04 Jun b. a downward pressure on U.S. lowskilled
Question
IS and Econ 13 – Final Examination
S. Skaperdas – March 16, 2015
Version (Form) A
Please fill in your scantron, INCLUDING
YOUR VERSION (Form) (A). Be sure to
mark (blacken) the appropriate boxes.
There are 74 questions in this exam. Questions
1-28 are worth 1 point each, whereas questions 29-74 are worth 2 points each (making a total of 120 maximum possible points).
1. Government revenue as a fraction of GDP and GDP per capita
a. are not related at all.
b. are negatively correlated.
c. are positively correlated.
d. have been proven to be causally linked.
e. b and d.
2. Over the past 40 years, productivity
a. has been growing more slowly than wages.
b. has been growing faster than median wages.
c. has been growing just about the same as wages.
d. has been falling while wages have remained stagnant.
e. has been falling while wages have increased.
3. If a country has a population of 1,000, an area of 1,000 square miles and a GDP of $6,000,000, then its GDP per capita is
a. $600.
b. $1,000.
c. $6,000.
d. $10,000.
e. $60,000.
4. Changes in the following variable shift the demand curve for a good.
a. The tastes of the consumers.
b. The preferences of the consumers.
c. The prices of some other goods.
d. The income of consumers.
e. All of the above.
5. Modern economic growth is correlated with
a. the rise of the corporation as a dominant
form of firm organization.
b. an increase in the government’s share of GDP.
c. an expansion of social safety nets.
d. a and c.
e. All of the above.
6. According to Krugman and Wells, productivity is driven by all of the following EXCEPT:
a. physical capital
b. human capital
c. natural resources
d. technological progress
e. innovation.
7. Modern economic growth is correlated with the following characteristics EXCEPT
a. investment in economic infrastructure.
b. a reduction in the importance of traditional communities.
c. government investment in sewers and public health.
d. a reduction in urbanization.
e. lower child-mortality rates.
8. If output is growing at 3.5%, how many years will it take for output to double?
a. 10 years.
b. 20 years.
c. 40 years.
d. 14 years.
e. 28 years.
9. An economy that grows at 2% a year can be expected to double its income in about
a. 20 years
b. 35 years
c. 50 years
d. 70 years
e. 100 years
10. Productivity usually refers to
a. output per worker
b. output per dollar of invested capital.
c. output per acre of land.
d. output per unit of human capital.
e. output per unit of physical capital.
11. Typically, excessive fishing occurs because
a. fishermen rely on enforcers to worry
about fish populations.
b. fishermen do not fully take into account
the effect their fishing has on the future
stock of fish.
c. fishermen are unionized, so they are not
concerned with externalities.
d. shows like the “Deadliest Catch” make
people eat more crab.
e. b and c.
12. The “party of Davos” refers to
a. the participants of the World Aristocracy
Forum.
b. the participants of the World Social
Forum.
c. the party that takes place every June in
Davos, Switzerland.
d. a hypothesized emerging world-wide
elite.
e. a and c.
Suppose that each of Xena and Robinson
face the choice between, on the one hand,
Not Arming and Specializing in Production
(with the intention to Trade) and, on the
other hand, Arming with the intention of
remaining autarkic. Denote the first
“strategy” by N and the second by A. The
matrix of possible outcomes is then as
follows:
13. If Robinson were to pursue his self-interest,
he would choose:
a. N
b. A
c. Sometimes N and sometimes A.
d. Can never be determined from the
information provided.
14. If Xena were to pursue her self-interest, she
would choose:
a. N
b. A
c. Sometimes N and sometimes A.
d. Can never be determined from the
information provided.
15. If Robinson and Xena were each to pursue
their own self-interest, the outcome that will
occur is
a. N for Robinson and N for Xena
b. N for Robinson and A for Xena
c. A for Robinson and N for Xena
d. A for Robinson and A for Xena
e. Can never be determined from the
information provided.
