Deck 9: Part A: Business Cycles, Unemployment, and Inflation

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Question
Use the following data to calculate: (a) the size of the labour force and (b) the official unemployment rate.Total population 1,500; population under age 15 and institutionalized, 360; not in labour force, 450; unemployed, 69; workers with part-time jobs who are looking for full-time jobs, 30.
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Question
Why might the unemployment rate increase when the economy moves into its recovery phase?
Question
Which types of industries are hit hardest by a recession? Explain.
Question
What is meant by the term business cycle? List the four phases of the business cycle.
Question
What is Okun's law? Give an example of how it works.
Question
Discuss the unequal burden of unemployment for different demographic groups in Canada.
Question
What phase of the business cycle is the Canadian and your provincial economy experiencing at the present time? Justify your answer.
Question
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table. In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.   (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased? (b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment? (c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?  <div style=padding-top: 35px> (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased?
(b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment?
(c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.   (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased? (b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment? (c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
"The economic cost of unemployment is measured by the GDP gap." Explain this statement.
Question
Define the "full-employment" or "natural" rate of unemployment and give its approximate percentage rate as economists currently define it.
Question
According to most economists, what is the immediate cause of the business cycle? Give an example of how this causes expansion and contraction in the business cycle.
Question
How is the unemployment rate affected if employment increases from 9 million to 9.5 million and the labour force increases from 10 million to 11 million?
Question
If the population is 26.7 million, the labour force is 13.6 million, and the number measured as unemployed is 0.68 million, what is the rate of unemployment?
Question
Calculate the rate of inflation between Year 1 and Year 2.The price index in Year 1 was 124.0.It was 130.7 in Year 2.
Question
What is inflation and how is it measured?
Question
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment in month 1 and month 2 of the same year.Make the computations necessary to complete the table. In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment in month 1 and month 2 of the same year.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
What are the economic and non-economic costs of unemployment?
Question
"The increasing importance of durable goods has made our economy more vulnerable to cyclical fluctuations." Explain and evaluate.
Question
What are two criticisms of the unemployment rate? How do these criticisms relate to the overstating or understating of the unemployment rate?
Question
Explain the differences among the frictional, structural, cyclical, and seasonal forms of unemployment.
Question
"Inflation is a harsh and arbitrary form of taxation." Do you agree? If so, who pays this tax?
Question
Evaluate the statement: "Anticipated inflation is not too much a problem."
Question
Describe and explain what is meant by clipping coins, from an economic perspective.
Question
Explain the difference between real and nominal income.How can you get an approximation of the percentage change in real income from one-time period to another?
Question
What is "demand-pull" inflation?
Question
Assume that nominal income is $35,000 and the price index is 1.20 in year 1.In year 2, nominal income rises to $38,000 and the price index rises to 1.25.What was the percentage change in real income from year 1 to year 2? What was the absolute amount of increase in real income? Make your calculations of the percentage change in real income and the absolute change in real income using the approximation formula and using the more precise method with index numbers.
Question
How has the rate of inflation in Canada changed in the past five decades?
Question
Answer the next four questions based on the following data using year 1 as the base year.All dollars are in billions. Answer the next four questions based on the following data using year 1 as the base year.All dollars are in billions.   (a) Find real income in year 4.(b) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 1 and 3? (c) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 2 and 4? (d) What was the increase in real income from year 3 to year 4 in %?<div style=padding-top: 35px> (a) Find real income in year 4.(b) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 1 and 3?
(c) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 2 and 4?
(d) What was the increase in real income from year 3 to year 4 in %?
Question
How does inflation affect the economy's real level of output and why does output change in this way?
Question
Describe and explain what is meant by downward sticky wages and unemployment.
Question
What is hyperinflation and what are its effects?
Question
Describe cost-push inflation and its major source.
Question
The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years. The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years.   (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4? (b) Using the rule of 70, determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?  <div style=padding-top: 35px> (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4?
(b) Using the "rule of 70," determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?
The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years.   (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4? (b) Using the rule of 70, determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
Some economists believe that moderate inflation cannot be accepted because a gradual increase in prices leads to an ever-rising rate of inflation.Other economists argue that in order to achieve rapid economic growth, some moderate price increases are necessary, and that rigid price stability would cause considerable unemployment.Contrast and evaluate these two points of view.
Question
Inflation is frequently described as "too much money chasing too few goods." Is this an acceptable definition?
Question
Evaluate the statement: "Inflation only benefits the rich."
Question
Explain the concept of Core Inflation
Question
Describe and explain the specter of deflation.
Question
Explain the difference between nominal and real interest rates.
Question
Explain how policy makers Core Inflation data to assess whether any deliberate changes are in polices aimed at achieving acceptable levels of Inflation.
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Deck 9: Part A: Business Cycles, Unemployment, and Inflation
1
Use the following data to calculate: (a) the size of the labour force and (b) the official unemployment rate.Total population 1,500; population under age 15 and institutionalized, 360; not in labour force, 450; unemployed, 69; workers with part-time jobs who are looking for full-time jobs, 30.
(a) 690 (1,500 - 360 - 450 = 690).
(b) 10% (69/690 = 0.10; 0.10 ×\times 100 = 10%).Ignore the part-time workers as they are counted as being employed.
2
Why might the unemployment rate increase when the economy moves into its recovery phase?
