HKDSE · Answers & Marking Scheme

2022 HKDSE Economics Answers & Marking Scheme

Thinka 2022 DSE-Style Mock — Economics

149 marks210 mins2022
An original Thinka practice paper modelled on the structure and difficulty of that year's HKDSE paper. Not affiliated with or reproduced from the HKEAA.

Paper 1 (Multiple Choice)

Answer all 45 questions. All questions carry equal marks. Choose the best answer.
45 Question · 45 marks
Question 1 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
In an economy facing an inflationary gap, which of the following combinations of fiscal and monetary policies would most effectively help restore long-run macroeconomic equilibrium?
  1. A.Reduce income tax rate and buy government bonds
  2. B.Increase government expenditure and increase required reserve ratio
  3. C.Reduce government transfer payments and sell government bonds in the open market
  4. D.Increase corporate tax rate and lower the discount rate

Answer

C

Worked solution

To close an inflationary gap, contractionary policies are required. Reducing government transfer payments is a contractionary fiscal policy, which reduces aggregate demand (AD). Selling government bonds in the open market is a contractionary monetary policy, which reduces the money supply and increases interest rates, thereby reducing consumption and investment demand (AD). Option A and Option B contain expansionary policies. Option D contains an expansionary monetary policy (lowering the discount rate). Therefore, Option C is the correct answer.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (C). Reject all other options.
Question 2 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose Country A and Country B produce two goods: Smart watches (W) and Toys (T). Assume constant opportunity costs.\nCountry A: 1 unit of labor can produce 4W or 2T.\nCountry B: 1 unit of labor can produce 2W or 2T.\nIf Country A and Country B trade, which of the following is the range of mutually beneficial terms of trade (in terms of Toys per Smart watch)?
  1. A.\(0.5 \text{ units of Toys} < 1 \text{ unit of Smart watch} < 1 \text{ unit of Toy}\)
  2. B.\(1 \text{ unit of Toy} < 1 \text{ unit of Smart watch} < 2 \text{ units of Toys}\)
  3. C.\(2 \text{ units of Smart watches} < 1 \text{ unit of Toy} < 4 \text{ units of Smart watches}\)
  4. D.\(0.5 \text{ units of Smart watches} < 1 \text{ unit of Toy} < 1 \text{ unit of Smart watch}\)

Answer

A

Worked solution

In Country A, the opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of W is \(2 / 4 = 0.5\) units of T. In Country B, the opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of W is \(2 / 2 = 1\) unit of T. Since Country A has a lower opportunity cost in producing W, it will specialize in and export W. Country B will import W. For trade to be mutually beneficial, the price of 1 unit of W must lie between the opportunity costs of the two countries, which is: \(0.5 \text{ units of Toys} < 1 \text{ unit of Smart watch} < 1 \text{ unit of Toy}\). Thus, Option A is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (A). Reject all other options.
Question 3 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Consider the market for coffee beans. Suppose a scientific study reveals that coffee consumption significantly improves focus and memory, and at the same time, a severe drought occurs in major coffee-producing countries. How would the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity of coffee beans change?
  1. A.Equilibrium price increases, while the change in equilibrium quantity is uncertain.
  2. B.Equilibrium price decreases, while the change in equilibrium quantity is uncertain.
  3. C.Equilibrium quantity increases, while the change in equilibrium price is uncertain.
  4. D.Equilibrium quantity decreases, while the change in equilibrium price is uncertain.

