Deck 23: Measuring a Nation S Income

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Question
An economy's income is the same as its expenditure because every transaction has a buyer and a seller.
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Question
Macroeconomic statistics tell us about a particular household, firm, or market.
Question
In years of economic contraction, firms throughout the economy increase their production of goods and services, employment rises, and jobs are easy to find.
Question
GDP is the most closely watched economic statistic because it is thought to be the best single measure of a society's economic well-being.
Question
The basic tools of supply and demand are central to microeconomic analysis but are of little use to macroeconomics.
Question
GDP includes the value of paper clips but does not also count the value of the metal used to make them.
Question
GDP excludes the value of intermediate goods because their value is included in the value of final goods.
Question
The goal of macroeconomics is to explain the economic changes that affect many households, firms, and markets simultaneously.
Question
Macroeconomic statistics include GDP, the inflation rate, the unemployment rate, retail sales, and the trade deficit.
Question
GDP adds together many different kinds of products into a single measure of the value of economic activity by using market prices.
Question
Microeconomics and macroeconomics are closely linked.
Question
GDP is the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time.
Question
For an economy as a whole, income must exceed expenditure.
Question
GDP can measure either the total income of everyone in the economy or the total expenditure on the economy's output of goods and services, but GDP cannot measure both at the same time.
Question
U.S. GDP includes the market value of rental housing, but not the market value of owner-occupied housing services.
Question
U.S. GDP excludes the production of most illegal goods.
Question
Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole.
Question
GDP is the market value of all final goods and services produced by a country's citizens in a given period of time.
Question
Both the value of hamburgers sold by a restaurant and the value of the beef it used to make these hamburgers are included in GDP.
Question
U.S. GDP includes estimates of the value of items that are produced and consumed at home, such as housework and car maintenance.
Question
While GDP includes tangible goods such as books and bug spray, it excludes intangible services such as the services provided by teachers and exterminators.
Question
Expenditures by households on education are included in the investment component of GDP.
Question
If the value of an economy's imports exceeds the value of that economy's exports, then net exports is a negative number.
Question
At a rummage sale, you buy two old books and an old rocking chair; your spending on these items is not included in current GDP.
Question
Most goods whose purchases are included in the investment component of GDP are used to produce other goods in future periods.
Question
New home construction is included in the consumption component of GDP.
Question
The investment component of GDP refers to financial investment in stocks and bonds.
Question
If someone in the United States buys a surfboard produced in Australia, then that purchase is included in both the consumption component of U.S. GDP and the net exports component of U.S. GDP.
Question
Additions to inventory subtract from GDP, and when the goods in inventory are sold, the reductions in inventory add to GDP.
Question
If a good produced this quarter goes into inventory, then it is included in this period's GDP. If it is sold in the next quarter, it will have no effect on GDP.
Question
When an American doctor opens a practice in Bermuda, his production there is part of U.S. GNP.
Question
Disposable personal income is the income that households and noncorporate businesses have left after satisfying all their obligations to the government.
Question
The government's purchases of goods but not its purchases of services are included in GDP.
Question
If the U.S. government reports that GDP in the third quarter was $16 trillion at an annual rate, then the amount of income and expenditure during quarter three was $4 trillion.
Question
Expenditures by households on education are included in the consumption component of GDP.
Question
The government purchases component of GDP includes salaries paid to soldiers but not Social Security benefits paid to the elderly.
Question
Changes in inventory are included in the investment component of GDP.
Question
When an American doctor opens a practice in Bermuda, his production there is part of U.S. GDP.
Question
The government computes measures of income other than GDP because these other measures usually tell different stories about overall economic conditions.
Question
If a firm produces a good and then adds it to its inventory rather than selling it, for the purposes of GDP accounting the firm is considered to have "purchased" the good so it will count as part of that period's investment expenditures.
Question
If consumption is $4000, exports are $300, government purchases are $1000, imports are $400, and investment is $800, then GDP is $5700.
