Economics 1
Introduction to Economics
University of California,
Berkeley
Spring 2007
Professor Martha Olney
|
Midterm #2 from previous terms
This is the second midterm from Prof. Olney's Spring 2007
offering
of Economics 1.
The exam was written as a 50
minute exam.
1. Laptops can be beneficial
to students for note-taking. But web surfing, solitaire, email,
you-tube, and more is distracting to students seated behind the laptop.
a. Consider Sorena. His
private marginal cost of using the laptop in class is the wear and tear
on the laptop and the risk the laptop will be lost or stolen. His
downward-sloping marginal benefit is better note-taking. But
Sorena also checks email, surfs the web, and watches an occasional
you-tube video during class.
Draw a graph at the right
that shows (1) how many hours per semester Sorena would want to use his
laptop, and (2) the socially optimal number of hours per semester that
Sorena should use his laptop in class. Explain.
b. An econ student tells the
prof she should impose a penalty (essentially, a tax) on laptop users
who are doing more than just note-taking. What determines the
size of the penalty? Will the penalty eliminate the distracting
behavior? Why or why not?
2. Article #14, “The
Lemongrass War,” describes competition between two Indonesian
restaurants in Queens, New York: Padang Raya (owned by Mr. Rahman
Imansjah) and Manangasli (owned by Ms. Nani Tanzil).
a. Why does “monopolistic
competition” characterize Padang Raya and Manangasli?
b. Padang Raya opened first,
in June 2004. Draw a graph that shows the profit-maximizing price
and quantity of meals sold and the profit earned at Padang Raya when
Ms. Tanzil worked there as a chef.
c. Then Ms. Tanzil was
fired. In August 2005, she opened her own restaurant,
Manangasli. In your graph, how would you show the effect of this
new restaurant on Padang Raya? (Tell us. Don’t draw it.)
Why?
3. Suppose the economy can be
described by the following equations (all values are billions of
dollars per quarter):
C = 200 +
0.8Yd
I = 300
G = 400
EX = 500
IM = 500
TR = 400
TA = 500
a. What is the
equilibrium level of output and income? Show all your work or you
will receive zero (0) points on this question. If you cannot
solve this problem without a calculator, set it up and go as far as you
can (cost of not fully solving = loss of 3 points). No
calculators allowed during the exam.
b. Government spending for
military equipment and personnel rises by $100 billion per
quarter. Will the equilibrium level of output and income rise by
more than, less than, or exactly $100 billion per quarter?
Explain why.
4. The Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) of the Federal Reserve (the Fed) conducts monetary
policy.
a. When the Federal Reserve
lowers interest rates, does investment spending fall, rise, or stay the
same? Why?
b. When the unemployment rate
falls, does the inflation rate fall, rise, or stay the same? Why?
c. What is an inflation
dove? An inflation hawk?
d. The inflation rate and the
unemployment rate are initially both at the Fed’s target or goal
rates. Then the price of oil rises due to supply
restrictions. What does the Fed do when oil prices rise if the
FOMC members are inflation hawks? What does it do if the FOMC
members are inflation doves?
Draw a Phillips Curve graph
at the right which shows the effects of the rise in oil prices and the
Fed’s reaction. Label the initial position “A”, the hawk position
“H”, and the dove position “D”.
5. Answer only two (2) of the
three (3) parts in this question.
a. Define “gross domestic
product.” What was the 2006 value of nominal GDP for the United
States?
b. Is everyone who is out of
work “unemployed”? Explain. What was the February 2007
unemployment rate for the United States?
c. What is the “consumer price
index”? What was the inflation rate in the U.S. between December
2005 and December 2006?
This is the second midterm from Prof. Olney's Fall 2005
offering
of Economics 1.
The exam was written as a 50
minute exam.
1. Suppose there are two industries – the red (cardinal) shirt industry
and the blue-&-gold shirt industry. Suppose both industries
are initially in long-run competitive equilibrium.
a. Using the axes below, draw graphs that show the
initial long-run competitive equilibria. Label your curves with
subscripts “a.”
b. Heeding the call of “Take off that red
shirt! Take off that red shirt!,” many consumers stop buying red
shirts and switch to blue-&-gold shirts. In the short run,
what happens to the price and quantity of red shirts? In the
short run, what happens to the price and quantity of blue-&-gold
shirts? Why? On the axes below, show these short-run
effects, using subscripts “b” on your curves and labels.
c. In the long run, what happens to the number of
firms producing red shirts? To the number of firms producing
blue-&-gold shirts? Why? On the axes below, show the
long-run effects, using subscripts “c” on your curves and labels.
