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Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 Macroeconomics--ECN 201 Assignment for Unit 2 Chapters 4-6 Taylor Text, 3rd edition Remember to explain your responses thoroughly. Be careful most of the questions have several parts. Be sure to answer the complete question. Please answer every question to complete the full assignment. There are no optional questions. 1. Given the information in the following table for three consecutive years in the U.S. Economy, calculate the missing data. Year Nominal GDP in Billions REAL GDP in billions GDP Deflator 1996 1997 1998 7813 8303.805 8759.617 7813 8165 8516.058 100 101.7 102.86 Inflation %change in GDP deflator 1.8 1.7 1.14 Real GDP per capita in 1996 dollars 31264.51 32311.04 33,344 Population in Millions 249.9 252.7 255.4 2. Suppose there are only three goods in the economy: Year Good Price Quantity ________________________________________________________________________ 2001 Apples $ 2.50 1000 Bananas $ 1.25 500 Computers $ 100 10 2002 Item Price Apples Bananas Computers Apples Bananas Computers Quantity 2.5 1000 1.25 500 1 100 $ 3.50 $ 2.25 $ 100 2500 625 100 800 400 14 Item Price Quantity Apples 3.5 800 Bananas 2.25 400 Computers 1 14 2800 900 14 Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 (A) 2001 NOMIAL GDP= 3225 2002 NOMIAL GDP= 3714 (B) (percent change in GDP) Using 2001 Prices 3225 2001 Production 2514 2002 Production 22.05% Decrease in Production Using 2002 Prices 4725 2001 Production 3714 2002 Production 21.40% Decrease in production 21.72% (C )Decrease in Real GDP from 2001 to 2002 (in other words the there is -21.72% change in Real GDP (D) GDP deflator = nominal GDP/real GDP or GDP deflator= 3325/2514= 1.28 * 100 = 128. GDP deflator for 2002 =128 A. Calculate nominal GDP for 2001 and 2002. B. Calculate the percentage change in GDP from 2001 to 2002 using 2001 prices and 2002 prices. C. Calculate the percentage change in real GDP from 2001 to 2002 using your answers from D. What is the GDP deflator for 2002 if it equals 1.0 in 2001? 3. Why does an increase in investment share in GDP require a decrease in some other share? Because when you add all the shares together the must equal 1. The sum of all parts must not be greater than the whole. In this case, the GDP is the whole and it represents 1. The four shares (consumption, investment, net exports and government purchases) make up the GDP. For theoretical purposes if they were evenly divided as a part of GDP, then 25% would go to each share. If for some Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 reason there was a 10% in investment, then there would have to be a 10% decrease in another share. 4. How does the relationship between net exports and the exchange rate tie into the negative relationship between interest rates and net exports? To clarify, it is easiest to show the relationship between all of them at the same time. An increase in the interest rate will cause the exchange rate to rise. This happens because, foreign investers can earn more on their investments by placing them in the United States market. Think about it like a personal savings account, if the interest rate is 3% on your account in one bank but then another bank across the street or across the country will offer 6%, then you will more likely want to put your money in the other bank and take it out of your current bank. So this increase in demand for the US dollar caused by more competing resources, (in this case foreign investors) for a limited amount of the US dollar, puts pressure on the dollar to rise. When the exchange rate rises, it makes the American dollar in compared to currency X more valuable. When this happens, items produced in other countries and sold in the US are less expensive to buy in the US. At the same time, items made in America but exported out, are more expensive. When this happens, net exports will decrease. In other words, the interest rate and the exchange rate are positively related. The exchange rate and the interest rate are both negatively related to net exports. 5. What is the difference between monetary and fiscal policy? monetary policy is how the government goes about controlling the supply of money and therefore the inflation Fisical policy is how the government spends, borrows, and taxes. 6. The following table shows the amount of output that can be produced using different combinations of labor and capita in a hypothetical economy with a given type of technology. For example, 650 units of output are produced when 200 units of labor and 100 units of capital are combined. This table is an example of a production function. a. Hold capital constant at 100 while you increase labor. What happens to output? Out put will increase. You have an diminishing increase with each increase in the amount of labor. For example Look the percent changes in production from one set of numbers to the next. Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 246 400 532 600 400 532 600 618 62.60% 33.00% 12.78% 3.00% b. Now hold labor constant at 100 and raise the level of capital. What happens to output? Out put would increase by a diminishing amount. 324 400 452 492 400 452 492 526 23.46% 13.00% 8.85% 6.91% c. Finally, what happens when you raise labor and capital by the same amount? Out put doubles. As indicated by the red lettered Production amounts in the modified chart below. Labor Capital 50 100 150 200 250 50 100 150 200 250 200 246 278 304 324 324 400 452 492 526 432 532 600 654 700 528 650 734 800 856 618 760 858 936 1000 7. Suppose C = 660, I = 140, G = 200, and X = 0. a. What is GDP? 1000 Calculate each component's share of GDP. i. I= 14% ii. C= 66% iii. G= 20% iv. X= 0% b. Suppose government spending increases to 250 and GDP does not change. What is government spending's share of GDP now? 45% What is the new nongovernment share? 55% c. Without doing any calculations, explain in general terms what happens to C/Y, X/Y, I/Y after the government spending increase in (b) above. Describe the mechanisms by which each of these changes happens. There is government spending and nongovernment spending. When government spending increases and GDP does not change, Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 then nongovrenment spending must decrease, because the sum of the two must equal 1. Y=C+I+G+X When we hold Y constant, which is what we are doing my not increasing GDP in the above example, then if we have a increase in government spending, then we will have an equal total decrease spread out amongst the other shares that belong to the nongovernement shares. It is the sum total of the decrease in each of these nongovermental shares that will be equal to the percent increase in government spending. 8. Why is the sum of all income equal to GDP? Aggregate income is Equal to GDP. subdivided by 6 parts. A. Labor income B. Capital income C. Depreciation D. Indirect Business Tax E. Net income of foreigners F. Statistical discrepancy Aggregate income is Take a farmer who produces $500,000 a year. He has 8 farm hands that he pays $25000 year. That equals $200,000 in labor He pays himself $75,000 year salary. That equals $75,000 in labor He then has 4 tractors that have depreciated $10,000 in depreciaion His total production cost is $285,000 Subtract is cost from what he produced $500,000 Equals his profits $215,000 Now if you add all of the labor cost as follows: $25,000 +$25,000+25,000+25,000+25,000+25,000+25000+25,000+75,000 + Depreication of $10,000 + Profits of $215,000 Equals aggregate income of $500, and also GDP. 9. Determine whether each of the following would be included in GDP, and explain why or why not. Bryon Gaskin Macroeconomics 201 Assignment for Unit 2 a. You buy a used CD from a friend. No, because it is not a newly produced good. b. You buy a new CD from a music shop. Yes, because, you have purchased a new produced good. c. You cook your own dinner. No, because you are not producing anything, however, the act of buying food, would have been considered a part of GDP. d. You hire someone to cook your dinner. Yes, because you are paying for a new performed service. Now if for instance you contract someone to cook your dinner for a year because you think that you will not be able to do it yourself, and then you later decide that you don’t need the cooks services, and instead of not using his services, you allow someone to buy out the cooks contract, then that would not be counted towards GDP.