Economics Homework Help
30 Question Macro Economic Assignemnt
Some are multiple-choice and others require being solved and worked through. Will list the topics that are covered at the bottom of this description. Can only send one question at a time. Can not go back to a question either. Once it is complete it’s gone. There is no time limit. You are able to stop at one question and come back at a later time which I will have to do. If you don’t feel confident in doing these Pearson my lab econ questions to a 100% certainty, please don’t bid on the question because I will give a bad review.
Outline 1 (Chapter 5: The Wealth of Nations – Defining and Measuring Macroeconomic Aggregates)
- Macroeconomic Questions
- National Income Accounts: Production = Expenditure = Income
- Production
- Expenditure
- Income
- Circular Flows
- National Income Accounts: Production
- National Income Accounts: Expenditure
- National Income Accounting: Income
- What isn’t measured by GDP?
- Physical capital depreciation
- Home production
- The Underground Economy
- Negative Externalities
- Gross domestic product versus Gross national product
- The increase in income inequality
- Leisure
- Does GDP buy happiness?
- Real versus Nominal
- The GDP Deflator
- The Consumer Price Index
- Inflation
- Adjusting Nominal Variables
Outline 2 (Chapter 6: Aggregate Incomes)
- Inequality around the world
- Productivity and the aggregate production function
- Productivity differences
- The aggregate production function
- Labor
- Physical Capital and Land
- Technology
- Representing the Aggregate Production Function
- The role and determinants of technology
- Technology
- Dimensions of Technology
- Entrepreneurship
Outline 3 (Chapter 9: Employment and Unemployment)
- Measuring employment and unemployment
- Equilibrium in the labor market
- The demand for labor
- Shifts in the labor demand curve
- The supply of labor
- Shifts in the labor supply curve
- Equilibrium in a competitive labor market
- Why is there unemployment?
- Voluntary unemployment
- Job search and frictional unemployment
- Wage rigidity and structural unemployment
- Minimum wage laws
- Labor unions and collective bargaining
- Efficiency wages
- Downward wage rigidity
- Cyclical unemployment and the natural rate of unemployment
Outline 4 (Chapter 11: The Monetary System)
- Money
- The functions of money
- Types of money
- The money supply
- Money, prices and GDP
- Nominal GDP, real GDP and inflation
- The quantity theory of money
- Inflation
- What causes inflation?
- The consequences of inflation
- The social costs of inflation
- The social benefits of inflation
- The Federal Reserve
- The Central Bank and the objectives of monetary policy
- What does the central bank do?
- Bank reserves and the plumbing of the monetary system
- Bank reserves and liquidity
- The demand side of the federal funds market
- The supply side of the federal funds market and equilibrium in the Federal funds market
- The Fed’s influences on the money supply and the inflation rate
- The relationship between the federal funds rate and the long-term real interest rate
Outline 5 (Chapter 12: Short-Run Fluctuations)
- Economic fluctuations and business cycle
- Macroeconomic Equilibrium and Economic Fluctuations
- Labor Demand and Fluctuations
- Sources of Fluctuations
- Technology shocks: Explanation from real business cycle theory
- Sentiments and multipliers: Explanation from John Maynard Keynes
- Monetary and Financial Factors: Explanation from Milton Friedman
- Multipliers and Economic Fluctuations
- Equilibrium in the medium run: Partial recovery and Full recovery
- Modeling Expansions
Outline 6 (Chapter 13: Countercyclical Macroeconomic Policy)
- The role of countercyclical policies in economic fluctuations
- Countercyclical monetary policy
- Controlling the federal funds rate
- Other tools of the Fed
- Expectations, Inflation and Monetary Policy
- Contractionary monetary policy: control of inflation
- Zero lower bound
- Policy Trade-offs
- Countercyclical Fiscal Policy
- Fiscal policy over the business cycle: Automatic and Discretionary components
- Analysis of Expenditure based fiscal policy
- Analysis of taxation based fiscal policy
- Fiscal policies that directly target the labor market
Policy waste and policy lags