Exam 11: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
Exam 1: What Is Economics57 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist54 Questions
Exam 3: Measuring a Nations Well-Being62 Questions
Exam 4: Measuring the Cost of Living58 Questions
Exam 5: Production and Growth60 Questions
Exam 6: Unemployment60 Questions
Exam 7: Saving, Investment and the Financial System60 Questions
Exam 8: The Basic Tools of Finance56 Questions
Exam 9: The Monetary System58 Questions
Exam 10: Money Growth and Inflation58 Questions
Exam 11: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts59 Questions
Exam 12: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy60 Questions
Exam 13: Business Cycles54 Questions
Exam 14: Keynesian Economics and the Is-Lm Analysis60 Questions
Exam 15: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply61 Questions
Exam 16: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand41 Questions
Exam 17: The Short Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment60 Questions
Exam 18: Supply Side Policies57 Questions
Exam 19: The Financial Crisis and Sovereign Debt60 Questions
Exam 20: Common Currency Areas and European Monetary Union60 Questions
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Which of the following, if undertaken by a SA economic agent, would be classified as foreign direct investment?
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
If a company based in SA prefers a strong rand (a rand with a high foreign exchange value), then the company probably exports more than it imports.
Free
(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
Which of the following would be recorded as a SA merchandise export?
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
If SA has a positive capital inflow, what does this signify?
(Multiple Choice)
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If SA imports total R100 billion and SA exports total R150 billion, which of the following would be true?
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose a cup of coffee is €1.50 in Germany and R0.50 in SA.If purchasing power parity holds, what is the nominal exchange rate between euros and rands?
(Multiple Choice)
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If the SA price level is increasing by 3 per cent annually and the US price level is increasing by 5 per cent annually, by what percentage would the rand price of US dollars need to change according to purchasing power parity?
(Multiple Choice)
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If savings in SA is R300 billion and investment in SA is R550 billion, then
(Multiple Choice)
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If other things remain the same, if a country saves less, then
(Multiple Choice)
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When more rands are needed to buy a unit of Japanese yen, the rand
(Multiple Choice)
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A fall in the rand's nominal exchange rate in terms of US dollars
(Multiple Choice)
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If the nominal exchange rate is 20 SA rands per 1 US dollar, and if the price of a Big Mac is $2 in the USA and R60 in SA, then the real exchange rate is 2/3 SA Big Mac per American Big Mac.
(True/False)
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Suppose the inflation rate over the last 20 years has been 10 per cent in SA, 7 per cent in Japan, and 3 per cent in the USA.If purchasing power parity holds, which of the following statements is true? Over this period,
(Multiple Choice)
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According to purchasing power parity, what is the relationship between changes in price levels between two countries and changes in nominal exchange rates?
(Essay)
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Which of the following people or firms would be pleased by a depreciation of the rand against the US dollar?
(Multiple Choice)
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For any country, net exports are always equal to net capital outflow because every international transaction involves an exchange of an equal value of some combination of goods and assets.
(True/False)
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