2. The Chang Lin Tien Center for East Asian Studies is being
constructed near Moffitt Library. From 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
construction noise pollutes the air, making it difficult for students
in nearby library buildings to concentrate. Students complain to
the ASUC (student association), asking that the construction noise stop
no later than 1 p.m. The construction company estimates that it
will cost an additional $30,000 per day to work from 5 a.m. to 1 p.m.
rather than 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
a. Does the existence of the ASUC make it more likely that the
students and the construction company will be able to come to an
agreement to reduce noise? Are there other conditions that must also
exist in order for the ASUC and the construction company to come to an
agreement? Explain.
b. The ASUC negotiates a fine: on any day that the
construction company makes noise after 1 p.m., the construction company
must pay the ASUC $35,000. The money raised with the fine will be
used to buy ear plugs and noise-blocking headphones for students to use
in the library. Will the noise now stop at 1 p.m.? Explain.
c. Suggest another possible approach – other than a fine –
that the ASUC can use to address the complaints about the construction
noise. In terms of efficiency, is your approach better than the
$35,000 fine? In terms of equity, is your approach better than
the fine? Explain.
3. On November 1, the Federal Reserve raised interest
rates.
a. In one sentence, define “investment spending.”
What effect should the Fed’s action have on investment spending?
All else constant, what effect should it have on employment?
Explain your answers.
b. When you are home for Thanksgiving, your Uncle Alvin says to you,
“Hey, you’re taking economics. I’ve got all my retirement savings
in bonds. But the prices of these bonds keep going down.
What’s up with that?” What do you say to Uncle Alvin?
4.
a. Name and define the three characteristics of
money. Name something that is money in one economy but not money
in another economy and explain your choice.
b. Think about yourself. Are you employed,
unemployed, or out of the labor force? Explain your answer.
c. State two differences between the consumer price index
(CPI) and the GDP deflator.
d. Within 0.4 percentage points, what is the current
unemployment rate in the U.S.?
5. Suppose that the country of Oskiland can be characterized by the
following equations (all amounts are in millions of dollars per year):
C = 100 + 0.8Yd
EX =
600
TR = 200
I = 200
IM = 600
TA = 300
G = 400
a. What is the equilibrium level of output and
income? Show all your work or you will receive zero (0) points on
this question. If you cannot solve this problem without a
calculator (tsk tsk), set it up and go as far as you can. No
calculators allowed during the exam.
b. Increased confidence in the future spurs the
government of Oskiland to build a new $100 million football
stadium. Explain – using economics and not mathematics – why
income in Oskiland will increase by more than $100 million.
c. Suppose that the workers hired to build the new
football stadium are “guest workers” from another country,
Treeville. They spend less than half of their wages in Oskiland
and send the rest of their income to their family in Treeville.
Will income in Oskiland still increase by as much as it would have if
the workers had all been permanent residents of Oskiland? Explain.
This is the second midterm from Prof. Olney's Spring 2005
offering
of Economics 1.
The exam was written as a 50 minute exam.
1 Briefly define any three of the following six
terms. Spend less than one minute on each term.
A. Gross domestic product (GDP)
B. Income (Y)
C. Unemployed person
D. Consumer price index
E. Money
F. Government budget deficit
2 In 2001, the Federal Reserve (“Fed”) lowered
interest rates eleven times in an effort to fight recession.
A. To lower interest rates, would the Fed buy bonds
or sell bonds? Draw a graph at right to show what would happen in
the bond market. What happens to the price of bonds?
Explain why a change in the price of bonds changes the interest rate.
B. Define “investment spending.” What effect
should the drop in interest rates have had on investment
spending? Why?
3A. Suppose the federal government eliminates $100
billion in taxes paid by the wealthiest 1/2 percent of the
population. At the same time, they reduce Social Security
payments to all the elderly by $100 billion. If everyone has the same
marginal propensity to consume, what effect would this legislation have
on equilibrium income? Explain your answer.
B. Is it reasonable to assume that the marginal
propensity to consume by the super-wealthy is the same as the marginal
propensity to consume by the elderly? Does the effect on income
depend on whether these two mpc’s are the same? Why? Be complete.
4 Microsoft is an extremely profitable
company. It is the only seller of the Windows Operating System,
so we can think of Microsoft as a monopolist. Draw a graph at the
right that illustrates the profit maximizing point for Microsoft.
Why do economists say that monopolists such as Microsoft are bad for
society?
5 The price of gas has increased a lot and is
expected to increase more. Consider the markets for two types of
cars: “gas guzzlers” (cars that use lots of gas) and “hybrids” (cars
that use very little gas).
A. The price of used hybrid cars recently increased
so much that one-year-old hybrid cars are now selling for more than
their original sales price. Why? Draw graph(s) at the
bottom of the page to support your answer.
B. When Matt said, “We better sell our gas guzzler
and buy a hybrid now before the price of hybrid cars rises even more!”
his economist girlfriend Suzi said “Relax, Matt. Eventually the
price of hybrid cars will come back down. Then we can sell our
gas guzzler at a good price and buy a hybrid.” She’s right.
Why? Show what happens in the graph(s) you drew at the bottom of
the page.
