Exam 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics455 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist643 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade547 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand693 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application626 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, Demand, and Government Policies668 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets547 Questions
Exam 8: Applications: the Costs of Taxation509 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade521 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities543 Questions
Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources452 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System664 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production649 Questions
Exam 14: Firms in Competitive Markets604 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly662 Questions
Exam 16: Monopolistic Competition649 Questions
Exam 17: Oligopoly522 Questions
Exam 18: The Markets for the Factors of Production592 Questions
Exam 19: Earnings and Discrimination511 Questions
Exam 20: Income Inequality and Poverty478 Questions
Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice570 Questions
Exam 22: Frontiers in Microeconomics461 Questions
Exam 23: Measuring a Nation S Income547 Questions
Exam 24: Measuring the Cost of Living565 Questions
Exam 25: Production and Growth527 Questions
Exam 26: Saving, Investment, and the Financial System637 Questions
Exam 27: Tools of Finance534 Questions
Exam 28: Unemployment and Its Natural Rate701 Questions
Exam 29: The Monetary System540 Questions
Exam 30: Money Growth and Inflation504 Questions
Exam 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts540 Questions
Exam 32: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy511 Questions
Exam 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply572 Questions
Exam 34: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand523 Questions
Exam 35: The Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment536 Questions
Exam 36: Six Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy354 Questions
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If the exchange rate is 5 Egyptian pounds per U.S. dollar, a watch that costs $25 US dollars costs
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According to purchasing-power parity, if two countries have the same price level because they have the same prices for all goods and services, then which of the following would equal 1?
(Multiple Choice)
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If a nation is selling more goods and services to foreigners than it is buying from them, then on net it must be buying assets abroad.
(True/False)
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If purchasing power parity holds, then if the price of a basket of goods in the U.S. rose from $1,500 to $2,000 and the price of the same basket in Mexico rose from 12,000 pesos to 18,000 pesos
(Multiple Choice)
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A good in the U.S. costs $20. The same good costs 150 pesos in Mexico. If the nominal exchange rate is 10 pesos per dollar, what is the real exchange rate?
(Multiple Choice)
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Other things the same, an increase in the U.S. real exchange rate makes U.S. goods more expensive relative to foreign goods.
(True/False)
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Last year a country had exports of $50 billion, imports of $60 billion, and domestic investment of $40 billion. What was its saving last year?
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the (hypothetical) information in the following table to answer the following questions.
Table 31-2
-Refer to Table 31-2. Which currency(ies) is(are) have a higher nominal exchange rate than predicted by the doctrine of purchasing-power parity?

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A country recently had saving of 300 billion euros and domestic investment of 200 billion euros. What was the value of this country's net exports? Explain how you found your answer.
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You hold currency from a foreign country. If that country has a higher rate of inflation than the United States, then over time the foreign currency will buy
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If purchasing-power parity holds, when a country's central bank increases the money supply, its
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If the price of a sofa is $800 in the U.S. and 2400 pesos in Argentina, and the exchange rate is 4 pesos per dollar, what is the real exchange rate?
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Suppose that a country has $120 billion of national saving, and $80 billion of domestic investment. Is this possible? Where did the other $40 billion of national savings go?
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In an open economy, gross domestic product equals $3,500 billion, consumption expenditure equals $2100 billion, government expenditure equals $400 billion, investment equals $800 billion, and net exports equals $200 billion. What is national savings?
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If a dollar buys more rice in the China. than in the U.S., then
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If the real exchange rate between the U.S. and Japan is 1, the nominal exchange rate is 100 yen per U.S. dollar and the price of chicken in the U.S. is $2.50 per pound, what is the price of chicken in Japan?
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If citizens of a country are not saving much, it is better to
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