Answer

A

Worked solution

The scientific study increases the preferences for coffee, causing the demand for coffee beans to increase (demand curve shifts to the right). The severe drought in major producing countries reduces the harvest, causing the supply of coffee beans to decrease (supply curve shifts to the left). An increase in demand and a decrease in supply will definitely cause the equilibrium price to rise. However, the change in equilibrium quantity is uncertain as it depends on the relative magnitudes of the shifts in demand and supply. Therefore, Option A is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (A). Reject all other options.
Question 4 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
In the AS-AD model, suppose an economy is initially at long-run macroeconomic equilibrium. If there is a sudden and significant rise in international oil prices (the economy is a net oil importer), in the short run, the price level will ________ and the real output level will ________.
  1. A.rise ... rise
  2. B.rise ... fall
  3. C.fall ... rise
  4. D.fall ... fall

Answer

B

Worked solution

A rise in international oil prices increases the production costs for firms in an oil-importing economy. This causes the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) to decrease (the SRAS curve shifts to the left). As a result, the short-run macroeconomic equilibrium shifts along the aggregate demand (AD) curve, leading to a higher price level (inflation) and a lower level of real output (recession). Therefore, Option B is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (B). Reject all other options.
Question 5 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
In a banking system, the legal reserve ratio is 20%. Suppose a customer deposits \$100,000 in cash into Bank A. If banks do not hold excess reserves and there is no cash leakage to the public, what is the maximum possible amount of total credit (loans) created by the entire banking system?
  1. A.\$100,000
  2. B.\$400,000
  3. C.\$500,000
  4. D.\$2,000,000

Answer

B

Worked solution

The maximum deposit creation multiplier is \(1 / R = 1 / 0.20 = 5\). The maximum total deposits that can be supported by the \$100,000 cash deposit is \(\$100,000 \times 5 = \$500,000\). Total credit (loans) created by the entire banking system is equal to the change in total deposits minus the change in reserves (which equals the initial cash deposit), i.e., \(\$500,000 - \$100,000 = \$400,000\). Therefore, Option B is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (B). Reject all other options.
Question 6 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Which of the following transactions would be included in the calculation of Hong Kong's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the current year?\n(1) The commission fee of \$5,000 charged by a Hong Kong auction house for the transaction of an antique vase.\n(2) A fee of \$120,000 received by a Hong Kong consulting firm for providing services to a company in Tokyo.\n(3) A \$10,000 monthly social security allowance paid by the Hong Kong government to an elderly resident.\n(4) A \$50,000 purchase of shares in a newly listed company by a Hong Kong resident.
  1. A.(1) and (2) only
  2. B.(3) and (4) only
  3. C.(1), (2) and (4) only
  4. D.(1), (2), (3) and (4)

Answer

A

Worked solution

(1) is included because the commission represents a service produced within Hong Kong's domestic boundary during the current period. (2) is included because it is an export of services produced by a resident production unit in Hong Kong. (3) is a transfer payment, which does not involve any current production, so it is excluded. (4) is a financial transaction (transfer of ownership of existing assets/claims), which does not involve any production of new goods or services, so it is excluded. Thus, only (1) and (2) are included. Option A is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (A). Reject all other options.
Question 7 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Under the Linked Exchange Rate System of Hong Kong, the HK dollar (HKD) is pegged to the US dollar (USD) at a rate of 7.80 HKD to 1 USD. Suppose the USD depreciates against the Euro (EUR). Which of the following statements are correct?\n(1) The HKD will depreciate against the EUR.\n(2) Hong Kong's exports to Europe will become more price competitive.\n(3) The cost of Hong Kong tourists travelling to Europe will decrease.\n(4) Hong Kong's import prices from Europe (in terms of HKD) will decrease.
  1. A.(1) and (2) only
  2. B.(1) and (4) only
  3. C.(2) and (3) only
  4. D.(3) and (4) only

