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Tutorial Chapter 9 U nemployment & Stagflation

Learn about stagflation, unemployment, and labor force participation rates. Understand the definitions, measurement, and causes of these economic indicators.

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Tutorial Chapter 9 U nemployment & Stagflation

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  1. TutorialChapter 9 Unemployment & Stagflation

  2. 1. Stagflation is defined as the “double trouble” of higher inflation combined with an increase in a. the money supply. b. unemployment. c. the price level. d. corporate profits. B. Stagflation occurs when the economy is stagnating and inflating at the same time.

  3. 2. The labor force is defined as a. individuals over the age of 16 years b. non-institutionalized individuals over the age of 16 years. c. non-institutionalized individuals over the age of 16 years who are working. d. non-institutionalized individuals over the age of 16 years who are working or looking for work. D. The definition of unemployment is what it is because of how the government defines it. D is simply the government’s definition.

  4. 3. Individuals are counted as unemployed if they have a. no job. b. no job and are not looking. c. no job but looked for a job at least once in the last four weeks. d. no job but looked for a job at least once in the last six months. C. By definition, a person has to be actively seeking gainful employment to be considered unemployed. The four weeks is the government’s time frame when seeking employment.

  5. 4. The labor force participation rate is defined as the a. percent of population above the age of sixteen years. b. ratio of the number in the labor force to the population of working age. c. ratio of the number employed to the population of working age. d. civilian labor force divided by the total labor force. B. This is the government’s definition of labor force participation rate.

  6. 5. In the 1970s, as more women entered the labor force, the result was that the a. labor force participation rates for females increased. b. labor force participation rates for females decreased. c. unemployment rate declined. d. labor force declined. A. The ratio of the number women in the labor force increased in relation to the population of working age people.

  7. 6. Workers temporarily unemployed but who normally find jobs quickly are called a. frictionally unemployed. b. cyclically unemployed. c. seasonally unemployed. d. structurally unemployed. A. Frictional unemployment is the normal job search type of unemployment. Recent high school grads and college grads are examples of workers who are frictionally unemployed.

  8. 7. Workers who are unemployed because they lack the skills needed by employers are called a. frictionally unemployed. b. cyclically unemployed. c. seasonally unemployed. d. structurally unemployed. D. Improvements in capital and technology lead to more jobs, but the jobs may remain vacant if the people in the work force do not have the training and skills to meet the requirements for the jobs.

  9. 8. Which of the following occupations would least likely to be subjected to seasonal employment? a. Lifeguard. b. Department store Santa. c. Ronald McDonald clown. d. Easter Bunny. C. Lifeguards, Santa's, and the Easter Bunny are only employed during certain seasons. A Ronald McDonald clown can be employed during any season.

  10. 9. Which of the following occupations would most likely be subject to seasonal unemployment? a. Automobile mechanic. b. Appliance salesperson. c. Television repair-person. d. Farm worker. D. Farming is very subject to the seasons, the other possible answers are not subject to changes in the seasons.

  11. 10. Full unemployment is considered as being equal to the level that combines all of the following except a. frictional unemployment. b. cyclical unemployment. c. seasonal unemployment. d. structural unemployment. B. Full employment includes frictional, seasonal, and structural unemployment, but not cyclical unemployment.

  12. 11. Most economists believe the current level of full employment is represented by an unemployment rate between a. 2 and 4%. b. 4 and 5%. c. 5 and 6%. d. 7 and 9%. C. Making up that 5% and 6% are everyone who is included in frictional, seasonal, and structural unemployment. Even in the best of times there will be certain people who will be actively seeking employment.

  13. 12. What effect would the enactment of compulsory unemployment insurance laws have on unemployment rates? They would a. increase unemployment rates. b. decrease unemployment rates. c. have no impact on unemployment rates. d. decrease the number of discouraged workers. A. The easier it is to remain unemployed, the longer people will take to find a job.

