SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Macroeconomics: Measurement Of Economic Performance
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
economics
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. (base year basket valued at current year prices/base year basket valued at base year prices) x 100
government expenditures
structural / expectational inflation
CPI equation
participation rate
2. A basic accounting measure of total production of goods and services of the national economy in one year
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
participation rate
consumption expenditures
seasonal changes
3. The sale of a finished good or product directly to a consumer (baker sells bread to customer); counted in GDP
largest category of GDI
gross investment expenditures
expenditure approach
final goods
4. GDI = w + i + r + pi + misc
GDI equation
government expenditures
labor force
net export expenditures
5. The number of dollars one receives as wages - rent - interest or profit
full employment
nominal income
cyclical / deficit demand unemployment
cost push
6. (1) wages - (2) rents - (3) profits - (4) interest - (5) misc
national income
cyclical / deficit demand unemployment
five sources of income
circular flow diagram
7. All people living in a society who are of legal age to work
four kinds of spending
unemployed
deflation
labor force
8. Phase of the business cycle where output and employment begin to move toward full employment
unemployment rate
expansion / recovery
expenditure approach
unemployed
9. Temporary and associated with turnover in the labor market
consumption expenditures
frictional unemployment
personal income
seasonal unemployment
10. A person who is available for and looking for work - but has none
structural unemployment
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
unemployed
national income
11. The civilian labor force expressed as a percentage of the labor force population
income approach
participation rate
personal income
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
12. Allows us to keep tabs on the economic health of society and to develop policies that will improve that health
nominal GDP
national income accounting
deflation
four kinds of spending
13. Output sacrificed due to unemployment
disposable income
seasonal changes
natural employment
GDP gap
14. Calculate spending and income: what is spent on a product is received as income by those who contributed to the product's production. the spending amount and income amount should equal one another.
how to determine GDP
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
expansion / recovery
nominal GDP
15. Measures the prices of a fixed market basket of over 300 consumer goods and services purchased by the typical urban consumer
consumption expenditures
GDP gap
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
price index
16. Cyclical unemployment is at 0
full employment
disposable income
rule of 70
participation rate
17. Phase of the business cycle where output and employment are at their lowest levels
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
trough
natural employment
business cycle
18. The total net sales of goods sold abroad minus the total net spent on purchases from other countries
expansion / recovery
business cycle
net export expenditures
Gross National Product (GNP)
19. All investment spending by government and business firms
business cycle
gross investment expenditures
national income
participation rate
20. Measures GDP by adding up all that is spent by various consumers on this year's total output of final goods and services; also called gross national expenditure (GNE)
real GDP
civilian labor force
GDI equation
expenditure approach
21. (1) final purchases of machinery and equipment by governments and business; (2) all construction; and (3) changes in inventories
three kinds of Ig expenditures
cyclical / deficit demand unemployment
full employment
labor force
22. A sustained rise in the general price level of an economy
inflation
gross investment expenditures
seasonal changes
price index
23. The percentage of unemployed workers in the civilian labor force
four kinds of spending
demand pull
unemployment rate
how to determine GDP
24. Caused by the actions of people who have come to expect a certain amount of inflation in the economy
structural / expectational inflation
real GDP
COLA
four kinds of spending
25. The sale of goods and services to households
unemployment rate
expansion / recovery
structural unemployment
consumption expenditures
26. Total income earned by resource suppliers for their contributions to the production of the GNP
national income
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
income approach
recession
27. Recurrent ups and downs of economic activity
deflation
structural / expectational inflation
business cycle
seasonal unemployment
28. Phase of the business cycle which is characterized by a period of at least six months where there is a decline in total output - income and employment
GDP gap
five sources of income
COLA
recession
29. The price index that puts all goods and services in the market basket; measures the overall price level change - not just a change in price of typical consumer goods
GDP gap
GDP Price Index
circular flow diagram
natural employment
30. Those who are on ______ incomes are hurt most by inflation
fixed income
structural unemployment
civilian labor force
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
31. Income earned by the factors of production for their current contributions to production; total dollar value of all final goods and services produced for consumption in society during a particular time period
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
gross investment expenditures
unemployed
Gross National Product (GNP)
32. Measures the amount of goods and services one's money can buy; measures purchasing power
real income
gross investment expenditures
income approach
peak
33. Excess unemployment caused because the economy deviates from the long run output potential of the economy
how to determine GDP
largest category of GDI
cyclical / deficit demand unemployment
seasonal unemployment
34. Inflation arising from the supply or cost side of the economy
cost push
business cycle
consumption expenditures
COLA
35. Monetary
expansion / recovery
price index
demand pull
GDP measures the market value of annual output and it is a __________ measure.
36. GDP = C + Ig + G + Xn
demand pull
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
COLA
unemployment rate
37. Results from a pattern of work that changes due to seasonal fluctuations in demand or due to changing weather conditions
seasonal unemployment
labor force
GDP equation (expenditure approach)
national income
38. Cost of living allowance
full employment
COLA
expansion / recovery
peak
39. Measures national income as the sum of the incomes received by productive resources in the economy; also called Gross Domestic Income (GDI)
trough
cost push
income approach
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
40. Income earned that is available to resource suppliers and others before payment of personal taxes
Gross National Product (GNP)
three kinds of Ig expenditures
cyclical / deficit demand unemployment
personal income
41. The average of all prices is falling
deflation
participation rate
Gross National Product (GNP)
how to determine GDP
42. Government purchase of goods and services; does not include transfer payments and expenditures for servicing the national debt or investment goods
trough
gross investment expenditures
government expenditures
GDI equation
43. Output measured at base year prices - and thus adjusted
business cycle
real GDP
labor force
peak
44. Personal income less income taxes
unemployed
demand pull
inflation
disposable income
45. Used for comparing the price of a specific market basket of goods and services in one particular year to the price in a base year
expenditure approach
price index
full employment
five sources of income
46. Frictional + structural unemployment
real income
GDI equation
GDP gap
natural employment
47. Those that are used to produce other goods that will eventually be sold (miller sells flour to a baker); not counted in GDP
intermediate goods
price index
civilian labor force
demand pull
48. Shows how money and goods and services flow between the various markets and players in the economy
unemployment rate
full employment
fixed income
circular flow diagram
49. Consumption - investment - government - and net exports
four kinds of spending
trough
full employment
three kinds of Ig expenditures
50. Second-hand sales (goods not produced that year) and financial transactions (moving money from x to y); not counted in GDP
natural employment
GDP gap
unemployment rate
non-production transactions