Answer

A

Worked solution

Since the HKD is pegged to the USD, any change in the exchange rate of the USD against other currencies is mirrored by the HKD. (1) Since the USD depreciates against the EUR, the HKD will also depreciate against the EUR. This statement is correct. (2) As the HKD depreciates against the EUR, Hong Kong goods become cheaper in terms of EUR, making HK exports to Europe more price competitive. This statement is correct. (3) A depreciated HKD means it takes more HKD to buy EUR, so travelling to Europe becomes more expensive, not less. This statement is incorrect. (4) Since the EUR appreciates against the HKD, imports from Europe will become more expensive in HKD terms. This statement is incorrect. Therefore, Option A is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (A). Reject all other options.
Question 8 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose the price elasticity of demand for a local concert ticket is 1.5. If the organizer decides to raise the ticket price by 10%, how will the total revenue of the organizer change?
  1. A.Total revenue will increase because the percentage increase in price is smaller than the percentage decrease in quantity demanded.
  2. B.Total revenue will decrease because the percentage decrease in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage increase in price.
  3. C.Total revenue will increase because demand is elastic.
  4. D.Total revenue will remain unchanged.

Answer

B

Worked solution

The price elasticity of demand is 1.5, which is greater than 1, indicating that demand is elastic. When demand is elastic, the percentage decrease in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage increase in price. Specifically, a 10% increase in price leads to a \(10\% \times 1.5 = 15\%\) decrease in quantity demanded. Since the percentage decrease in quantity demanded (15%) is greater than the percentage increase in price (10%), the total revenue (Price \(\times\) Quantity) will decrease. Thus, Option B is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (B). Reject all other options.
Question 9 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Susan is choosing between three mutually exclusive options for her Saturday afternoon:\nOption X: Study for her Economics exam, which she values at \$200.\nOption Y: Work part-time at a bookstore, which pays \$150 in wages.\nOption Z: Watch a movie with her friends, which she values at \$180 and costs \$80 for the ticket.\nAssume there are no other costs involved. What is Susan's opportunity cost of choosing Option X?
  1. A.\$150
  2. B.\$100
  3. C.\$250
  4. D.\$330

Answer

A

Worked solution

Opportunity cost is the value of the highest-valued alternative forgone. If Susan chooses Option X, her forgone alternatives are Option Y and Option Z. The net value of Option Y is the wage of \$150. The net value of Option Z is its valuation minus the cost, which is \(\$180 - \$80 = \$100\). Comparing the forgone alternatives, Option Y has the highest net value (\$150 > \$100). Therefore, the opportunity cost of choosing Option X is the value of Option Y, which is \$150. Option A is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (A). Reject all other options.
Question 10 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose the government imposes a price floor (minimum price) below the equilibrium price of a certain good. What will be the effect on the market price and quantity traded of this good?
  1. A.There will be a shortage of the good.
  2. B.There will be a surplus of the good.
  3. C.The market price and quantity traded will remain unchanged.
  4. D.The market price will decrease and the quantity traded will increase.

Answer

C

Worked solution

A price floor is a government-imposed minimum price above which the market price is allowed to be. If the price floor is set below the equilibrium price, it is non-binding (ineffective). The market forces of demand and supply will keep the price at the equilibrium level. Therefore, there will be no change in either the market price or the quantity traded of the good. Thus, Option C is correct.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct answer (C). Reject all other options.
Question 11 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The table below shows the amount of food or clothing that Country A and Country B can produce with one unit of labor:

$$\begin{array}{|c|c|c|} \hline & \text{Food (units)} & \text{Clothing (units)} \\ \hline \text{Country A} & 10 & 5 \\ \hline \text{Country B} & 8 & 2 \\ \hline \end{array}$$

Which of the following statements is correct?
  1. A.Country B has a comparative advantage in producing clothing.
  2. B.The opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of food in Country A is 2 units of clothing.
  3. C.Both countries will benefit if 1 unit of clothing is traded for 3 units of food.
  4. D.If Country A allocates half of its labor to food and half to clothing, it will have a comparative advantage in food.

