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Informations
Catégorie :Category: nCreator TI-Nspire
Auteur Author: anthonyk2923
Type : Classeur 3.0.1
Page(s) : 1
Taille Size: 2.62 Ko KB
Mis en ligne Uploaded: 24/02/2025 - 07:48:49
Uploadeur Uploader: anthonyk2923 (Profil)
Téléchargements Downloads: 3
Visibilité Visibility: Archive publique
Shortlink : http://ti-pla.net/a4515712
Type : Classeur 3.0.1
Page(s) : 1
Taille Size: 2.62 Ko KB
Mis en ligne Uploaded: 24/02/2025 - 07:48:49
Uploadeur Uploader: anthonyk2923 (Profil)
Téléchargements Downloads: 3
Visibilité Visibility: Archive publique
Shortlink : http://ti-pla.net/a4515712
Description
Fichier Nspire généré sur TI-Planet.org.
Compatible OS 3.0 et ultérieurs.
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Circular Flow Model Income vs. Expenditure Illustrates GDP Components: Households, Firms, Government, Foreign Sector GDP Definition: The total value of goods/services produced in a country within a specific time frame. Expenditure Approach: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M) Income Approach: GDP = Income earned by factors of production. Value-Added Approach: GDP = Sum of values added at each stage of production. Exclusions from GDP: Intermediate goods, non-market transactions, underground economy, externalities. Limitations: Doesnt account for distribution, environmental impact, or unpaid work. Nominal vs. Real GDP: Nominal: Measured in current prices. Real: Adjusted for inflation, more accurate. GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100 Business Cycle Phases: Expansion, Peak, Contraction (Recession), Trough GDP Connection: Actual vs. Potential output; Output gap shows the difference. What Happens: Expansion: Economy grows, GDP rises. Contraction: GDP falls, unemployment rises. Unemployment Measurement: Unemployment Rate = (Unemployed / Labor Force) x 100 Labor Force Participation Rate: % of working-age population in labor force. Understatement: Excludes discouraged workers, underemployed. Types: Frictional: Temporary transitions. Structural: Mismatch of skills. Cyclical: Due to the business cycle. Natural Rate of Unemployment: The lowest sustainable unemployment rate, accounting for frictional and structural unemployment. Price Indices and Inflation CPI = (Cost of Basket in Current Year / Cost of Basket in Base Year) x 100 GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100 Shortcomings of CPI: Substitution bias, quality change bias. Types of Inflation: Cost-Push: Caused by rising production costs. Demand-Pull: Caused by high demand for goods/services. Graphing: Be able to draw demand-pull and cost-push inflation graphs. Costs of Inflation Winners: Debtors, those with fixed-rate loans. Losers: Creditors, those on fixed incomes. Unanticipated Inflation: Redistributes real income, reduces purchasing power. Real vs. Nominal Interest Rate: Real: Adjusted for inflation. Nominal: Not adjusted for inflation. Deflation: General decrease in prices. Disinflation: Slowing rate of inflation. Made with nCreator - tiplanet.org
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Compatible OS 3.0 et ultérieurs.
<<
Circular Flow Model Income vs. Expenditure Illustrates GDP Components: Households, Firms, Government, Foreign Sector GDP Definition: The total value of goods/services produced in a country within a specific time frame. Expenditure Approach: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M) Income Approach: GDP = Income earned by factors of production. Value-Added Approach: GDP = Sum of values added at each stage of production. Exclusions from GDP: Intermediate goods, non-market transactions, underground economy, externalities. Limitations: Doesnt account for distribution, environmental impact, or unpaid work. Nominal vs. Real GDP: Nominal: Measured in current prices. Real: Adjusted for inflation, more accurate. GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100 Business Cycle Phases: Expansion, Peak, Contraction (Recession), Trough GDP Connection: Actual vs. Potential output; Output gap shows the difference. What Happens: Expansion: Economy grows, GDP rises. Contraction: GDP falls, unemployment rises. Unemployment Measurement: Unemployment Rate = (Unemployed / Labor Force) x 100 Labor Force Participation Rate: % of working-age population in labor force. Understatement: Excludes discouraged workers, underemployed. Types: Frictional: Temporary transitions. Structural: Mismatch of skills. Cyclical: Due to the business cycle. Natural Rate of Unemployment: The lowest sustainable unemployment rate, accounting for frictional and structural unemployment. Price Indices and Inflation CPI = (Cost of Basket in Current Year / Cost of Basket in Base Year) x 100 GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100 Shortcomings of CPI: Substitution bias, quality change bias. Types of Inflation: Cost-Push: Caused by rising production costs. Demand-Pull: Caused by high demand for goods/services. Graphing: Be able to draw demand-pull and cost-push inflation graphs. Costs of Inflation Winners: Debtors, those with fixed-rate loans. Losers: Creditors, those on fixed incomes. Unanticipated Inflation: Redistributes real income, reduces purchasing power. Real vs. Nominal Interest Rate: Real: Adjusted for inflation. Nominal: Not adjusted for inflation. Deflation: General decrease in prices. Disinflation: Slowing rate of inflation. Made with nCreator - tiplanet.org
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