4: macroeconomics/international business Flashcards

1
Q

what are leakages?

A

when income is used for purposes other than domestic consumption (savings, taxes, and imports)

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2
Q

what are injections?

A

sources of amounts added to domestic production that do not result from domestic consumption expenditures (gov spending, gov subsidiaries, investment spending)

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3
Q

what is GDP

A

gross domestic product is the total market value of all final goods and services produced within the borders of a nation in a particular period. note that GDP includes the output of foreign owned factories in the US but excludes the output of US owned factories operating abroad

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4
Q

what is nominal GDP

A

nominal GDP measures the value of all final goods and services produced within the borders of a nation in terms of current dollars

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5
Q

what is real GDP

A

real GDP measures the value of all final goods and services produced within the borders of a nation in terms of constant prices.

real GDP=nominal GDP/GDP deflator x 100
deflator is the price index used to adjust nominal GDP for changes in overall prices of goods and services.

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6
Q

how is GDP calculated under the expenditure approach

A

Government purchases of goods and services
gross private domestic investment
personal consumption expenditures
net exports (exports-imports)

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7
Q

how is GDP calculated under the income approach

A
income of proprietors
profits of corporations
interest
rental income
adjustments for net foreign income
taxes
employee compensation
depreciation
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8
Q

what is cyclical unemployment

A

downturn in business cycle

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9
Q

what is frictional unemployment

A

transition or imperfect information

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10
Q

what is structural unemployment

A

jobs they had previously have been greatly reduced or eliminated. resulting from technological advances or because lack is skills available for job

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11
Q

what is unemployment rate

A

unemployment/size of labor force

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12
Q

what is natural rate of unemployment

A

all unemployment except cyclical/size of labor force

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13
Q

In the macroeconomic context, investment includes spending on

A
  1. Residential construction;
  2. Nonresidential construction;
  3. Business durable equipment;
  4. Business inventory
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14
Q

list the factors that shift aggregate demand

A

changes in wealth, changes in real interest rates, changes in expectations about the future economic outlook, changes in exchange rates, changes in gov spending, changes in consumer taxes

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15
Q

list the factors that shift short run aggregate supply

A

changes in resource costs
resource availability
technological advances

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16
Q

what is the definition of a business cycle

A

business cycles are defined as the ride and fall of economic activity relative to its long term growth trend

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17
Q

phases of a typical business cycle

A

expansionary phase: rising growth in economic activity (real GDP)
peak: high point of economic activity
contractionary phase: declining growth in economic activity
trough: low point of economic activity
recovery phase: economic activity starts to increase and return to its long term trend

18
Q

how is a recession defined

A

a recession is defined as a period during which real GDP is falling for at least two consecutive quarters. recessions are characterized by falling real output and rising unemployment

19
Q

what are the characteristics of depression

A

a depression is a very severe recession. a depression is characterized by a sustained period of falling real GDP and high rates of unemployment.

20
Q

economists generally agree that business cycles result from what

A

shifts in aggregate demand and aggregate supply

21
Q

What happens to price levels and purchasing power during inflation

A

During a period of inflation, the general level of prices is increasing, or the purchasing power of the dollar is decreasing. increase rates increase

22
Q

what is the consumer price index and its purpose

A

The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (published monthly) relates the prices paid by all urban consumers for a “basket” of goods and services during a period to the price of the “basket” in a prior reference period.
commonly used to measure deflation/inflation
purpose is to measure and compare prices over time
(current-prior)/prior

23
Q

what are the causes of demand pull inflation and cost pull inflation

A

demand pull inflation is caused by increases in aggregate demand. spending for domestic goods exceeds productive capacity of economy

cost push inflation: caused by reduction in short run aggregate supply

24
Q

list the three ways the federal reserve could increase the money supply

A

purchase government securities on the open market
lower the discount rate
lower the required reserve ratio

25
Q

explain the relationship between interest rates and the money supply

A

an increase in money supply leads to a decrease in interest rates and viseversa

26
Q

what is the likely impact of a decrease in the money supply on interest rates, real GDP, and the overall price level

A

increase interest rates, decrease real GDP, decrease overall price level

27
Q

name the motivations for developing international business operations

A

comparative advantage
imperfect markets: barriers to trade
product cycle: establishment of foreign subsidiaries to more efficiently capitalize on foreign demand for domestic products

28
Q

identify three inherent risks of international business operations

A

exchange rate fluctuation
operating in foreign economies
political risk

29
Q

what are import quotas and import tariffs

A

import quotas: restricts quantity that can be imported

import tariffs: tax on imported goods

30
Q

three main accounts USA reports international activity

A

current, capital. financial

31
Q

Average propensity to consume (APC):

Average propensity to save (APS):

A

Average propensity to consume (APC): Measures the percent of disposable income spent on consumption goods. APC = CS/DI
Average propensity to save (APS): Measures the percent of disposable income not spent, but rather saved. APS = S/DI
APC + APS = 1

32
Q

what is inflation and deflation

A

Inflation (or inflation rate) is the annual rate of increase in the price level; deflation (or deflation rate) is the annual rate of decrease in the price level.

33
Q

Transfer pricing?

A

Transfer pricing is the determination of the amounts at which transactions between affiliated entities will be recorded. The issue of transfer pricing has special significance when the affiliated entities are located in different countries.

34
Q

name the factors influencing exchange rates

A

trade related factors; relative inflation rates, relative income levels, government controls
financial factors: relative interest rates, capital flows

35
Q

identify the three categories of exchange rate exposure

A

transaction risk: balances from prior transactions
economic risk: alter value of future transactions
translation risk: conversion of FS

36
Q

what is Globalization

A

The movement toward a more integrated and interdependent world economy, evidenced by the increased mobility of goods, services, labor, technology and capital throughout the world.

37
Q

what type of crisis is addressed by international monetary fund

A
  1. Currency crisis—When speculation in the exchange value of a currency causes a dramatic depression in its value
  2. Banking crisis—When a loss in confidence in the banking system of a country leads to a run on banks
  3. Financial debt crisis—When a country cannot meet its foreign debt obligations
38
Q

what is the objective of the world bank

A

The objective of the World Bank is to promote general economic development, especially in developing countries, primarily by leading for infrastructure, agricultural, education, and similar needs.

39
Q

what is a frequently used statistical measure of globaliztion

A

world trade expressed as a percentage of GDP

40
Q

what is meant by a shift in economic balance of power

A

the ability of the worlds emerging nations to contend with the economies of the industrialized world for power, resources, influence, ect. is a change or shift in the economic balance of power from previous decades.