Answer

C

Worked solution

Let's calculate the opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of clothing (C) in both countries:
- For Country A: opportunity cost of 1C = \( 10 / 5 = 2 \) units of food (F).
- For Country B: opportunity cost of 1C = \( 8 / 2 = 4 \) units of food (F).
Since Country A has a lower opportunity cost in producing clothing (2F < 4F), it has a comparative advantage in clothing. Country B has a comparative advantage in food.
For trade to be mutually beneficial, the terms of trade for 1 unit of clothing must lie between the two countries' opportunity costs: \( 2F < 1C < 4F \).
Option C suggests 1C is traded for 3F, which lies within this range (between 2F and 4F). Thus, both countries will benefit.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option C.
Question 12 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
An economy is experiencing high inflation. The central bank decides to increase the required reserve ratio. At the same time, commercial banks decide to hold more excess reserves due to credit risks. Which of the following is correct?
  1. A.The actual money multiplier will decrease.
  2. B.The monetary base will increase.
  3. C.The maximum possible money supply will increase.
  4. D.The public's cash holding will definitely decrease.

Answer

A

Worked solution

The actual money multiplier is determined by the total reserves (required + excess) and cash leakage. An increase in the required reserve ratio decreases the maximum money multiplier. At the same time, when commercial banks hold more excess reserves, they lend out less, which directly reduces the actual money multiplier. Therefore, both actions will lead to a decrease in the actual money multiplier.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option A.
Question 13 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The government relaxes the import quota on Japanese beef. At the same time, a scientific report highlights the health risks of consuming red meat. In the market for Japanese beef, the equilibrium price will _______ and the equilibrium quantity will _______.
  1. A.decrease ... be uncertain
  2. B.decrease ... increase
  3. C.be uncertain ... decrease
  4. D.increase ... be uncertain

Answer

A

Worked solution

Relaxing the import quota increases the market supply of Japanese beef (supply curve shifts right), which tends to lower the equilibrium price and increase the equilibrium quantity.
The scientific report on health risks decreases the consumer demand for Japanese beef (demand curve shifts left), which tends to lower both the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity.
Combining both shifts: the equilibrium price will definitely decrease, while the effect on equilibrium quantity is uncertain as it depends on the relative magnitude of the shifts.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option A.
Question 14 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
There is a sudden increase in the price of imported raw materials in a small open economy. At the same time, the government increases its spending on infrastructure. In the short run, how will these events affect the aggregate price level and real GDP of the economy?
  1. A.The price level will increase while the change in real GDP is uncertain.
  2. B.Both the price level and real GDP will increase.
  3. C.The price level will decrease while the change in real GDP is uncertain.
  4. D.The change in price level is uncertain while real GDP will decrease.

Answer

A

Worked solution

An increase in the price of imported raw materials increases the cost of production, which shifts the Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve to the left. This causes the price level to rise and real GDP to fall.
An increase in government spending on infrastructure increases aggregate demand, shifting the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve to the right. This causes both the price level and real GDP to rise.
When SRAS shifts left and AD shifts right: the aggregate price level will definitely increase, while the change in real GDP is uncertain.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option A.
Question 15 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
A Hong Kong resident owns a residential property in London and rents it to a British citizen. The monthly rental income received by the Hong Kong resident should be included in Hong Kong's ________ and the UK's ________.
  1. A.GDP ... GDP
  2. B.GNI ... GDP
  3. C.GDP ... GNI
  4. D.GNI ... GNI

Answer

B

Worked solution

GDP is measured based on the location of production. Since the property is located in London, the housing service is produced within the economic territory of the UK, so it is included in the UK's GDP.
GNI (GNP) is measured based on the residency of the factor owner. Since the owner is a Hong Kong resident, the rental income (which is property income from abroad) is included in Hong Kong's GNI. It is not included in Hong Kong's GDP because the production did not take place in Hong Kong.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option B.
Question 16 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The balance sheet of a banking system is shown below:

$$\begin{array}{lr|lr} \hline \text{Assets (\$ million)} & & \text{Liabilities (\$ million)} & \\ \hline \text{Reserves} & 400 & \text{Deposits} & 1,000 \\ \text{Loans} & 600 & & \\ \hline \end{array}$$

The required reserve ratio is \( 25\% \).
Suppose the public withdraws \$100 million of cash from the banking system and holds it as currency in circulation. If there is no subsequent cash leakage and banks fully utilize their excess reserves to create deposits, the maximum possible money supply in the economy will...
  1. A.decrease by \$300 million.
  2. B.decrease by \$100 million.
  3. C.decrease by \$400 million.
  4. D.remain unchanged.