16. The collectively rational outcome is for
a. N for Robinson and N for Xena
b. N for Robinson and A for Xena
c. A for Robinson and N for Xena
d. A for Robinson and A for Xena
e. Can never be determined from the
information provided.
Suppose Bianca takes 4 minutes to produce one
coconut and 1 minute to produce a fish, whereas
Jake takes 6 minutes to produce a coconut and 12
minutes to produce a fish.
17. Bianca’s opportunity cost of 1 coconut is:
a. 1 fish
b. 3 coconuts
c. 4 fish
d. 2 fish
e. 1/4 a fish
18. Jake’s opportunity cost of 1 coconut is:
a. 1/2 a fish
b. 3 fish
c. 4 fish
d. 2 fish
e. 7 coconuts
19. Who has the absolute advantage in
producing coconuts?
a. Bianca
b. Jake
c. Both
d. Neither
e. Cannot be determined
20. Who has the comparative advantage in
producing coconuts?
a. Bianca
b. Jake
c. Both
d. Neither
e. Cannot be determined
21. Suppose the exchange rate for pesos in terms
of dollars in the first year is 5 pesos to 1 dollar.
Xena
N A
Robinso
n
N (No
arming)
Robinson
obtains:
(5coconuts
, 10 fish);
Xena
obtains (10
coconuts,
5 fish)
Robinson
obtains:
(0coconuts
, 0 fish);
Xena
obtains (15
coconuts,
20 fish)
A
(Arming
)
Robinson
obtains:
(20
coconuts,
10 fish);
Xena
obtains (0
coconuts,
0 fish)
Robinson
obtains: (2
coconuts,
6 fish);
Xena
obtains (7
coconuts,
4 fish)
In year two, the exchange rate becomes 10 pesos
to 1 dollar. In this example, the peso:
a. appreciated relative to the dollar.
b. depreciated relative to the dollar.
c. is too cheap.
d. unclear given the information provided.
e. a and c.
22. Suppose the exchange rate for pesos in terms
of euros in the first year is 5 pesos to 1 euro. In
year two, the exchange rate becomes 3 pesos to 1
euro. In this example, the peso:
a. depreciated relative to the euro.
b. is too expensive.
c. appreciated relative to the euro.
d. unclear given the information provided.
e. a and b.
23. Given the exchange rates in the above two
questions, we know that the dollar must have:
a. depreciated relative to the peso
b. appreciated relative to the euro
c. become too expensive
d. unclear given the information provided.
e. a and b.
24. The key statistic to measure economic
growth is
a. Real GDP per capita.
b. The size of the government’s budget.
c. Life expectancy.
d. The Dow Jones market index.
e. A high exchange rate.
25. Restrictions on international trade
a. have been reduced since WWII.
b. include US city taxes on all local sales.
c. were uncommon before WWII.
d. a and b.
e. All of the above.
26. An example of investment spending in the
calculation of GDP is
a. purchase of a bond.
b. purchase of a stock.
c. purchase of insurance.
d. purchase of a new productive machine.
e. All of the above.
27. Globalization is associated with the
following tendencies EXCEPT
a. economic growth in China.
b. some loss of sovereignty on the part of
states.
c. increasing competition for natural
resources.
d. less movement of capital across
countries
e. greater information transmission and
cultural exchanges across countries.
28. For the past decade, the US
a. had a yearly trade deficit (negative trade
balance).
b. had a yearly trade surplus (positive
trade balance).
c. some years it had a trade deficit and
some years a trade surplus.
d. consumed more goods and services than
it produced.
e. a and d.
Please note that the remaining questions are
worth 2 points each.
29. An example of the use of leverage is
a. buying low and selling high.
b. using others as a lever in order to make
money.
c. trading using modern computers.
d. investing by borrowing funds in order to
boost investment returns.
e. the buying of foreign currencies by a
Central Bank that wants to support these foreign
currencies.
30. Externalities
a. Are always negative
b. Are always positive
c. Include the effects of climate
change.
d. Provide a rationale for government
involvement in the economy.
e. c and d.
