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Econ 104 Final Distinction-Level Exam Answers

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Econ 104 Final Distinction-Level Exam Answers

Institution
Econ 104
Course
Econ 104

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Econ 104 Final Review

Comprehensive Final Test

Aggregate Demand Curve - A curve that shows the relationship between the price level an the
level of planned aggregate expenditures in the economy, holding constant all other factors that
affect aggregate expenditure



Microeconomics - the study of how households and firms maek their choices, how they interact
in markets, and how the governmnet attempts to influence thier choices



Macroeconomics - the study of hte economy as a whole, including topics such as inflation,
unemployment, and economic growth



Business Cycle - alternating periods of economic expansion and economic recession



Expansion - the period of the business cycle duirng which total production an total employment
are increasing



Recession - the period of a business cycle during which total production and total employment
are ddecreasing



Economic Growth - the ability of an economy to produce increasing quantities of goods and
services



Inflation Rate - the percentage increase in teh price level from one year to the next



Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - the market value of all final goods and services produced in a
country during a period of time, typically one year, measured using market values not
quantities, includes only current production

,Final good or service - a good or service purchased by a final user



Intermediate good or service - a good or service that is an input into another good or service,
such as a tire on a truck



factors of production - firms use: labor, capital, natural resources and entrepreneurship to
produce goods and services



Transfer payments - payments by the government to households for which the government
does not recieve a new good or service in return, includes social security, not included in GDP



Components of GDP - includes consumption, investment, government purchases, an net
exports: Y = C + I + G + NX



Consumption - spending by the households on goods and services, not including spending on
new houses



investment - spending by firms on new factories, office buildings, machinery, and additions to
inventories, plus spending by households and firms on new houses



Government Purchases - spending by the federal, state, and local government on goods and
services



Net Exports - exports minus imports



Value Added - the market balue a firm adds to a product, allows them to make the profit



Shortcomings of GDP as a measure of total production - household production (goods an
services people produce by themselvs) and the underground economy (buying and selling of

, goods and services that is concealed from the government to avoid taxes or regulations or
because it is illegal



Shortcomings of GDP as a measure of well being - the value of leisure is not included, not
adjusted for pollution or other negative effects of production, not adjusted for changes in crime
and other social problems, measure the size of the pie but not how it is divided up



Nominal GDP - the value of final goods and services evaluated at current-year prices



Real GDP - the value of final goods and services evaluated at base-year prices



Price Level - a measure of the average prices of goods and services in the economy, calculate %
change in price level by looking at change in GDP deflator



GDP deflator - a measure of the price level, calcuated by dividing nomial GDP by real GDP and
multiplying by 100



Gross National Product (GNP) - value of final goods and services produced by the residences of
the US, even if the production takes place outside of the US



National Income - subtract the value of worn out machinery, equiptment and buildings
(deprication/consumption of fixed capital) from GDP equals national income



Labor Force - the sum of te emplyed and unemployed workers in the economy



Unemployment rate - the percentage of labor force that is unemployed: # unemployed divided
by labor force, multiplied by 100

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Econ 104
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