6 a. Suppose the economy can be described by the
following equations. What is the equilibrium level of
income? Show all your work or you will receive zero (0) points on
this question. If you cannot solve this problem without a
calculator (tsk tsk), set it up and go as far as you can. No
calculators allowed during the exam.
C = 200 + 0.8YD
I = 60
G = 200
EX = 0
IM = 0
TR = 100
TA = 300
b. What is the value of the spending multiplier in
this economy? Show all your work or you will receive zero (0)
points on this question.
This is the second midterm from Prof. Olney's Spring 1999
offering
of Economics 1.
The exam was written as a 50 minute exam.
1. For each of the following, indicate whether the
individual is Unemployed, Employed, or Out of the Labor Force.
Give a one-sentence explanation of your answer.
a) A woman who volunteers with
Habitat for Humanity 40 hours per week
b) A student who is actively
looking for a part-time job
2. Draw the graph that illustrates the profit
maximizing point for a monopoly firm making abnormal economic profit.
Explain your graph. If the firm were instead part of an industry
characterized by monopolistic competition, could it earn abnormal
profit in the long run? Why or why not?
3.
A) The City of San Francisco wants to build a
new stadium for the 49ers in Hunter’s Point in San Francisco.
Estimated construction costs are $525 million. The workers who
would do the construction all live in the Bay Area. Explain the
process by which construction of the stadium would generate more than
$525 million worth of additional income and output in the Bay Area
economy. Be clear and complete.
B) The new stadium may not be built due to
legal struggles and other dysfunction in the DeBartolo family which
owns the 49ers. Concerned about the economic impact of the loss
of the stadium, Mayor Willie Brown asks the State of California to
provide additional transfer payments totaling $525 million to the
residents of San Francisco. Will the additional income and output
generated from the $525 million in transfer payments be the same as
what would have been generated from the $525 million in construction
costs? Explain your answer clearly and completely.
4. How do banks create money? If the Federal
Reserve increases reserves by $100 billion, will banks create $100
billion in new money, more than $100 billion, or less than $100
billion? Explain your answers clearly.
5. Suppose the economy can be described by the
following equations. What is the equilibrium level of
income? Show all your work or you will receive zero (0) points on
this question. If you cannot solve this problem
without a calculator (tsk tsk), set it up and go as far as you
can. No calculators allowed during the exam.
C = 100 + 0.9YD
I = 50
G = 200
EX = 0
IM = 0
TR = 200
TA = 300
6. An important event in economic history
is the migration of African Americans from the South to the North in
the early twentieth century. In this question you will use
general equilibrium analysis to analyze the effects of the migration on
wages of Southern Black workers and on wages of Northern Black workers.
Suppose that initially the wages of Southern Black workers (WS) equaled
the wages of Northern Black workers (WN). Then, increased use of
machinery (capital) in the north increased the marginal product of
workers in the north, increasing wages for Northern Black
workers. In response, great numbers of workers moved from the
South to the North. Illustrate these events in two graphs below:
[a] initial conditions; [b] increased use of machinery; [c]
migration. Use [a], [b] and [c] to label your curves.
What happens to wages of the remaining Southern Black workers as a
result of the migration? Give your answer and briefly explain
your graphs in the area below the graphs.
This is the second midterm from Prof. Olney's Fall 1996
offering
of Economics 1.
The exam was written as a 50 minute exam.
1. Frozen yogurt and ice cream are substitute goods. In
Berkeley,
the market for these goods is characterized by monopolistic
competition.
Suppose Yogurt Park, a seller of frozen yogurt, earned abnormal profit
in the 1980s. As a result, in 1991 Ben & Jerry's opened an
ice
cream store nearby. What effect would this have on Yogurt Park's
profit? Why? Illustrate your answer with a graph.
2. Smoking creates negative externalities in the form of second-hand
smoke, an apparent cancer-causing agent. A restaurant wants to
serve
both smoking and non-smoking patrons, but is willing to charge them
different
prices for the same meal. Use the graph at right to illustrate
the
optimal price the restaurant should charge a smoker for her/his
meal.
What should happen to the number of smoking patrons at the
restaurant?
Explain.
3. <not relevant>
4. Throughout the 1930s, the U.S. unemployment rate stayed above 10
percent. Why can unemployment be so high for so long?
Illustrate
your answer with a graph.
5. When the unemployment rate is very high for a very long time,
some
people become discouraged by the process of looking for work and give
up
looking for awhile. What effect does their action have on the
unemployment
rate? Be sure to define all terms that you use.
6. Suppose the economy can be described by the following
equations.
What is the equilibrium level of income? Show all your work or
you
will receive zero (0) points on this question.
C = 100 + 0.8YD
I = 100
G = 200
EX = IM = 0
TR = 200
TA = 350
7.
A 5 percent cut in military spending is passed by Congress,
signed
by President Clinton, and implemented. What effect will this
action
have on equilibrium income? On unemployment? On the federal
government budget deficit? Be clear and complete.
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Martha Olney
Last updated 4/30/2007