Answer

A

Worked solution

Let \( C_0 \) be the initial cash held by the public.
Initial maximum money supply = \( C_0 + \text{Max Deposits}_0 = C_0 + \frac{400}{0.25} = C_0 + 1,600 \) million.
After the public withdraws \$100 million:
- Cash held by the public becomes \( C_0 + 100 \) million.
- Reserves in the banking system decrease to \( 400 - 100 = 300 \) million.
New maximum deposits that can be created with \$300 million of reserves = \( \frac{300}{0.25} = 1,200 \) million.
New maximum money supply = \( (C_0 + 100) + 1,200 = C_0 + 1,300 \) million.
Change in maximum money supply = \( (C_0 + 1,300) - (C_0 + 1,600) = -300 \) million.
Therefore, the maximum possible money supply will decrease by \$300 million.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option A.
Question 17 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The price elasticity of demand for a good is 1.5. If the seller decreases the price of the good, the total revenue will ________ because the percentage increase in quantity demanded is ________ than the percentage decrease in price.
  1. A.increase ... greater
  2. B.increase ... smaller
  3. C.decrease ... greater
  4. D.decrease ... smaller

Answer

A

Worked solution

The price elasticity of demand is 1.5, which is greater than 1 (elastic demand).
When demand is price-elastic, the percentage change in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage change in price.
Thus, if price decreases, the percentage increase in quantity demanded will be greater than the percentage decrease in price, leading to an increase in total revenue.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option A.
Question 18 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The table below shows the production relationship of a firm in the short run, where capital is a fixed factor:

$$\begin{array}{|c|c|} \hline \text{Number of Workers} & \text{Total Product (units)} \\ \hline 1 & 10 \\ \hline 2 & 24 \\ \hline 3 & 42 \\ \hline 4 & 56 \\ \hline 5 & 65 \\ \hline 6 & 70 \\ \hline \end{array}$$

At which worker does the Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns start to manifest itself?
  1. A.the 2nd worker
  2. B.the 3rd worker
  3. C.the 4th worker
  4. D.the 5th worker

Answer

C

Worked solution

Let's calculate the marginal product (MP) of each additional worker:
- 1st worker: \( 10 \) units
- 2nd worker: \( 24 - 10 = 14 \) units
- 3rd worker: \( 42 - 24 = 18 \) units
- 4th worker: \( 56 - 42 = 14 \) units
- 5th worker: \( 65 - 56 = 9 \) units
- 6th worker: \( 70 - 65 = 5 \) units
The marginal product increases up to the 3rd worker (from 10 to 14, then to 18) and starts to decrease with the employment of the 4th worker (falling to 14). Therefore, the Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns starts to operate with the employment of the 4th worker.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option C.
Question 19 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Under the Linked Exchange Rate System of Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Dollar (HKD) is pegged to the US Dollar (USD) at a rate of 7.80 HKD to 1 USD. If the US Dollar depreciates against the Euro (EUR), which of the following is most likely to happen?
  1. A.The price of European imports in terms of HKD will decrease.
  2. B.The price of Hong Kong exports in terms of Euros will decrease.
  3. C.The purchasing power of Hong Kong residents in Europe will increase.
  4. D.The volume of imports from Europe to Hong Kong will definitely increase.

