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Economics 101a Final Exam - Fall 2005, Exams of Economics

This is a final exam for economics 101a course in the fall of 2005. It covers various topics such as the solow growth model, keynesian cross model, quantity theory of money, ricardian theory of debt, is-lm / as-ad model, and phillips curve. The exam consists of multiple-choice questions and problems that require the application of economic theories and models.

Typology: Exams

Pre 2010

Uploaded on 07/30/2009

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Download Economics 101a Final Exam - Fall 2005 and more Exams Economics in PDF only on Docsity! 1 Final Exam - Economics 101a - Fall 2005 You will have 120 minutes to complete this exam. It is divided into 116 points. On multiple choice questions MC#1-MC#37, choose the best answer and mark it on your scantron. Section 1: (30 points total, 3 points each, write on scantron) MC#1: Which of the following would tend to lower the natural rate of unemployment. a) raise the legal minimum wage b) raise unemployment insurance benefits c) increase unionization of the labor force d) increase the money supply e) none of the above MC#2: In the long run, a rise in money supply will lead to a) lower interest rates b) higher prices c) higher output d) lower real wage e) all of the above MC#3: In the Solow growth model, all of the following grow in steady state at the rate of technological progress except: a) GDP per person b) consumption per person c) real rental rate d) real wage MC#4: The Life-cycle and Permanent Income models of consumption are helpful in explaining why consumption rises strongly in response to a) a fall in the interest rate b) a temporary rise in income c) a permanent rise in income d) a tax cut MC#5: According to the Keynesian Cross model of aggregate expenditure, fiscal policy that raises government spending will affect output ______ a tax cut of an equal size. a) more than b) less than c) the same amount as d) in the opposite direction as MC#6: Which of the following can help avoid the ‘time inconsistency’ problem in monetary policy: a) central bank discretion b) efficiency wages c) rational expectations d) an inflation targeting-rule MC#7: Suppose a country has the following Phillips curve: π = π e – 0.4 (u - un), where expectations are adaptive. What is the sacrifice ratio here in terms of output (assuming that we are starting at the natural rate of unemployment, and using Okun’s law)? a) 0 b) 0.4 c) 2.5 d) 5 e) 10 MC#8: Which of the following theories of the short run aggregate supply implies that the real wage falls when GDP rises: a) sticky price model. b) sticky wage model. c) imperfect information model d) none of the above. MC#9: According to the Quantity Theory of Money, which of the following could generate a rise in overall price level: a) a fall in GDP b) a fall in the velocity of money c) a fall in the supply of money d) none of the above MC#10: Under the Ricardian theory of debt, a tax cut today causes national saving to ____. a) rise b) fall c) not change d) move, but the direction is a ambiguous 2 Problem 1: Growth (22 points total) Suppose a country has the following production function: Y = K1/2L1/2 (Note: this is not yet in per- worker terms). Assume that the saving rate is 20%, the depreciation rate is 10%, and that there is no population growth or technological progress. a) (12 points) Using the Solow growth model, compute the steady state values of the following: (show your work) Capital stock per person Consumption per person Real rental rate on capital Real wage rate b) (10 points) Suppose the saving rate is raised in this economy by some unspecified amount. What will happen to the steady state values of the variables in part (a): (mark on your scantron) MC#11: Capital stock per person (a) rise (b) fall (c) no change (d) insufficient information MC#12: Consumption per person (a) rise (b) fall (c) no change (d) insufficient information MC#13: Real rental rate (a) rise (b) fall (c) no change (d) insufficient information MC#14: Real wage rate (a) rise (b) fall (c) no change (d) insufficient information In a couple of sentences explain your answer for the real wage rate above: how are labor supply and labor demand curves in the labor market affected by the higher saving rate in steady state? For the next three problems, assume the following usual conditions hold, unless instructed otherwise. Prices are completely fixed in the short run and completely flexible in the long run. Consumption is a function only of current disposable income, with a constant marginal propensity to consume. Investment is a function only of the interest rate. Real money demand is a function of the interest rate and income. Problem 2: Short Run and Long Run (32 points total, 8 points each section) Suppose Congress decides to cut government spending on a permanent basis to help balance the government budget. Use the IS-LM / AS-AD model to analyze the implications in the short run and the long run. a) (Write in blue book) Draw the IS-LM and AS-AD graphs to show the short run and long run equilibria following this policy. Assume that prices are completely fixed in the short run. Be sure to label the axes, curves, use arrows to show shifts in curves, and mark the equilibrium points: 1 for the initial equilibrium, 2 for the short run equilibrium, and 3 for the long-run equilibrium. Explain briefly why the curves are shifting. b) What happens to the following variables in the short run? (mark on your scantron) MC#15: interest rate: a) rise b) fall c) no change d) ambiguous MC#16: investment: a) rise b) fall c) no change d) ambiguous MC#17: private saving: a) rise b) fall c) no change d) ambiguous MC#18: real money demand: a) rise b) fall c) no change d) ambiguous
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