Bureau of Economic Analysis for real GDP and personal consumption expenditures (PCE) in billions of 2005 dollars for the years 2009-2012 are: Year Real GDP PCE 2009 12,758 9,032 2010 13,063 9,196 2011 13,299 9,429 2012 13,616 9,630 As an economic analyst, you could use these figures to determine the simple multiplier to predict given changes in autonomous spending. Please compute the MPC for the years 2009-2010 and for 2011-2012. What would be the values of the simple multiplier for these two time periods?
Bureau of Economic Analysis for real GDP and personal consumption expenditures (PCE) in billions of 2005...
Given below are data on real GDP and potential GDP for the nation of Anaziland for the years 2009-2013, in billions of 2009 currency For each year, calculate the output gap as a percentage of potential GDP and state whether the gap is a recessionary gap or an expansionary gap. Also calculate the year-to-year growth rates of real GDP Instructions: Enter your response as a percentage rounded two decimal places. If you are entering any negative numbers be sure to...
Check my work Given below are data on real GDP and potential GDP for the United States for the years 2005-2016, in billions of 2009 dollars. For each year, calculate the output gap as a percentage of potential GDP and state whether the gap is a recessionary gap or an expansionary gap. Also calculate the year-to-year growth rates of real GDP. Instructions: Enter your responses as a percentage rounded to one decimal place. If you are entering any negative numbers...
3. Calculating GDP from raw economic data The following table shows data on personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, exports, imports, and government consumption expenditures and gross investment for the United States in 2010, as published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. All figures are in billions of dollars. Fill in the missing cells in the following table to calculate GDP. Components Personal Consumption Expenditures (CC) $10,417.1 Gross Private Domestic Investment (II) $1,818 Exports (XX) $1,935.3 Imports (MM) $2,435.5...
4. Measuring GDP The following table shows data on consumption, investments, exports, imports, and government expenditures for the United States in 2014, as published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. All figures are in billions of dollars. Fill in the missing cells in the table to calculate GDP using the expenditure approach.Data (Billions of dollars) Consumption (C) 11,930.3Investment (I) 2,851.6Exports (X) 2,337.0Imports (M) 2,875.2Net Exports of Goods and Services Government Purchases (G) 3,175.2Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
2002 85.0 92.0 Refer to the data below (all values are in billions): Nominal Year GDP Deflator GDP (in Billions (Price Index, of Dollars) 2009 = 100) 2000 9,817 81.9 2001 10,128 83.8 10,469 2003 10,960 86.7 2004 11,685 89.1 2005 12,422 2006 13,178 94.8 2007 13,808 97.3 2008 14,291 99.2 2009 13,939 100.0 2010 14,524 101.2 15,518 103.3 2012 16,163 105.2 2013 16,768 106.7 2014 17,393 108.8 2015 18,037 110.0 2016 18,569 111.4 2011 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014...
7. Measuring GDP The following table shows data on personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, exports, imports, and government purchases of goods and services for the United States in 2009, as published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. All figures are in billions of dollars. Fill in the missing cells in the table to calculate GDP by adding together the final demands of consumers, business firms, the government, and foreigners-a method of calculating GDP known as the expenditure approach....
Recall the method of calculating real GDP detailed in the chapter. As you may already have noticed, this method has a problem: in calculating aggregate output, this method weights the output of the various goods and services by their relative prices in the base year. Say, for example, a textbook costs $100 in the base year, and a laptop costs $2,000. This means that the laptop would have 20 times the weight of a book in calculating aggregate output. But...
Instructions: Enter your responses rounded to the nearest billion. a. Calculate real GDP for 2016 using 2000 prices. $ billion b. By how much did real GDP increase between 2000 and 2016? $ billion c. By how much did nominal GDP increase between 2000 and 2016? $ billion Refer to the data below (all values are in billions): Year Nominal GDP GDP Deflator (in Billions of Dollars) (Price Index 2009 100) 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009...
Please solve for Growth rate of real GDP and show work Given below are data on real GDP and potential GDP for the nation of Anaziland for the years 2009–2013, in billions of 2009 currency. For each year, calculate the output gap as a percentage of potential GDP and state whether the gap is a recessionary gap or an expansionary gap. Also calculate the year-to-year growth rates of real GDP. Instructions: Enter your response as a percentage rounded two decimal...
Recall the method of calculating real GDP detailed in the chapter. As you may already have noticed, this method has a problem: in calculating aggregate output, this method weights the output of the various goods and services by their relative prices in the base year. Say, for example, a textbook costs $100 in the base year, and a laptop costs $2,000. This means that the laptop would have 20 times the weight of a book in calculating aggregate output. But what happens when relative prices change? As you know,...