31. Positive externalities
a. Call for subsidies or public
ownership.
b. Call for taxes or quantitative
restrictions.
c. Imply there is no government
involvement.
d. Imply that private choices are
always by themselves efficient.
e. c and d.
32. Public goods are
a. rivalrous in consumption and
excludable
b. non-rivalrous in consumption and
non-excludable.
c. rivalrous in consumption and nonexcludable
d. non-rivalrous in consumption and
excludable.
e. None of the above.
33. Increasing returns to scale in production
imply
a. decreasing average cost in
production.
b. increasing average cost of
production.
c. constant average cost of
production.
d. first decreasing and then increasing
average cost of production.
e. first increasing and then decreasing
average cost of production.
34. Key areas of government involvement in the
economy include
a. infrastructure investment.
b. regulation of banking and finance.
c. basic research.
d. All of the above.
e. None of the above.
35. Stock markets and other financial markets
a. can exist without any governance.
b. can last only if there are laws and
effective enforcement that protect
investors.
c. have existed since the agricultural
revolution.
d. only require self-regulation on the
part of market participants.
e. a and d.
36. Channels through which influence of
government can be responsible in determining
incomes DOES NOT include:
a. The regulation of finance and
industry.
b. The Bank for International
Settlements.
c. The legal and administrative
intervention in labor markets (e.g., re.
unions)
d. Through international treaties (e.g.,
NAFTA)
e. tax policy.
37. Natural monopolies
a. are characterized by decreasing
average costs of production.
b. are characterized by diminishing
returns.
c. Are naturally pro-competitive.
d. imply either public ownership or
regulation of the industry.
e. b and d.
Note: marking A or D for #37 is correct.
38. The US Federal Reserve
a. was founded in 1776 and was the
first Central Bank created in
industrialized countries.
b. was founded in 1913 after a series
of banking crises.
c. was founded in 1776 and was the
last Central Bank created in
industrialized countries.
d. is the Central Bank’s Central Bank.
e. c and d.
39. Over the past 40 years the US distribution of
income
a. has become less equal.
b. has remained roughly the same.
c. has become more equal.
d. first became less equal and is now
becoming more equal.
e. cannot be determined.
40. Since the onset of the Great Recession, longterm
interest rates (such as on mortgages)
a. have gone down.
b. have gone up.
c. are about the same as before.
d. have followed an indeterminate
path.
e. c and d.
41. Social spending and insurance DOES NOT
include
a. Unemployment compensation
b. Food assistance
c. Housing subsidies
d. Subsidies to agribusiness.
e. Subsidies to the poor.
42. Most of the US federal discretionary budget
is taken by
a. health care expenditures.
b. unemployment insurance.
c. administration.
d. military expenditures.
e. welfare expenditures.
43. Economic policy, especially about the role of
governments and markets, is determined
a. solely by voting.
b. solely through lobbying
c. by a combination of democratic
voice and money influences.
d. just by money influences.
e. in a secret room.
44. David Ricardo, a British political economist
of the 19th century, used the production of
wine and cloth in Britain and Portugal to
illustrate the idea of comparative advantage. In
his classic example, the unit labor costs of
production (i.e., how much labor it takes to
produce one unit of output) of these two goods in
these two countries are
Cloth Wine
Britain 100 110
Portugal 90 80
According to these numbers, which of the
following statements is correct?
a. Britain has comparative advantage
in producing wine.
b. Britain has absolute advantage in
producing wine.
c. Portugal has absolute advantage in
producing wine.
d. Portugal has comparative
advantage in producing cloth.
e. Neither comparative advantage
nor absolute advantage can be
determined by the information
provided.
44. Government subsidies to U.S. farm products
a. are highly uncommon.
b. tend to lower their international price.
c. can be considered a form of trade
protection
d. b and c.
e. All of the above.[DOES NOT
COUNT]
45. Included in GDP would be:
a. the dollar value of a used car sold during
the period.
b. the dollar value of a new car imported
during the period.
c. the dollar value of a new car exported
during the period.
d. the dollar value of a used car imported
during the period.
e. All of the above.