Answer

B

Worked solution

Since the HKD is pegged to the USD, when the USD depreciates against the Euro, the HKD will also depreciate against the Euro.
As a result, Hong Kong goods become cheaper in terms of Euros. Thus, the price of Hong Kong exports in terms of Euros will decrease.
This makes Hong Kong's exports more competitive in European markets. European goods imported to Hong Kong will become more expensive in terms of HKD.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option B.
Question 20 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
If the government imposes an effective price ceiling on a rental housing market, which of the following is a possible outcome?
  1. A.A surplus of rental housing will emerge.
  2. B.Consumer surplus for all potential tenants will definitely increase.
  3. C.Landlords may reduce the quality of maintenance and services for the rental properties.
  4. D.Deadweight loss in the market will be eliminated.

Answer

C

Worked solution

An effective price ceiling is set below the equilibrium price. This creates excess demand (a shortage) of rental housing.
Since landlords cannot raise rent legally to clear the market, they have no incentive to maintain the quality of the flats or compete for tenants. Instead, they may let the quality of rental housing deteriorate (reducing repair/maintenance costs) or engage in non-price discrimination.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting the correct option C.
Question 21 · MC
1 marks
The table below shows the maximum amount of clothing or food that Country X and Country Y can produce with the same amount of resources. \n\n| | Clothing (units) | Food (units) |\n|---|---|---|\n| Country X | 40 | 20 |\n| Country Y | 30 | 10 |\n\nWhich of the following statements is correct?
  1. A.Country X has a comparative advantage in producing clothing.
  2. B.Country Y has an absolute advantage in producing clothing.
  3. C.If the terms of trade are 1 unit of food for 2.5 units of clothing, both countries will gain from trade.
  4. D.If the terms of trade are 1 unit of food for 1.5 units of clothing, both countries will gain from trade.

Answer

C

Worked solution

To find the comparative advantage, we calculate the opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of food in terms of clothing:\n- Country X: \(40 \text{ clothing} / 20 \text{ food} = 2 \text{ clothing}\).\n- Country Y: \(30 \text{ clothing} / 10 \text{ food} = 3 \text{ clothing}\).\nSince Country X has a lower opportunity cost in producing food, it has a comparative advantage in food. Conversely, Country Y has a comparative advantage in clothing.\nThe terms of trade must lie between the opportunity costs of the two countries for mutually beneficial trade: \(2 \text{ clothing} < 1 \text{ food} < 3 \text{ clothing}\).\nSince \(2.5 \text{ clothing}\) lies within this range, both countries will gain from trade.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option C. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 22 · MC
1 marks
The government subsidizes the purchase of electric vehicles (EVs). At the same time, the cost of lithium batteries (a major input of EVs) drops significantly. How would the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity of electric vehicles change?
  1. A.Equilibrium price will decrease while equilibrium quantity is uncertain.
  2. B.Equilibrium price is uncertain while equilibrium quantity will increase.
  3. C.Both equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity will increase.
  4. D.Both equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity will decrease.

Answer

B

Worked solution

A government subsidy to buyers of electric vehicles (EVs) will increase the demand for EVs, shifting the demand curve to the right. Concurrently, a reduction in the cost of lithium batteries (an input) will decrease the production cost, shifting the supply curve of EVs to the right. When both demand and supply shift to the right, the equilibrium quantity will definitely increase, while the equilibrium price may increase, decrease, or remain unchanged, depending on the relative magnitude of the shifts in demand and supply.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 23 · MC
1 marks
An economy initially operating at long-run equilibrium faces a sudden increase in the prices of imported oil and raw materials. In the short run, how would the real GDP and the price level of this economy change?
  1. A.Real GDP increases, price level increases.
  2. B.Real GDP decreases, price level increases.
  3. C.Real GDP decreases, price level decreases.
  4. D.Real GDP increases, price level decreases.

Answer

B

Worked solution

An increase in the prices of imported oil and raw materials raises the cost of production for domestic firms. This causes the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve to shift to the left (upward). As a result, the equilibrium real GDP decreases, and the price level increases, a phenomenon known as stagflation.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 24 · MC
1 marks
Suppose a central bank lowers the required reserve ratio. Under which of the following circumstances will this policy be LESS effective in stimulating the economy?
  1. A.Commercial banks hold a large amount of excess reserves and are reluctant to lend out money.
  2. B.The public prefers to hold less cash and deposit more into banks.
  3. C.Firms are highly optimistic about the future business outlook.
  4. D.The investment demand is highly interest-elastic.