Question
U.S. GDP was almost $12 trillion in 2015.
Question
If nominal GDP is $10,000 and real GDP is $8,000, then the GDP deflator is 125.
Question
If Brazil buys $100 million of tractors from the U.S., then U.S. net exports will decrease.
Question
Real GDP is a better gauge of economic well-being than is nominal GDP.
Question
Real GDP evaluates current production using prices that are fixed at past levels and therefore shows how the economy's overall production of goods and services changes over time.
Question
If consumption is $7000, exports are $600, government purchases are $2000, government transfers are $900, imports are $800, and investment is $1000, then GDP is $9,800.
Question
Changes in real GDP reflect only changes in the amounts being produced.
Question
If total spending rises from one year to the next, then the economy must be producing a larger output of goods and services.
Question
A consumer buys toys made in China. The value of the toys is included only in the net exports component of GDP.
Question
The term real GDP refers to a country's actual GDP as opposed to its estimated GDP.
Question
Changes in the GDP deflator reflect only changes in the prices of goods and services.
Question
An increase in nominal U.S. GDP necessarily implies that the United States is producing a larger output of goods and services.
Question
Nominal GDP uses constant base-year prices to place a value on the economy's production of goods and services, while real GDP uses current prices to place a value on the economy's production of goods and services.
Question
If exports are $500, GDP is $8000, government purchases are $1200, imports are $700, and investment is $800, then consumption is $6200.
Question
If consumption is $1800, GDP is $4300, government purchases are $1000, imports are $700, and investment is $1200, then exports are $300.
Question
If real GDP and the GDP deflator both rise, then it must be that nominal GDP rose.
Question
In 2015, government purchases were the largest component of U.S. GDP.
Question
The output of goods and services produced in the United States has grown on average 3 percent per year since 1965.
Question
The overall effect of accounting for purchases of foreign goods in GDP reduces GDP.
Question
The GDP deflator can be used to take inflation out of nominal GDP.
Question
​GDP can be measured in terms of expenditures but not income, since income is subject to taxation.
Question
If real GDP is higher in one country than in another, then we can be sure that the standard of living is higher in the country with the higher real GDP.
Question
GDP is adjusted to reflect changes in the quality of the environment such as changes in air and water quality.
Question
​When you purchase a run-down 1965 Ford Mustang to restore and resell, the purchase of the vehicle and all restoration expenditures are included in current GDP.
Question
GDP is a good measure of economic well-being for all purposes.
Question
Recessions are associated with lower incomes, rising unemployment, and falling profits.
Question
Real GDP per person tells us the income and expenditure of the average person in the economy.
Question
If the GDP deflator in 2009 was 160 and the GDP deflator in 2010 was 180, then the inflation rate in 2010 was 12.5%.
Question
GDP is a useful measure since it provides a single measure of the value of the entire variety of goods and services produced by an economy.
Question
Other things equal, in countries with higher levels of real GDP per person, life expectancy and literacy rates are higher than in countries with lower levels of real GDP per person.
Question
Economists use the term inflation to describe a situation in which the economy's overall production level is rising.
Question
If nominal GDP is $12,000 and the GDP deflator is 80, then real GDP is $15,000.
Question
In 2015, the level of U.S. real GDP was more than four times its 1965 level.
Question
GDP does not make adjustments for leisure time, environmental quality, or volunteer work.
Question
If the GDP deflator in 2009 was 150 and the GDP deflator in 2010 was 175, then the inflation rate in 2010 was 25%.
Question
Periods during which real GDP rises are called recessions.
Question
​GDP excludes the purchases of sliced bread by a sandwich shop, because the bread is an intermediate good in this case.
Question
GDP does not directly measure those things that make life worthwhile, but it does measure our ability to obtain many of the inputs into a worthwhile life.
Question
Typically in countries with lower levels of real GDP person, a smaller percentage of the population is literate.