46. The Bretton Woods system was characterized
by
a. the universal adoption of the Gold
standard.
b. the absence of recessions.
c. flexible exchange rates.
d. low levels of cross-country capital
movements.
e. All of the above.
47. When a country has a trade surplus,
a. The financial (or, capital) account must
necessarily be negative.
b. The financial account is positive.
c. The financial account is zero.
d. the value of its exports is higher than
the value of its imports.
e. a and d.
48. Since 1971
a. restrictions on trade gradually increased.
b. only the U.S. dollar has been backed by
gold.
c. no currency has been backed by either
gold or silver.
d only a new currency, the euro, followed
the practice of the Swiss franc to be backed
by gold.
e. only the Icelandic kroner has been
backed by a precious metal successfully.
49. An increase in the cost of producing a good
a. shifts the demand curve to the right.
b. shifts the demand curve to the left.
c. causes a movement along the demand
curve.
d. implies no change in the demand
curve.
e. causes a movement along the supply
curve.
50. An Iowa farmer buys a new truck made in
Connecticut by a Japanese company. As a result
a. US GDP increases, but Japanese
GDP is unaffected
b. GDP for both US and Japan
increase
c. US GDP increases, but Japanese
GDP decreases
d. Japanese GDP increases, but US
GDP is unaffected
e. None of the above
51. Suppose the U.S. market for a certain
industry, say textiles, opens to international
competition through a complete elimination of
trade barriers. Then, other things being equal,
we can expect
a. no effect on employment or wages since
industries such as textiles are never
affected by international competition.
b. an increase in the number of U.S.
workers employed in that industry and
an increase in their wages.
c. a decrease in the number of U.S.
workers employed in that industry and
an increase in their wages.
d. an increase in the number of U.S.
workers employed in that industry and a
decrease in their wages.
e. a decrease in the number of U.S.
workers employed in that industry and a
decrease in their wages.
52. A point outside a production possibilities
frontier
a. indicates that some resources are
unemployed.
b. is unattainable for production purposes
c. is worse than points on the production
possibilities frontier.
d. implies that too much capital and not
enough labor are used.
e. None of the above.
53. Modern economic growth is correlated
a. with increasing urbanization.
b. with an increase in the size of the public
sector.
c. with massive investments in
infrastructure.
d. a and c.
e. All of the above.
54. Suppose that, at a particular price, quantity
demanded is 500 and quantity supplied is 300.
Then, we should expect the price in this market
to
a. Go up because there is excess
demand
b. Go down because there is excess
demand.
c. Go up because there is excess supply.
d. Stay the same.
e. Go up or down, depending on whether
there is excess supply or excess
demand.
55. Economic growth can be represented by
a. a movement along the Production
Possibilities Frontier (PPF).
b. an outward expansion of the PPF.
c. an inward (down and left) shift of the
PPF.
d. a downward shift in the demand curve.
e. b and d.
56. The province of Shanghai in China has
about the same life expectancy and per capita
income as
a. the rest of China.
b. Italy.
c. Bangladesh.
d. India.
e. Ghana.
57. Consider the market for the Samsung
Galaxy Note II. Samsung has started an effective
advertising campaign for its product and more
segments of the population consider it a “cool”
product. At the same time, improvements in
production techniques imply that the Note II is
cheaper to produce. Which of the following
MUST be true?
a. The equilibrium quantity will fall.
b. The equilibrium quantity will rise.
c. The equilibrium price will fall.
d. The equilibrium price will rise.
e. Neither the equilibrium price nor
quantity will be affected.
58. Adam Smith
a. argued in favor of corporations as the
most efficient form of firm organization.
b. considered the corporate form of firm
organization critical for the success of the
industrial revolution.
c. considered the corporate form of firm
organization too immature for the
nineteenth century economy.
d. argued against corporations because of
the intractable problems inherent in the
separation of ownership from
management.
e. a and b.
59. The Democratic Republic of the Congo
(former Zaire)
a. lost more the 5 million people to war over
the past 20 years.
b. is very rich in natural resources.
c. has had a very weak and corrupt
government.
d. All of the above.
e. None of the above.
