Macroeconomics Study Guide Samuelson
Macroeconomics Study Guide Samuelson
Macroeconomics Study Guide Samuelson
I. CHAPTER OVERVIEW
In this beginning chapter, basic economic concepts are discussed. The first part of this chapter has been
designed to provide a rough outline of what the discipline of economics is all about. The primary objective
here is to give you the lay of the land, as well as a feel for why people would ever want to concern
themselves with the study of economics in the first place. We need to consider how, in broad and general
terms, such a study should be conducted.
In the second part of the chapter the three main problems of economic organization are presented and
discussed. In the last section there is a discussion of the production-possibility frontier that every society
faces. Together, these sections help to describe the constraints placed on all economies as they deal with
the problem of scarcity.
Finally, there is an appendix to this chapter, focusing on the use of graphs in economic analysis. Basic
equations related to the use and interpretation of graphs are presented. Following the format of your text,
there is an appendix to this chapter in the Study Guide that you can use to review this material.
After you have read Chapter 1 in your text and completed the exercises in this Study Guide chapter, you
should be able to:
1. Recognize that while there are numerous specific examples of economic problems and decisions,
they
are all illustrations of the basic definition of economics: Economics is the study of how societies
choose to use scarce productive resources that have alternative uses, to produce commodities of
various kinds, and to distribute them among different groups.
2. Understand the what, the how, and the for whom of economic decision-making.
3. Define the three primary inputs in the production of outputs: land, labor, and capital.
4. Distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics.
5. Understand and avoid the common fallacies in economic reasoning.
6. Distinguish between positive and normative economics.
7. Understand the concept of productive efficiency and how it relates to both the use of inputs and
the
basic definition of economics.
8. Use the production-possibility frontier to illustrate the choices that societies face.
9. Understand the concept of opportunity cost and explain its relationship to the production
possibilities frontier.
Match the following terms from column A with their definitions in column B.
A B
__ Scarcity 1. The branch of economics concerned with the overall performance of the
economy.
__ Efficiency 2. Commodities or services, such as land, labor, or capital, that are used by
firms in their production processes.
__ Free goods 3. Measurement of cost based on the value of the next-best forgone alternative.
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__ Economic goods 4. Using the economys resources as effectively as possible to satisfy peoples
needs and desires.
__ Macroeconomics 5. Describes the facts and behavior of an economy.
__ Microeconomics 6. Assuming that what is true for part of a system is also true for the whole
system.
__ Normative 7. Commodities and resources that we value are limited in supply.
economics
__ Positive economics 8. Goods and services that result from the production process.
__ Laissez-faire 9. A market economy in which the government has almost no role.
__ Inputs 10. Assuming that one event causes another simply because it happens first.
__ Outputs 11. Goods that we value that are limited in supply.
__ Post hoc fallacy 12. Involves value judgments and ethical precepts about an economy.
__ Fallacy of 13. Commodities and resources that are available without limit.
composition
__ Opportunity cost 14. Branch of economics concerned with the behavior of individual entities
such as markets, firms, and households.
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7. Even though economics is a social science, economists often use a scientific approach when tackling
economic problems. They identify economic problems, formulate theories, collect and analyze data, and
use econometrics, a specialized branch of statistics, in an attempt to accept or refute economic theories. As
in any scientific investigation, efforts are made to control for other factors related to the problem under
consideration. For example, if we are interested in explaining the relationship between the price of CDs
and the quantity purchased by a consumer, we would want to hold the consumers income constant.
Normally, we would expect that when the price of a product goes up, the quantity demanded will fall.
However, it is possible that a consumer may coincidentally get a better paying job or a raise in pay just as
the firm is increasing the price of CDs. So unless we hold income constant we may conclude that when
price increases the consumer will demand more CDs.
8. Post hoc is Latin for after this. Just because one event precedes another, it does not mean that it
caused the events that follow. This is the post hoc fallacy. Finally, the fallacy of composition says that
what is true for the part is not necessarily true for the whole. For example, one firm may cut prices to steal
customers away from competitors and make more profit. On the other hand, if all firms cut prices, they
may wind up stealing customers from no one and wind up losing money due to lower revenues.
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5. Economists often use diagrams to explain economic concepts. The production possibility frontier
(PPF) is used to illustrate the concept of scarcity and the production choices that society faces. Points
along the frontier represent full utilization of resources. Points outside are not feasible given the resources
society has, and points inside represent the underutilization of resources. The PPF can shift out over time
as more resources are discovered or if technological innovations improve the efficiency of given resources.
Waste from business cycles and environmental degradation can push economies inside the PPF.