  14. 13. Which of these is likely to increase the most in a severe recession? a. Frictional unemployment. b. Seasonal unemployment. c. Structural unemployment. d. Cyclical unemployment. D. Cyclical unemployment is the type of unemployment that is most susceptible to changes in the economy. Certain jobs are effected by economic downturns before others. For example, carpenters are normally the among the first to experience unemployment when the economy goes into a recession.

  15. 14. When workers are overqualified for their current jobs or can find work only part-time, we refer to this as a. unemployed. b. discouraged workers. c. not in labor force. d. underemployed. D. A person with a doctorate degree who can only find a job flipping burgers at McDonalds is an example of underemployment.

  16. 15. Which of the following about discouraged workers would be correct? They are a. counted in the labor force. b. not counted in the labor force or unemployment numbers. c. counted in the labor force and the unemployment numbers. d. not counted in the labor force but are counted in the unemployment numbers. B. One of the weaknesses in using the unemployment rate as an indicator of how well the economy is doing is that it does not consider the discouraged worker.

  17. 16. Inflation is defined as a(n) a. increase in some prices. b. increase in the price of a specific commodity (or service). c. sustained increase in the general price level. d. sustained increase in the price of a specific commodity (or service). C. Some prices always increase because of the workings of the price mechanism. Only when the general level of prices increase over time can we say that we have inflation.

  18. 17. A sustained increase in the general price level is called a. deflation. b. inflation. c. disinflation. d. hyperinflation. B. A sustained decrease in the average price level is called deflation. Disinflation is a reduction in the rate of inflation. Hyperinflation is a very high rate of inflation.

  19. 18. Demand-pull inflation is induced by a. inward shift in the aggregate demand curve. b. inward shift in the aggregate supply curve. c. outward shift in the aggregate supply and demand curves. d. outward shift in the aggregate demand curve. D. If you draw a downward sloping demand curve and an upward sloping supply curve on a piece of paper and then move the demand curve to the right, you will see that prices will increase. This is called demand-pull inflation.

  20. 19. Cost-push inflation is typically induced by a. inward shift in the demand curve. b. inward shift in the aggregate supply and demand curves. c. outward shift in the demand curve. d. inward shift in the supply curve. D. If you draw a downward sloping demand curve and an upward sloping supply curve on a piece of paper and then move the supply curve to the left, you will see that prices will increase. This is called cost-push inflation.

  21. 20. Cost-push inflation typically follows which of the following patterns? a. Aggregate supply decreases that ultimately causes the price level to increase. b. Aggregate demand and aggregate supply both decreases that ultimately causes the price level to increase. A. A factor that can cause a shift in supply is a change in costs. As costs increases the supplier cannot not afford to supply as much at every price level as used to be the case. A leftward shift of the aggregate supply curve will cause prices to increase. This is called cost-push inflation.

  22. 21. Demand-pull inflation typically follows which of the following patterns? a. Aggregate demand decreases that ultimately causes the price level to increase. b. Aggregate demand increases that ultimately causes the price level to increase. c. Aggregate demand and aggregate supply both increases that ultimately causes the price level to increase. B. Because the downward sloping demand curve is moving to the right along an upward sloping supply curve, the increase in demand will pull the general price level upward.

  23. 22. The Consumer Price Index measures the cost of a. all goods and services produced in the U.S. economy. b. all goods produced in the U.S. economy. c. a fixed market basket of consumer goods and services produced in the U.S. economy. C. The Consumer Price Index does not measure the prices of all goods and services, but only a particular basket of goods and services. As times change and consumers buying habits change, what goes into this basket changes.

  24. 23. If the inflation rate is 14% per year, and your nominal income increases by 13% per year, your real income a. declines slightly. b. increases slightly. c. increases substantially. d. does not change. A. With inflation increasing 1% more than your income increases, your buying power, or real income, goes down by 1%.

  25. 24. A reduction in the rate on inflation is known as a. deflation. b. disinflation. c. inflation. d. hyperinflation. B. If inflation in year one is 6% and 5% in year two, we experience disinflation. We still have inflation in year two, but the inflation rate is lower than in the previous year.

