000. What is the
contribution to GDP of this plumber using the product approach?
A) $200,000.
B) $180,000.
C) $50,000.
D) $30,000.
6. The value of a producer's output minus the value of all intermediate goods used in the
production of that output is called the producer's
A) net output.
B) accounting profit.
C) value added.
D) profit margin.
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Junjie Liu – Econ 291 Practice Multiple Choice
2
7. Suppose that the government collects $3 million in taxes, pays $2 million in social security
benefits, and pays workers $1 million to sit at their desks and work as little as possible. The
government's contribution to GDP is
A) $0.
B) $1 million.
C) $3 million.
D) $4 million.
8. The income-expenditure identity is best paraphrased as
A) all spending generates income.
B) all profits are used for investment spending.
C) on average, consumers cannot save.
D) on average, government can spend no more than what it collects in income taxes.
9. Additions to inventory are
A) not counted as an expenditure in GDP accounting.
B) counted as an intermediate input.
C) counted as a component of investment spending.
D) subtracted from sales revenue in calculating profit income.
10. GDP may inaccurately measure the value of aggregate output because it may not properly
account for
A) production in the underground economy and the true value of government production.
B) the true value of government production and the proper value of purchases and sales of used
goods.
C) the proper value of purchases and sales of used goods and depreciation of consumer durables.
D) the depreciation of consumer durables and production in the underground economy.
11. If real GDP grows faster than nominal GDP, it is a sign that
A) inflation is negative.
B) there is no inflation.
C) there is inflation, but little.
D) there is galloping inflation.
12. Real GDP values current production at
A) current year prices.
B) the best estimate of next year's prices.
C) the average of price levels over the entire sample period.
D) base year prices.
For the following questions, suppose an economy produces only food and clothing, and that price
and quantity data are given in the table below.
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Junjie Liu – Econ 291 Practice Multiple Choice
3
13. Year 1 nominal GDP is
A) $200.
B) $270.
C) $310.
D) $390.
14. Year 2 nominal GDP is
A) $200.
B) $270.
C) $310.
D) $390.
15. Suppose that Year 1 is the base year. Year 2 real GDP is
A) $200.
B) $270.
C) $310.
D) $390.
16. Suppose that Year 2 is the base year. Year 1 real GDP is
A) $200.
B) $270.
C) $310.
D) $390.
17. Suppose that Year 1 is the base year. What is the growth rate of GDP?
A) 35%
B) 55%
C) 70%
D) 110%
18. Suppose that Year 2 is the base year. What is the growth rate of GDP?
A) 44.4%
B) 58%
C) 67.5%
D) 120%
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