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Deck 23: Measuring a Nation S Income
1
An economy's income is the same as its expenditure because every transaction has a buyer and a seller.
True
2
Macroeconomic statistics tell us about a particular household, firm, or market.
False
3
In years of economic contraction, firms throughout the economy increase their production of goods and services, employment rises, and jobs are easy to find.
False
4
GDP is the most closely watched economic statistic because it is thought to be the best single measure of a society's economic well-being.
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5
The basic tools of supply and demand are central to microeconomic analysis but are of little use to macroeconomics.
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6
GDP includes the value of paper clips but does not also count the value of the metal used to make them.
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7
GDP excludes the value of intermediate goods because their value is included in the value of final goods.
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8
The goal of macroeconomics is to explain the economic changes that affect many households, firms, and markets simultaneously.
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9
Macroeconomic statistics include GDP, the inflation rate, the unemployment rate, retail sales, and the trade deficit.
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10
GDP adds together many different kinds of products into a single measure of the value of economic activity by using market prices.
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11
Microeconomics and macroeconomics are closely linked.
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12
GDP is the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time.
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13
For an economy as a whole, income must exceed expenditure.
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14
GDP can measure either the total income of everyone in the economy or the total expenditure on the economy's output of goods and services, but GDP cannot measure both at the same time.
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15
U.S. GDP includes the market value of rental housing, but not the market value of owner-occupied housing services.
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16
U.S. GDP excludes the production of most illegal goods.
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17
Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole.
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18
GDP is the market value of all final goods and services produced by a country's citizens in a given period of time.
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19
Both the value of hamburgers sold by a restaurant and the value of the beef it used to make these hamburgers are included in GDP.
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20
U.S. GDP includes estimates of the value of items that are produced and consumed at home, such as housework and car maintenance.
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21
While GDP includes tangible goods such as books and bug spray, it excludes intangible services such as the services provided by teachers and exterminators.
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22
Expenditures by households on education are included in the investment component of GDP.
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23
If the value of an economy's imports exceeds the value of that economy's exports, then net exports is a negative number.
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24
At a rummage sale, you buy two old books and an old rocking chair; your spending on these items is not included in current GDP.
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25
Most goods whose purchases are included in the investment component of GDP are used to produce other goods in future periods.
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26
New home construction is included in the consumption component of GDP.
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27
The investment component of GDP refers to financial investment in stocks and bonds.
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28
If someone in the United States buys a surfboard produced in Australia, then that purchase is included in both the consumption component of U.S. GDP and the net exports component of U.S. GDP.
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29
Additions to inventory subtract from GDP, and when the goods in inventory are sold, the reductions in inventory add to GDP.
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30
If a good produced this quarter goes into inventory, then it is included in this period's GDP. If it is sold in the next quarter, it will have no effect on GDP.
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31
When an American doctor opens a practice in Bermuda, his production there is part of U.S. GNP.
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32
Disposable personal income is the income that households and noncorporate businesses have left after satisfying all their obligations to the government.
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33
The government's purchases of goods but not its purchases of services are included in GDP.
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34
If the U.S. government reports that GDP in the third quarter was $16 trillion at an annual rate, then the amount of income and expenditure during quarter three was $4 trillion.
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35
Expenditures by households on education are included in the consumption component of GDP.
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36
The government purchases component of GDP includes salaries paid to soldiers but not Social Security benefits paid to the elderly.
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37
Changes in inventory are included in the investment component of GDP.
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38
When an American doctor opens a practice in Bermuda, his production there is part of U.S. GDP.
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39
The government computes measures of income other than GDP because these other measures usually tell different stories about overall economic conditions.
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40
If a firm produces a good and then adds it to its inventory rather than selling it, for the purposes of GDP accounting the firm is considered to have "purchased" the good so it will count as part of that period's investment expenditures.
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41
If consumption is $4000, exports are $300, government purchases are $1000, imports are $400, and investment is $800, then GDP is $5700.
