Suggested Answers for Tutorial 8 [Team B] Chapter 31 3. a. When an American art professor spends the summer touring museums in Europe‚ he spends money buying foreign goods and services‚ so U.S. exports are unchanged‚ imports increase‚ and net exports decrease. b. When students in Paris flock to see the latest movie from Hollywood‚ foreigners are buying a U.S. good‚ so U.S. exports rise‚ imports are unchanged‚ and net exports increase. c. When your uncle buys a new Volvo‚ an American is buying a
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Profits Katherine Carpenter Liberty University Econ 213 Gwartney states that profits are; “An excess of sales revenue relative to the opportunity cost of production. The cost component includes the opportunity cost of all resources‚ including those owned by the firm. Therefore‚ profit accrues only when the value of the good produced is greater than the value of the resources used for its production.” An example of a profit would be bakery offers a cheesecake for $20 and the total cost to make
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1) They would undertake a defensive open market sale. 18) Flexibility: Open market operations can be used to conduct a small purchase or sale of securities. Conversely‚ if the desired change in reserves or the base is very large‚ the open market operations tool is strong enough to do the job through a very large purchase or sale of securities Reversibility: Open market operations are easily reversed. If a mistake is made in conducting an open market operation‚ the Fed can immediately reverse
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Price - Elastic Products With the question as stated: When would you want to own a business that sells price-elastic products? I think that any time could be a good time to own a price-elastic business. Obviously‚ the most opportune time would be when the economy is in the state that it is in today. The best kind of business to be in would be a store like Wal-Mart. Because the fact that Wal-Mart can offer almost countless products for sale‚ the price point on any one product can cause a great
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edu/clampitp/phils%20site/internet_broadcast/Hall%20of%20Fame/Starbucks_Coffee_Company.pdf Lisa Baertlein (July 25‚ 2013 )‚ Starbucks profit up‚ U.S http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/25/us-starbucks-results-idUSBRE96O1E920130725 Kyle Spencer[->2] (October 26‚ 2012)‚ Starbucks: Strengths‚ Weaknesses‚ Opportunities‚ and Threats‚ Retrieved from
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Economics Chapter 2 Chapter 2 * Opportunity cost is a ratio. It is the decrease in the quantity produced of one good divided by the increase in the quantity produced of another good as we move along the production possibilities frontier. * The outward-bowed shape of the PPF reflects increasing opportunity cost. The PPF is bowed outward because resources are not all equally productive in all activities. * When goods and services are produced at the lowest possible cost and in the
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How can bursting of an asset-price bubble in the stock market help trigger a financial crisis? * When this happens the price of the bubble will realign with their fundamental economic values‚ companies will see their net worth decline and the value of their collateral they can pledge will drop. It causes a decline in the value of the institutions’ asset‚ whereby causing a decline in the net worth of the company. This deterioration in the balance sheets causes them to deleverage‚ worsening
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ECON 2035 8/27/13 Overview of Financial System * Financial market players: 1. Households 2. Firms‚ which issue stocks and bonds 3. Governments 4. Foreigners * Financial market- a place or channel for buying stocks‚ bonds‚ and other securities 1. Functions of financial markets: a. You have the money b. You can borrow from friends‚ banks‚ etc. c. Get funds in exchange of partnership d. Transferring funds: Savers and spenders (send) (borrow)
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gain from trade are the advantages of specialization • economies normally move toward equilibrium • Three basic econ. questions - What to produce? How to produce? For Whom? • Three economic system ➢ all of it answer those 3 basic econ. questions ➢ types - traditional‚ command/planned‚ market ➢ most of the country are mixed economies (more than one type) Chapter 2 : Economic Models Trade-offs and Trade • An important assumption in economic models is the other things equal assumption
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Study Guide for Exam IV Econ 302/BUS 302 The exam is similar in length and form to the previous 3 exams. Bring a tall‚ green skinny scantron to the exam‚ a calculator‚ and a pencil. Scratch paper will be provided‚ if needed. You will be provided with a copy of the t-distribution on page 920 in the text‚ and the F-distribution on page 925. The formulas for the full F test statistic and the partial F test statistic will be given on the exam. All other formulas you will be expected to know (excluding
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