6. Opportunity costs measure the cost of doing something in terms of the next-best alternative that is
given up. The opportunity cost of going to college is four (or more) years of work, plus the next-best way
of using the money spent on tuition and fees. In a two-good, PPF world, the opportunity cost of producing
more of one commodity is the amount of the other good that must be given up. Because economic
resources are scarce, society is forced to make choices. The cost of these choices can be measured in terms
of opportunity cost.
V. HELPFUL HINTS
1. All economic issues and problems ultimately relate back to the idea of scarcity. Since we are faced
with scarcity, we must make choices. Look back at the eight definitions/examples of economics at the
beginning of the textbook chapter. Make sure you see how they relate to the concept of scarcity.
2. All decisions therefore relate in some sense to economics. On a personal level, your time (like your
income) is a scarce resource and you continually decide how best to use it. The decision to stay in bed an
extra hour, or go to class, or study, or eat breakfast is ultimately tied back to the concepts of scarcity and
choice. The sooner you buy into and grasp this most basic notion of economics, the happier you (and your
instructor) will be!
3. Inputs are often referred to as factors of production. The two expressions can be used
interchangeably.
4. Capital is one of those terms (there will be others) that have special meaning for economists. To the
noneconomist, capital is often used synonymously with money. It is not uncommon for business
associates to talk of the capital they have invested in a project. For students of economics, however, capital
is a factor of production. It is itself an output from some previous production process. Remember, capital
is something physical, like a piece of equipment, that firms use as an input to produce goods and services.
Money is not capital.
5. The terms outputs and goods and services can be used interchangeably.
6. Economists frequently use diagrams, like the production-possibility frontier (PPF), to simplify and
explain concepts. The PPF illustrates the tradeoff that society faces when it produces one good instead of
another. Of course, in reality, an economy produces thousands of goods. In a three-dimensional PPF
diagram, a third axis could be added to show the tradeoff among three goods. While no one can draw a
four-dimensional diagram, conceptually the interpretation is the same as for our two-dimensional diagram.
7. Economics is an inexact science, and unlike the natural sciences, experiments are usually not
performed in a controlled environment. Always take care to know what is and what is not being held
constant. Make sure that you understand the post hoc fallacy and the fallacy of composition too.
8. Opportunity cost is a very important term in economic analysis. Economists are always measuring
costs and benefits, and weighing the pros and cons of economic decisions. Opportunity costs provide a
useful way to measure the cost of a particular economic decision. Remember, opportunity costs are
measured in terms of the next-best foregone alternative, not in terms of money. This concept is used over
and over again in economics.
These questions are organized by topic from the chapter outline. Choose the best answer from the options
available.
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b. determining corporate profits and losses.
c. the allocation of scarce resources.
d. balancing your checkbook.
e. all of the above.
2. When Samuelson and Nordhaus write that goods are limited while wants seem limitless, they mean
that:
a. people are basically greedy and not willing to share.
b. the government needs to redistribute output.
c. current methods of production are inefficient.
d. there is no simple solution to the basic economic problems of scarcity and unlimited human wants.
e. none of the above.
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b. if production had not been carried to the point where there was full employment of all the
economys resources.
c. if the economys stock of capital were small relative to its labor force.
d. in a technically advanced society, since proper technology would have established the best
possible method of producing each good.
e. in any circumstance, because the problem of how to produce goods is an engineering problem
throughout and not an economic problem.
10. Which of the following statements applies to a mixed economy?
a. There is confusion and a lack of organization.
b. The allocation of resources changes from production period to production period.
c. There are no real examples of truly mixed economies.
d. Mixed economies include aspects of both market and command economies.
e. None of the above statements apply.
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a. quantities of productive inputs or resources.
b. quantities of finished commodities.
c. values of finished commodities.
d. all of the above.
e. none of the above.
18. Each and every point in a production-possibility diagram (whether on the curve or off it) stands for
some combination of the two goods produced. With a given input stock, some of these points are
attainable, while others are not. Specifically, with respect to production, the economy could operate:
a. anywhere on the curve and only on the curve.
b. anywhere on the curve or anywhere inside it (below and to the left).
c. anywhere on the curve, inside it, or outside it.
d. all of the above.
e. none of the above.
19. In order to shift the PPF out (above and to the right), an economy would have to:
a. somehow increase its stock of inputs.
b. remove some incompetent bureaucrats from their jobs.
c. eliminate the sources of significant abuse of monopoly power.
d. all of the above.
e. none of the above.
20. If an economy did somehow add to its input stock, or if it did discover new production techniques, then
the production-possibility curve would:
a. remain unchanged.
b. move appropriately inward and to the left.
c. move appropriately outward and to the right.
d. all of the above.
e. none of the above.
Please use Figure 1-1 to answer questions 21 through 24.
