Module 15.2: Inflation and Indicators Flashcards

1
Q

What is frictional unemployement?

A

results from the time lag necessary to match employees who seek work with employers needing their skills.

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2
Q

What is structural unemployment?

A

caused by long run changes in the economy that eliminate some jobs while generating others.

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3
Q

What is cyclical unemployment?

A

driven by changes in the general level of economic activity. Driven by business cycles.

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4
Q

When is a person considered unemployed?

A

A person is unemployed if he is actively searching for work.

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5
Q

Does the labor force include only people who are unemployed?

A

No, can include both employed and unemployed.

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6
Q

What is the participation ratio? When does it expand and decrease?

A

is the percentage of the working-age population who are either employed or actively seeking employment. Tends to increase when economy expands and decrease during recessions.

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7
Q

What causes the unemployment rate to be a lagging indicator?

A

the number of discouraged workers who re-enter the labor force is greater than the number who are hired immediately.

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8
Q

What is inflation? hyperinflation?

A

persistent increase in price level over time.

Hyperinflation is when inflation is out of control and can ruin a monetary system.

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9
Q

What is the inflation rate? What is disinflation? What is deflation?

A

pecentage increase in the price level, typically compared to prior year.

Disinflation refers to an inflation rate that is decreasing over time but remains greater than 0.

A deflation is commonly associated with deep recessions. When prices are deflating, consumers delay purchases b/c prices will be cheaper in the future.

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10
Q

What is a price index? CPI? how is it used to calculate inflation?

A

Price index is a proxy for the price level.

CPI or consumer price index is the best known indicator in the U.S.

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11
Q

What is the formula for CPI?

A

[cost of basket at current price / cost of basket at base period prices] * 100

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12
Q

What is headline inflations vs. core inflation?

A

headline inflation - refers to price indexes for all goods

core inflation - refers to price indexes that exclude food and energy.

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13
Q

What is a laspeyres index? what are the three factors that cause laspeyres index to be biased upward?

A

Laspeyres index is an index that uses a constant basket of goods and services.

Three factors that cause it to be biased:

1) New Goods - new goods will reduce weight of goods in the index.
2) Quality changes - if price increases because increase in quality, could overstate inflation.
3) Substitution - prices of substitutes could lead to more purchases of the cheaper good.

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14
Q

What is hedonic pricing?

A

Used to adjust a price index for product quality

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15
Q

What is a fisher index (also known as chained index)? what does it solve?

A

it is the geometric mean of a laspeyres index and a paasche index.

Helps solve the bias from substitution.

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16
Q

What is a Paasche Index?

A

A Paasche index uses the current consumption weights, prices from the base period, and prices in the current period.

17
Q

What is the difference between cost-push inflation and demand pull inflation?

A

Cost-push inflation results from a decrease in aggregate supply driven by an increase in price such as wages and energy.

Demand-pull inflation results from a increase in aggregate demand driven by an increase in money supply, increased gov spending, or any change that increased demand.

18
Q

What are leading indicators? Coincident indicators? and lagging indicators?

A

leading indicators - have been known to change direction before peaks or troughs in the business cycle.

coincident indicators - that change direction at roughly the same time as peaks or troughs

lagging indicators - that don’t tend to change direction until after expansions or contractions are already underway.