Seminar 2
Seminar 2
By Le Thanh Ha
Type I: True/False question (give a brief explanation)
1. When the consumer price index falls, the typical family has to spend fewer dollars
to maintain the same standard of living.
2. Economists use the term inflation to describe a situation in which the economy’s
overall price level is rising.
3. Because the consumer price index reflects the goods and services bought by
consumers better than the GDP deflator does, it is the more common gauge of
inflation.
4. When the consumer price index is computed, the base year is always the first year
among the years being considered.
5. If the current year CPI is 140, then the price level has increased 40 percent since the
base year.
6. Inflation can be measured using either the GDP deflator or the consumer price
index.
7. The CPI for 2008 is computed by dividing the price of the basket of goods and
services in 2008 by the price of the basket of goods and services in the base year,
then multiplying by 100.
8. If the current year CPI is 90, then the price level has decreased 10 percent since the
base year.
9. If the value of the consumer price index is 110 in 2005 and 121 in 2006, then the
inflation rate is 11 percent for 2006.
10. Changes in the consumer price index are useful in predicting changes in the
producer price index.
11. The CPI and GDP deflator usually tell two different stories about how quickly
prices are rising.
12. When the price of Italian wine rises, this change is reflected in the U.S. CPI but not
in the U.S. GDP deflator.
13. The group of goods and services used to compute the GDP deflator changes
automatically over time, but the group of goods and services used to compute the
CPI does not.
14. If the CPI today is 120 and the CPI five years ago was 80, then something that cost
$1 five years ago would cost $1.50 in today's prices.
15.
2. In a simple economy, people consume only 2 goods, food and clothing. The market
basket of goods used to compute the CPI consists of 50 units of food and 10 units of
clothing.
Food Clothing
a. What are the percentage increases in the price of food and in the price of clothing?
b. What is the percentage increase in the CPI?
c. Do these price changes affect all consumers to the same extent? Explain.
3. List the three major problems in using the CPI as a measure of the cost of living.
4. Why does the GDP deflator give a different rate of inflation than the CPI?
5. Suppose that people consume only three goods, as shown in this table (the base year
is 2017):
a. What is the percentage change in the price of each of the three goods? Compute the
nominal and real GDP; and their percetage changes?
b. Using a method similar to the CPI, compute the percentage change in the overall price
level.
c. If you were to learn that a bottle of Gatorade increased in size from 2017 to 2018, should
that information affect your calculation of the inflation rate? If so, how?
d. If you were to learn that Gatorade introduced new flavors in 2018, should that
information affect your calculation of the inflation rate? If so, how?