Figure 1-1
21. On the dark production frontier labeled ABCD, which point corresponds to the economys valuing food
most heavily?
a. A.
b. B.
c. C.
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d. D.
e. E.
22. A shift in the dark PPF curve to the position indicated by the line marked 1 would be appropriate to
illustrate:
a. a change in the tastes of the population whereby its members want more food produced and less
clothing.
b. the appearance of some new resources useful only in the clothing industry.
c. an improvement in technology applicable to both industries.
d. a change in the production mix involving an increase in clothing output and a decrease in food
output.
e. the development of a better technology in the food industry alone.
23. Which alternative in question 22 would have applied if the dark PPF had shifted to position 2?
a. a change in the tastes of the population whereby its members want more food produced and less
clothing.
b. the appearance of some new resources useful only in the clothing industry.
c. an improvement in technology applicable to both industries.
d. a change in the production mix involving an increase in clothing output and a decrease in food
output.
e. the development of a better technology in the food industry alone.
24. Which alternative in question 22 would have applied if the dark PPF had shifted to position 3?
a. a change in the tastes of the population whereby its members want more food produced and less
clothing.
b. the appearance of some new resources useful only in the clothing industry.
c. an improvement in technology applicable to both industries.
d. a change in the production mix involving an increase in clothing output and a decrease in food
output.
e. the development of a better technology in the food industry alone.
Please use Figure 1-2 to answer questions 25 through 27.
Figure 1-2
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e. there is a breakthrough in technology.
26. As the economy moves from point B to point C:
a. it gives up 20 units of food and gains about 17 units of housing.
b. it gives up 20 units of housing and gains about 17 units of food.
c. idle resources become fully employed.
d. the economy becomes more efficient.
e. there is a breakthrough in technology.
27. Assume that an advance in technology is responsible for the shift from PPF I to PPF II. It appears that
technology:
a. affected both industries equally.
b. had a relatively greater influence on the food industry.
c. had a relatively greater influence on the housing industry.
d. was actually destroyed.
e. none of the above.
28. The concept of opportunity cost is:
a. useful only when discussing the production possibility frontier.
b. used to measure costs in terms of the next-best alternative.
c. measured in dollars and cents.
d. used only by professional economists.
e. none of the above.
29. The opportunity cost of repairing the roads in town could be:
a. putting an addition on the school.
b. purchasing new snow removal equipment.
c. changing from a volunteer to a full-time fire department.
d. any of the above, depending upon which is the next-best alternative.
e. none of the above.
The following problems are designed to help you apply the concepts that you learned in the chapter.
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Capital is essential to any modern economy, and a heavy reliance on capital is a characteristic of successful
advanced economies in the world today.
3. Circle all the following that qualify as capital:
a. An oil refinery.
b. An issue of General Motors stock.
c. Cash in a business owners safe.
d. A screwdriver used by a carpenter.
e. Money borrowed by a business firm from a bank to expand its operations.
f. A steel-ingot inventory held by a steel company.
g. Unsold automobiles held by an auto manufacturer.
h. An inventory of groceries held by a supermarket.
4. Any developed nation possesses a large stock of capital, and much of each days productive effort goes
into maintenance and expansion of that stock. Consequently, todays productive effort to maintain and
expand capital is significantly devoted to satisfying (yesterdays / todays / tomorrows) needs, while the
consumer goods actually enjoyed today result from (yesterdays / todays / tomorrows) effort.
5. Circle as many of the following as are correct:
a. The larger the available stock of capital, the larger the output of consumer goods that is possible.
b. In terms of a production-possibility frontier, additions to the stock of capital can push the frontier
upward and outward.
c. A decision to produce or to not produce more capital goods is not part of the decision of what
goods to produce.
d. In a fully employed economy, a decision to produce more capital goods today must go hand-in-
hand with a decision to produce fewer consumer goods in the current period.
Consider the production-possibility curves drawn in Figure 1-3. Use the different PPFs to answer
questions 6 through 10. In each panel the lighter schedule represents an original curve, while the darker
schedule represents what happens to the frontier after something has changed the economy.
6. Suppose that scientific invention increased the productivity of resources used only in the production of
X. Which panel most accurately reflects this development? ___
7. Many scientists believe that we are exhausting our natural resources. Assume that natural resources
used to produce X are being depleted, but that the production of Y, at least for the time being, is not
affected. ___
8. Assume that the labor force grows and the new workers receive specialized training to produce
commodity Y. ___
9. Technological knowledge increases and both industries benefit, more or less equally, from the new
technology. ___
10. A war depletes some of the resources used to produce X. ___
Figure 1-3
Answer the following questions, making sure that you can explain the work you did to arrive at the
answers.
