Why are changes in the output gap larger than changes in the unemployment gap? Why is the relationship expressed in Okun's law not affected by inflation or expected inflation?

What will be an ideal response?

Common sense suggests that output and unemployment must be negatively-related. However, the link between the two is employment. Since the productivity of employed workers can vary, output has extra flexibility. Moreover, even when employment is changing along with output, not all of the employment change corresponds to a change in unemployment, since new employees might be new entrants to the labor force, and employees who leave their jobs might leave the labor force and not be counted among the unemployed. All these connections between output, employment, the labor force, and unemployment are real; they do not involve any price adjustments.

Economics

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A bank's net worth is:

a. equal to assets plus liabilities b. sometimes called the owners' equity. c. equal to assets minus reserves. d. the same thing as net profits. e. the amount of interest charged by the bank for short-term loans.

Economics

At a discount rate of 10 percent, what is the net present value of an investment expected to yield $1,000 per year (to be received at year end) for the next two years?

a. $1,859.41 b. $1,801.23 c. $1,735.54 d. $1,527.78

Economics