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42
U.S. GDP was almost $12 trillion in 2015.
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43
If nominal GDP is $10,000 and real GDP is $8,000, then the GDP deflator is 125.
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44
If Brazil buys $100 million of tractors from the U.S., then U.S. net exports will decrease.
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45
Real GDP is a better gauge of economic well-being than is nominal GDP.
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46
Real GDP evaluates current production using prices that are fixed at past levels and therefore shows how the economy's overall production of goods and services changes over time.
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47
If consumption is $7000, exports are $600, government purchases are $2000, government transfers are $900, imports are $800, and investment is $1000, then GDP is $9,800.
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48
Changes in real GDP reflect only changes in the amounts being produced.
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49
If total spending rises from one year to the next, then the economy must be producing a larger output of goods and services.
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50
A consumer buys toys made in China. The value of the toys is included only in the net exports component of GDP.
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51
The term real GDP refers to a country's actual GDP as opposed to its estimated GDP.
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52
Changes in the GDP deflator reflect only changes in the prices of goods and services.
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53
An increase in nominal U.S. GDP necessarily implies that the United States is producing a larger output of goods and services.
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54
Nominal GDP uses constant base-year prices to place a value on the economy's production of goods and services, while real GDP uses current prices to place a value on the economy's production of goods and services.
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55
If exports are $500, GDP is $8000, government purchases are $1200, imports are $700, and investment is $800, then consumption is $6200.
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56
If consumption is $1800, GDP is $4300, government purchases are $1000, imports are $700, and investment is $1200, then exports are $300.
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57
If real GDP and the GDP deflator both rise, then it must be that nominal GDP rose.
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58
In 2015, government purchases were the largest component of U.S. GDP.
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59
The output of goods and services produced in the United States has grown on average 3 percent per year since 1965.
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60
The overall effect of accounting for purchases of foreign goods in GDP reduces GDP.
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61
The GDP deflator can be used to take inflation out of nominal GDP.
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62
​GDP can be measured in terms of expenditures but not income, since income is subject to taxation.
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63
If real GDP is higher in one country than in another, then we can be sure that the standard of living is higher in the country with the higher real GDP.
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64
GDP is adjusted to reflect changes in the quality of the environment such as changes in air and water quality.
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65
​When you purchase a run-down 1965 Ford Mustang to restore and resell, the purchase of the vehicle and all restoration expenditures are included in current GDP.
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66
GDP is a good measure of economic well-being for all purposes.
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67
Recessions are associated with lower incomes, rising unemployment, and falling profits.
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68
Real GDP per person tells us the income and expenditure of the average person in the economy.
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69
If the GDP deflator in 2009 was 160 and the GDP deflator in 2010 was 180, then the inflation rate in 2010 was 12.5%.
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70
GDP is a useful measure since it provides a single measure of the value of the entire variety of goods and services produced by an economy.
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71
Other things equal, in countries with higher levels of real GDP per person, life expectancy and literacy rates are higher than in countries with lower levels of real GDP per person.
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72
Economists use the term inflation to describe a situation in which the economy's overall production level is rising.
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73
If nominal GDP is $12,000 and the GDP deflator is 80, then real GDP is $15,000.
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74
In 2015, the level of U.S. real GDP was more than four times its 1965 level.
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75
GDP does not make adjustments for leisure time, environmental quality, or volunteer work.
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76
If the GDP deflator in 2009 was 150 and the GDP deflator in 2010 was 175, then the inflation rate in 2010 was 25%.
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77
Periods during which real GDP rises are called recessions.
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78
​GDP excludes the purchases of sliced bread by a sandwich shop, because the bread is an intermediate good in this case.
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79
GDP does not directly measure those things that make life worthwhile, but it does measure our ability to obtain many of the inputs into a worthwhile life.
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80
Typically in countries with lower levels of real GDP person, a smaller percentage of the population is literate.
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