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Table 1-1 shows the production possibilities for the country of Economainia for two commodities:
apartments and bread. At each production point listed in Table 1-1, all of Economainias resources are fully
employed and all the available technological knowledge is being utilized.
Figure 1-4
1. Use Figure 1-4 to plot the points and draw Economainias PPF. Use the letters from the table (A
through F) to label the points on your PPF. Before you start, note how the axes on the diagram are labeled.
2. Is point C a point of productive efficiency? Please explain. What about points A, B, D, E, and F?
3. Find the point where Economainia is producing 16,000 apartments and 10,000,000 loaves of bread.
Label this point G. Assuming that your PPF remains where it is (at least for now), list two reasons why
Economainia could be producing at point G.
4. Is point G a point of productive efficiency? Please explain.
5. Suppose Economainias PPF shifts so that it now goes through point G, and not points A through F.
Draw this new PPF on your diagram. What could have caused this shift in the PPF?
6. Find the point where Economainia is producing 50,000 apartments and 50,000,000 loaves of bread.
Label this point H. Given your current PPF can Economainia actually produce this combination of goods?
Please explain why, or why not.
Suppose some changes occur in the Economainia economy such that a new set of production
possibilities becomes possible. Table 1-2 lists the new production options.
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12 46
18 40
24 40
30 34
36 16
42 0
7. Add these points to your diagram and draw Economainias new PPF. Give two reasons for the shift in
the PPF.
8. Given your new PPF, can Economainia now product at point H? Please explain.
The next two questions refer to Figure 1-5, which is also Figure 1-5 in your textbook.
9. Explain the difference between points Al, A2, and A3 in panel (a).
10. What is the relationship between the three points in Figure 1-5 (a) and the three PPFs in Figure 1-5
(b)?
11. When an economy decides to produce more capital goods, must it usually (at least for the time being)
produce fewer consumer goods? Why, or why not?
12. List the opportunity costs associated with going to college for four years. Explain why the amount
spent for room and board should or should not be included in your list.
Figure 1-5
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13. B 14. B 15. D 16. E 17. B 18. B
19. A 20. C 21. D 22. B 23. E 24. C
25. B 26. A 27. B 28. B 29. D
2. a. N
b. P
c. P
d. N
e. P
f. N
3. a, d, f.
4. tomorrows, yesterdays
5. a, b, d.
6. (3)
7. (4)
8. (5)
9. (1)
10. (4)
1.
Figure 1-4
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2. Point C, as well as points A, B, D, E, and F, all represent points of productive efficiency. Society is on
its frontier. There is full employment of all resources and the only way to produce more of one good is by
producing less of the other.
3. Economainia could be at G due to unemployment (of any resource) or some other inefficiency, such as
strikes or political turmoil.
4. Since point G is beneath societys frontier, it represents a point of inefficiencysociety could do
better.
5. A leftward shift in the PPF can occur when society depletes or loses resources.
6. Point H is currently unattainable. Economainia has neither the resources nor the technological know-
how to produce at point H.
7. The PPF may shift to the right due to advances in technology or the discovery or acquisition of more
resources.
8. Point H is still unattainable. Society can produce either 42,000 apartments and no bread, or
50,000,000 loaves of bread and no apartments.
9. As the economy moves from Al to A3, it is giving up or trading current consumption goods for capital
goods. The increase in capital goods will enable this economy to produce more goods and services in the
future. All the points in Figure 1-5 (a) represent points of full employment and efficient use of the
available technology.
10. As the economy allocates more resources to capital investment in Figure 1-5 (a), it is providing for
more economic growth in the future. The points Al, A2, and A3 represent three different choices, made by
three different countries with equal resource endowments. Country 1 decides to allocate all its resources to
current consumption. It does not grow, and the PPF in Figure 1-5 (b) is similar to the one in Figure 1-5 (a).
Countries 2 and 3 allocate more resources to capital investment. The more resources that are allocated to
capital the more the economy grows, and the further out to the right the PPF shifts in the future.
11. Yes. Resources are scarce, and tradeoffs occur. While allocating more resources to capital goods will
help an economy grow and produce more of both consumer and capital goods in the future, it must
sacrifice some current consumption. This is not a huge problem. Since the production of capital goods is
typically financed (at least in part) by saving, households send a signal to producers that they do not need
consumer goods in the present. They are post-poning consumption until some point in the future, when the
capital investment will enable the economy to produce more.
12. The opportunity costs of going to college include the next-best use of your time, probably the money
lost from not working at a market job, and the next-best use of the money spent on tuition, books, and fees,
perhaps some financial investment. The amount spent for room and board is not part of opportunity cost.
Regardless, of how the four years are spent, living expenses must be paid. Of course, if there is a
substantial difference between college and non-college living costs, the alternative use of any extra costs
should be included.
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