During a recovery the unemployment rate can increase as a result of an increase in frictional unemployment.Some employed workers may feel more confident in switching jobs given the improving economic and labour market conditions and thus choose to become unemployed frictionally to search for a new position.Furthermore, economic recovery may also entice discouraged workers who were not in the labour force to begin searching for work again.This surge in the unemployed can cause the unemployment rate to be higher.
3
Which types of industries are hit hardest by a recession? Explain.
Industries specializing in consumer durable goods production and capital goods production are hardest hit.When economic activity slows, people postpone purchases of durable goods which worsens the downturn.Likewise, businesses postpone the purchase of new equipment and plant expansion if they expect a downturn.These slowdowns in business spending cause further deterioration in economic activity.
4
What is meant by the term business cycle? List the four phases of the business cycle.
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5
What is Okun's law? Give an example of how it works.
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6
Discuss the unequal burden of unemployment for different demographic groups in Canada.
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7
What phase of the business cycle is the Canadian and your provincial economy experiencing at the present time? Justify your answer.
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8
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table. In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.   (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased? (b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment? (c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?  (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased?
(b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment?
(c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment during year 1 and year 5.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.   (a) How is it possible that both employment and unemployment increased? (b) Would you say that year 5 was a year of full employment? (c) Why is the task of maintaining full employment over the years more than just a problem of finding jobs for those who happen to be unemployed at any given time?
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9
"The economic cost of unemployment is measured by the GDP gap." Explain this statement.
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10
Define the "full-employment" or "natural" rate of unemployment and give its approximate percentage rate as economists currently define it.
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k this deck
11
According to most economists, what is the immediate cause of the business cycle? Give an example of how this causes expansion and contraction in the business cycle.
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12
How is the unemployment rate affected if employment increases from 9 million to 9.5 million and the labour force increases from 10 million to 11 million?
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13
If the population is 26.7 million, the labour force is 13.6 million, and the number measured as unemployed is 0.68 million, what is the rate of unemployment?
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14
Calculate the rate of inflation between Year 1 and Year 2.The price index in Year 1 was 124.0.It was 130.7 in Year 2.
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15
What is inflation and how is it measured?
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16
In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment in month 1 and month 2 of the same year.Make the computations necessary to complete the table. In the table below are statistics showing the labour force and total employment in month 1 and month 2 of the same year.Make the computations necessary to complete the table.
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17
What are the economic and non-economic costs of unemployment?
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18
"The increasing importance of durable goods has made our economy more vulnerable to cyclical fluctuations." Explain and evaluate.
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19
What are two criticisms of the unemployment rate? How do these criticisms relate to the overstating or understating of the unemployment rate?
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20
Explain the differences among the frictional, structural, cyclical, and seasonal forms of unemployment.
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21
"Inflation is a harsh and arbitrary form of taxation." Do you agree? If so, who pays this tax?
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22
Evaluate the statement: "Anticipated inflation is not too much a problem."
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23
Describe and explain what is meant by clipping coins, from an economic perspective.
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24
Explain the difference between real and nominal income.How can you get an approximation of the percentage change in real income from one-time period to another?
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25
What is "demand-pull" inflation?
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26
Assume that nominal income is $35,000 and the price index is 1.20 in year 1.In year 2, nominal income rises to $38,000 and the price index rises to 1.25.What was the percentage change in real income from year 1 to year 2? What was the absolute amount of increase in real income? Make your calculations of the percentage change in real income and the absolute change in real income using the approximation formula and using the more precise method with index numbers.
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27
How has the rate of inflation in Canada changed in the past five decades?
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28
Answer the next four questions based on the following data using year 1 as the base year.All dollars are in billions. Answer the next four questions based on the following data using year 1 as the base year.All dollars are in billions.   (a) Find real income in year 4.(b) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 1 and 3? (c) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 2 and 4? (d) What was the increase in real income from year 3 to year 4 in %? (a) Find real income in year 4.(b) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 1 and 3?
(c) What was the percentage rise in prices between years 2 and 4?
(d) What was the increase in real income from year 3 to year 4 in %?
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29
How does inflation affect the economy's real level of output and why does output change in this way?
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30
Describe and explain what is meant by downward sticky wages and unemployment.
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31
What is hyperinflation and what are its effects?
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32
Describe cost-push inflation and its major source.
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33
The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years. The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years.   (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4? (b) Using the rule of 70, determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?  (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4?
(b) Using the "rule of 70," determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?
The table below shows the price index in the economy at the end of four different years.   (a) What is the rate of inflation in years 2, 3, and 4? (b) Using the rule of 70, determine how many years would it take for the prices to double at each of these three inflation rates?
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34
Some economists believe that moderate inflation cannot be accepted because a gradual increase in prices leads to an ever-rising rate of inflation.Other economists argue that in order to achieve rapid economic growth, some moderate price increases are necessary, and that rigid price stability would cause considerable unemployment.Contrast and evaluate these two points of view.
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35
Inflation is frequently described as "too much money chasing too few goods." Is this an acceptable definition?
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36
Evaluate the statement: "Inflation only benefits the rich."
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37
Explain the concept of Core Inflation
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38
Describe and explain the specter of deflation.
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39
Explain the difference between nominal and real interest rates.
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40
Explain how policy makers Core Inflation data to assess whether any deliberate changes are in polices aimed at achieving acceptable levels of Inflation.
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