Instructions enter your responses roundednbspto one decimal


1.  Refer to the data below:

Year Real GDP
(in billions)
Civilian
Labor Force
Employment Civilian Unemployment
2000 12,560 142,583,000 136,891,000 5,692,000
2001 12,682 143,734,000 136,933,000 6,801,000
2002 12,909 144,863,000 136,485,000 8,378,000
2003 13,271 146,510,000 137,736,000 8,774,000
2004 13,774 149,401,000 141,252,000 8,149,000
2005 14,234 149,320,000 141,729,000 7,591,000
2006 14,614 151,428,000 144,427,000 7,001,000
2007 14,874 153,124,000 146,046,000 7,078,000
2008 14,830 154,287,000 145,363,000 8,924,000
2009 14,419 154,142,000 139,877,000 14,265,000
2010 14,784 153,889,000 139,064,000 14,825,000
2011 15,021 153,617,000 139,869,000 13,747,000
2012 15,369 154,975,000 142,469,000 12,506,000
2013 15,710 155,389,000 143,929,000 11,460,000


Instructions: Enter your responses rounded to one decimal place.  Make sure to pay attention to the units measured in the question, i.e. million or trillion.

Between 2000 and 2013, by how much did

(a) The labor force increase?   million

(b) Total employment increase?   million

(c) Total unemployment increase?   million

(d) Total output (real GDP) increase?  $ trillion

2.  Refer to the data below:

Year Real GDP
(in billions)
Civilian
Labor Force
Employment Civilian Unemployment
2000 12,560 142,583,000 136,891,000 5,692,000
2001 12,682 143,734,000 136,933,000 6,801,000
2002 12,909 144,863,000 136,485,000 8,378,000
2003 13,271 146,510,000 137,736,000 8,774,000
2004 13,774 149,401,000 141,252,000 8,149,000
2005 14,234 149,320,000 141,729,000 7,591,000
2006 14,614 151,428,000 144,427,000 7,001,000
2007 14,874 153,124,000 146,046,000 7,078,000
2008 14,830 154,287,000 145,363,000 8,924,000
2009 14,419 154,142,000 139,877,000 14,265,000
2010 14,784 153,889,000 139,064,000 14,825,000
2011 15,021 153,617,000 139,869,000 13,747,000
2012 15,369 154,975,000 142,469,000 12,506,000
2013 15,710 155,389,000 143,929,000 11,460,000


Instructions: Enter your responses rounded to the nearest one decimal place. Make sure to pay attention to the units measured in the question, i.e. million or trillion.

Between 2000 and 2001, by how much did

(a) The labor force increase?   million

(b) Total employment increase?   million

(c) Total unemployment increase?   million
(d) Total output (real GDP) increase?  $ trillion

3  .According to Okun's Law, how much output (real GDP) was lost in 2009 when the nation's unemployment rate increased from 5.8 percent to 9.3 percent? (Real GDP in 2009 was $14,419 billion).

4.  Refer to the "In the News" below:

In the News: Unemployment Rate Hits a 26-Year High 

The nation's unemployment rate climbed to 10.2 percent in October, the highest rate since 1983. Nonfarm payrolls dropped another 190,000 last month, adding to 22 consecutive months of job losses. The biggest job losses were in manufacturing, construction, and retail employment.

Since the recession began over 7.3 million jobs have been lost. The unemployment rate has more than doubled from 4.9 percent in December 2007 to its current level of 10.2 percent.

In October, 35.6 percent of unemployed persons were jobless for 27 weeks or more, while 20 percent of the unemployed were jobless for 5 weeks or less.

Among the major worker groups, the unemployment rates for adult men (10.7 percent) and whites (9.5 percent) rose in October. The jobless rates for adult women (8.1 percent), teenagers (27.6 percent), blacks (15.7 percent), and Hispanics (13.1 percent) were little changed over the month.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 10, 2009.


If the number of unemployed is 15.7 million, in October 2009:

Instructions: Enter your responses rounded to the nearest whole number.

(a) How many people were in the labor force?million

(b) How many people were employed?million

5. Suppose all the dollar values in the following data are in 2000 dollars.

also, what does data in the 2000 mean

Consumption $200 billion
Depreciation 20
Retained earnings 12
Gross investment 40
Imports 70
Exports 50
Net foreign factor income 10
Government purchases 80

Instructions: Enter your response rounded to the nearest whole number.

How much is GDP?

$ billion

Use the Consumer Price Index shown and convert GDP to 2013 dollars.

Consumer Price Index
Year Index
(all items)
Percent
Change
2000 172.2 3.4
2001 177.1 2.8
2002 179.7 1.6
2003 184.0 2.6
2004 188.9 2.7
2005 195.3 3.4
2006 201.6 3.2
2007 207.3 2.8
2008 215.3 3.8
2009 214.5 -0.4
2010 218.1 1.6
2011 224.9 3.2
2012 229.6 2.1
2013 233.0 1.5


What is the value of that GDP in 2013 dollars? (Convert the figures from their nominal to their real values with 2013 as the base year; use the following formula: CPI2/CPI1 = GDP2/GDP1.)

Instructions: Enter your response rounded to the nearest whole number.$ billion

6. What was real per capita GDP in 1933 measured in 2013 prices? Use the data in the table below and a price index of 100/1,400 to compute your answer.

Year Nominal GDP Population Nominal per capita GDP
1933 $     57 billion 126 million $   452
2013 16,800 billion 301 million 54,194

Instructions: Enter your response rounded to the nearest whole number.

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Microeconomics: Instructions enter your responses roundednbspto one decimal
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