Principles of Macroeconomics Coursework Rodoula Makri ECON101-EN Question 1: a) Price of substitute good falls - As seen on the diagram above when price of substitute product A rise‚ then demand for substitute product B rises accordingly. Positive relationship between the two. Shift to the right. b) Taste shifts away from the good - Whe the taste shifts away from the good it becomes less desirable‚ making its demand for it decrease. Shift to the left. c) Price of complimentary good
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Macroeconomics Assignment: Unemployment Unemployment Data for August of 2013 Employment (rose/fell/remained unchanged)‚ and the unemployment rate edged (up/down/stayed unchanged) to (?) percent in the last month. Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 169‚000 in August‚ and the unemployment rate was little changed at 7.3 percent‚ the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment rose in retail trade and health care but declined in information. The jobless rate had
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A First Look at Macroeconomics Economic Growth • Definition: the expansion of the economy’s PPF (outward shift) • Measured by the increase in real domestic product (also called real GDP) Costs Benefits Forgone current consumption Technological progress Slow growth rates = real costs (e.g. compromised health care‚ worse roads‚ less housing etc.) Greener environment (questionable) Fluctuations of Real GDP around Potential GDP: the Business Cycle The Okun Gap Definitions: • Actual GDP:
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ECON1102 Macroeconomics 1 Course Outline Semester 2‚ 2013 Part A: Course-Specific Information Students are also expected to have read and be familiar with Part B Supplement to All Course Outlines. This contains Policies on Student Responsibilities and Support‚ Including Special Consideration‚ Plagiarism and Key Dates. It also contains the ASB PROGRAM LEARNING GOALS. Table of Contents 1 STAFF CONTACT DETAILS 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 1.1 Communications with
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expectations‚ income‚ and other goods. Examples of a shift in supply would be price inputs and technology. I believe that I am comfortable with supply and demand; however‚ I struggle with the graphs and the visuals of the shift. By taking macroeconomics before this class‚ in ways has prepared me to have a better understanding of microeconomics and how the economy is studied. Joan Sancho Gathering from chapter one reading‚ it states “a key element in getting people to recognize that lunches
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GREAT RECESSIONS OF THE WORLD GLOBAL MACROECONOMICS Abstract The NBER in the United States defines a recession as: “A recession is a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy‚ lasting more than a few months (more than two quarters)‚ normally visible in real GDP‚ real income‚ employment‚ industrial production‚ and wholesale-retail sales.” In this study of global recessions of the world our aim is to prepare a cause and effects analysis for four major recessions
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_____ Lower prices HIgher prices No change in prices Any of the above 5 points Question 8 1. Business cycles are measured by fluctuations in ______ Prices Currency exchange rate Real GDP Trade Deficit 5 points Question 9 1. Recessions usually cause _______ Inflation Hyperinflation Lower money supply
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Macroeconomics of Healthcare Douglas A. Propp‚ MD‚ MS‚ FACEP‚ CPE Chair‚ Department of Emergency Medicine Advocate-Lutheran General Hospital Clinical Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine University of Chicago As Emergency Physicians‚ we are frequently peripherally exposed to healthcare economic statistics‚ policies‚ and debates with little concern for mastering these concepts‚ feeling that they have little to do with our practice of Emergency Medicine. Although a working knowledge
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to eliminate business cycles. (d) wages and prices don’t adjust quickly‚ so the economy is slow to return to equilibrium. Answer: B 4. (4 points) The country of Old Jersey produces milk and butter‚ and it has published the following macroeconomic data‚ where quantities are in gallons and prices are dollars per gallon. | |2003 | |2004 | |Good |Quantity |Price | |Quantity
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Fundamentals of Macroeconomics ECO/372 Principles of Macroeconomics Alisha Wisniewski May 28‚ 2013 David Aloyan Part 1 Using Resource: Figure 3-1 in Ch. 3 of Macroeconomics 1. Gross Domestic Product – Is value of how much every household and a business can produce within the United States in a year. 2. Real GDP – The dollar amount of money made by businesses‚ government‚ and households combined. 3. Nominal GDP – GDP without taking in account other factors like inflation. It
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