Ec101 Tutorial 3 Solutions
Ec101 Tutorial 3 Solutions
Ec101 Tutorial 3 Solutions
Tutorial 3 Solutions
1. Differentiate between intermediate and final goods and explain why knowing this difference
is important while computing GDP?
Intermediate goods are goods that are used for production of other goods and services
while final goods are finished products ready for consumption. Knowing to difference is
essential as including intermediate goods can lead to double counting problem.
Business cycle shows us the ups and downs in the aggregate economic activity (GDP).
Many other variables such as unemployment and inflation rate also fluctuates along the
different phases of business cycle. Understanding business cycle is important for
economists and policy makers so we can design and implement policies to avoid massive
unemployment, rapid inflation or deep recession.
Tutors: draw a business cycle on the board and explain the different phases.
3. Explain why inflation rate computed using CPI may not be an ideal measure of inflation?
CPI is based on fixed basket of items consumed by a typical urban consumer. Inflation
rate computed using CPI is not an ideal measure of inflation as it fails to capture prices
changes of other goods and services.
4. Differentiate between real GDP and potential GDP and describe how each grows over time.
Real GDP is the value of final goods and services produced in a given year when valued
at the prices of a reference base year. Potential GDP is the maximum amount of real GDP
that can be produced while avoiding shortages of labour, capital, land and
entrepreneurial ability that would bring rising inflation. So real GDP is the actual
amount produced with the actual level of employment of the nation’s factors of
production while potential GDP is the amount that would be produced if there were full
employment of all factors of production with no shortages. Real GDP fluctuates from one
year to the next, though it grows more often than it shrinks. Potential GDP grows from
one year to the next because the quantity of the nation’s resources and technology
increases from one year to the next.
5. What is PPP and explains its usefulness?
PPP is purchasing power parity. To make the most valid international comparisons of
real GDP, we need to value each nation’s production using the same prices rather than
by using exchange rates and the prices within each country because relative prices within
different countries can vary widely. As a result, if the real GDP of each country is valued
using the same prices then the comparison of real GDP among the countries is more
accurate.
6. Discuss the difference between the expenditure approach to measuring GDP and the income
approach to measuring GDP.
The expenditure approach measures GDP by focusing on aggregate expenditures. Data
are collected on the different components of aggregate expenditure and then summed.
Specifically, the Statistics office collects data on consumption expenditure, C, investment,
I, government expenditure on goods and services, G, and net exports, X − M. These
expenditures are valued at the prices paid for the goods and services, called the market
price. GDP is then calculated as C + I + G + X − M.
The income approach measures GDP by focusing on aggregate income. This approach
sums all the incomes paid to households by firms for the factors of production they hire.
Compensation of employees; gross operating surplus, and gross mixed income. Adding
these income components does not quite equal GDP, because it values the output at factor
cost rather than the market price. So, further adjustments must be made to calculate
GDP: Indirect taxes must be added and subsidies subtracted.
7. Tropical Republic produces only bananas and coconuts. The base year is 2010, and the table
gives the quantities produced and the prices.