  26. 25. If the deflation rate is 10 percent per year, and your nominal wage rate increases by 11 percent per year, your real wage will a. increase slightly. b. increase substantially. c. not change. d. decrease slightly. B. With a deflation rate of 10% (a fall in the average price level) and a raise in pay of 11%, your real income would rise by 21%.

  27. 26. The real rate of interest can best be expressed as the a. nominal interest rate minus the real rate. b. inflation rate minus the nominal interest rate. c. nominal interest rate minus the inflation rate. d. inflation rate minus the real interest rate. C. For example, in the previous question, your buying power went down by 1% because 14% minus 13% equals -1%.

  28. 27. If the annual inflation rate is 5% per year, and the nominal interest rate is 6%, the real interest rate is ______ per year. a. 1% b. 5% c. 6% d. 11% A. If you pay 6% to borrow money, but you repay the loan in dollars that have decreased in value by 5%, the true cost to you for the loan is only 1%.

  29. 28. Which of the following would best define interest? a. Dollar amount paid to lenders to forego consumption. b. Payment for abstinence. c. Dollar amount paid by borrowers to lenders to forego present consumption. d. Dollar amount paid by lenders to borrowers to forego present consumption. C. People with money can either spend it or save it. In order to forego present consumption, these people need an incentive. The more interest they can earn on their savings, the more incentive there is to save.

  30. 29. Megan recently borrowed money to purchase an automobile at a nominal interest rate of 8% per year. If the inflation rate is 6% per year, what is the real rate of interest on the loan? a. 6% per year. b. 8% per year. c. 4% per year. d. 2% per year. D. By paying back an 8% loan with dollars that have been deflated by 6%, the true cost of the loan is only 2%.

  31. 30. If future price changes were perfectly anticipated by both borrowers and lenders, what would happen to the real rate of interest in the future if the price level changed? Real interest rate would a. increase. b. decrease. c. decrease by the amount of the price increase. d. not change. D. With future price changes exactly anticipated by both borrowers and lenders, interest rates would increase at the same level as prices, and therefore the real interest rate would not change.

  32. 31. Because of the way discouraged workers and part-time employment are reflected in the official statistics, the official unemployment rate a. overstates the unemployment problem. b. understates the unemployment problem. c. truly reflects the level of unemployment. d. overstates the size of the labor force. B. A discourage worker is one who has looked for work for a long time, would still like to have a job, but has quit looking for work because of discouragement.

  33. 32. An individual with a Ph.D. in physics, who can only find employment in a pizza parlor, would normally be considered as a. a discouraged worker. b. underemployed. c. overemployed. d. unemployed. B. This person is still considered fully employed, but is underemployed because their job is well below their qualifications.

  34. 33. If the CPI is 220 one year and 210 the next, the annual rate of inflation is measured by the CPI is approximately a. -4.5%. b. -2.3%. c. 220%. A. The rate of increase or decrease between two numbers is the difference between the two numbers divided by the original number. The difference between 220 and 210 is -10. Negative 10 divided by 220 is equal to a negative .045, which is -4.5%. The answer is a negative number because the CPI has decreased in this example and not increased.

  35. 34. If the CPI is 109 one year and 112 the next, the annual rate of inflation is measured by the CPI is approximately a. 1.45%. b. 2.75%. c. 3.6%. B. The difference between the two numbers divided by the original number is 3 / 109 = .0275 or 2.75%.

  36. 35. Which of the following events ushered in the Great Depression of the 1930s? a. The Smoot Hawley Tariff. b. A decrease in the money supply. c. An increase in taxes. d. all of the above. D. The build up of excessive inventory due to business greed led to the unemployment problem in the early 1930s, but it was these three policies of the government after unemployment became a problem that actually ushered in the depression.

  37. 36. What was the purpose of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff in the early 1930s? a. To raise money. b. Encourage international trade. c. To help bring down inflation. d. To increase the price of imports. D. The thinking was that if we raised the price of imports Americans would buy more domestic products. However, the higher prices led to a decrease in buying power which made the unemployment problem worse.

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