60. Positive economics refers to
a. analyses that try to understand how the
economy actually works.
b. the positive reinforcement that the media
can employ to pump up the economy.
c. the positive feelings that firms can
induce for the good of the economy.
d. a and b.
e. b and c.
61. The U.S. real median wage for males peaked
a. just before the Great Recession.
b. during the 90s.
c. during the 80s.
d. during the 70s.
e. during the 60s.
62. If all prices were to go down next year, with
production of all goods remaining the same, then
a. real income would be the same
b. nominal income would increase
c. real income would increase
d. real income would decrease.
e. a and b.
63. A tariff on an imported good shifts the
a. supply curve upward and increases both
the equilibrium price and equilibrium
quantity.
b. demand curve upward and decreases
the equilibrium price and equilibrium
quantity.
c. demand curve upward and increases
both the equilibrium price and
equilibrium quantity.
d. supply curve upward and decreases both
the equilibrium price and equilibrium
quantity.
e. supply curve upward, increases the
equilibrium price and decreases the
equilibrium quantity.
64. Suppose the U.S. wanted to improve its
domestic computer industry’s profitability. What
policy could the U.S. government pursue?
a. eliminate any restrictions on computer
imports.
b. impose a tax on exported computers.
c. subsidize the U.S. computer industry.
d. put a quota on exported computers.
e. b and d.
65. The smoking ban on all UC campuses
a. can be expected to yield few known
additional benefits as a result of the absence of
second-hand smoke.
b. can be expected to yield large benefits as
a result of the absence of second-hand smoke.
c. is expected to have no costs.
d. a and c.
e. b and c.
66. Pursuing freer trade is
a. always best for a country.
b. sometimes not in the interest of a
country.
c. always bad for a country.
d. always benefits the citizens of a
country.
e. a and d.
67. One reason many sub-Saharan countries in
Africa are as poor as they are is
a. the soil is less fertile because of the
Sahara.
b. there are few natural resources available
in most countries.
c. political instability combined with civil
wars.
d. the legacy of Spanish conquest.
e. All of the above.
68. Human capital is (are)
a. the machinery and tools that each
individual worker owns.
b. the improvement in labor created by
education and knowledge that is embodied in the
work force.
c. robots that can perform tasks that only
humans could do in the past.
d. general-purpose technology.
e. All of the above.
69. The greater openness of the U.S. economy
over the past three decades has induced
a. higher incomes for almost all U.S.
workers because of cheaper imported
goods.
b. a downward pressure on U.S. lowskilled
workers.
c. an upward pressure on U.S. low-skilled
workers.
d. lower competition in the U.S. job
market.
e. c and d.
70. In evaluating different policies addressing
climate change, taking account of the welfare of
future generations
a. is impossible.
b. depends on the economic growth assumed
between now and then.
c. is not proper because future generations do
not vote.
d. should not be of concern to us.
e. a and c.
71. Economic and financial globalization has
a. reduced the need for transnational
governance.
b. reduced the power of national
governments.
c. increased the bargaining power of
workers in rich countries.
d. increased the bargaining power of
workers in poor countries.
e. a and d.
72. An example of a government transfer is
a. a subsidy to U.S. sugar producers.
b. The State of California’s support for
university research.
c. expenditure on fixing a highway.
d. the salary of a Social Security
Administration employee.
e. the payroll tax.
73. The military superiority of European states
over the rest of the world since the 15th century
could ultimately be attributed to
a. the philosophers of ancient Greece and
Rome.
b. their economies being more advanced
than China in the 15th century.
c. solely to the industrial revolution.
d. advances in military technology induced
by the considerable internal political
fragmentation of Europe.
e. b and c.
74. The following is NOT a social benefit of
public higher education
a. The higher wages of college graduates
b. The intrinsic enjoyment in learning it can
induce.
c. A better educated citizenry many
contribute to the better functioning of
democracy.
d. The innovation induced through basic
research.
e. The stress of getting good grades.
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