Answer

A

Worked solution

A reduction in the required reserve ratio increases the excess reserves of commercial banks, allowing them to create more credit and increase the money supply. However, if commercial banks hold large excess reserves and are reluctant to lend (e.g., due to pessimistic economic outlook or high credit risks), the credit creation process will be disrupted, making the expansionary monetary policy less effective.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option A. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 25 · MC
1 marks
Suppose the government of an importing country imposes an import quota instead of a tariff that achieves the same level of domestic production. Assume the quota licenses are allocated to domestic importers for free. Comparing the quota with the tariff,
  1. A.domestic consumer surplus decreases by more under the quota.
  2. B.government revenue is lower under the quota.
  3. C.domestic price increases by more under the quota.
  4. D.the deadweight loss is larger under the quota.

Answer

B

Worked solution

If an import quota and a tariff achieve the same level of domestic production, they must result in the same domestic price and import quantity. Thus, consumer surplus and domestic production surplus are identical under both policies. However, under a tariff, the government receives tariff revenue. Under a quota where licenses are allocated to domestic importers for free, the government receives zero revenue (the quota rent goes to domestic importers). Therefore, government revenue is lower under the quota.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 26 · MC
1 marks
Which of the following is most likely to cause a government budget deficit to narrow during an economic recovery?
  1. A.An increase in government spending on unemployment benefits.
  2. B.An increase in tax revenues from profits tax and salaries tax.
  3. C.A decrease in the tax rate on luxury goods imports.
  4. D.A decision to launch massive new infrastructure projects.

Answer

B

Worked solution

During an economic recovery, real output and national income rise. This leads to an increase in corporate profits and individual incomes, thereby raising tax revenues from profits tax and salaries tax automatically. At the same time, unemployment falls, reducing government spending on unemployment benefits. These automatic stabilizers work together to narrow the budget deficit.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 27 · MC
1 marks
When the price of smartphone cases drops by 10%, the total revenue of smartphone case sellers increases by 5%. This implies that the demand for smartphone cases is
  1. A.perfectly inelastic.
  2. B.inelastic.
  3. C.elastic.
  4. D.unit elastic.

Answer

C

Worked solution

According to the relationship between price elasticity of demand and total revenue, if demand is elastic (elasticity > 1), a percentage decrease in price leads to a larger percentage increase in quantity demanded, causing total revenue to increase. In this case, price drops by 10% and total revenue increases by 5%, which indicates that the demand is elastic.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option C. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 28 · MC
1 marks
Suppose an economy is originally at its long-run equilibrium. If the government increases its spending on infrastructure, what are the effects on the price level and real output in the long run (assuming no change in long-run aggregate supply)?
  1. A.Price level increases; real output remains unchanged.
  2. B.Price level remains unchanged; real output increases.
  3. C.Both price level and real output increase.
  4. D.Both price level and real output remain unchanged.

Answer

A

Worked solution

An increase in government spending on infrastructure shifts the aggregate demand (AD) curve to the right. In the short run, real output and price level both rise. In the long run, as input prices and wages adjust upwards, the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve shifts to the left until the economy returns to its full-employment level of output (vertical LRAS). Therefore, in the long run, the real output remains unchanged at the full-employment level, while the price level increases permanently.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option A. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 29 · MC
1 marks
The government introduces a price floor for agricultural products which is set above the market equilibrium price. To make this price floor effective, the government promises to buy up all the surplus. As a result,
  1. A.consumer surplus will increase.
  2. B.producer surplus will increase.
  3. C.government expenditure will decrease.
  4. D.there will be a shortage of agricultural products in the market.

Answer

B

Worked solution

When the government sets a price floor above the equilibrium price and purchases all the surplus, the price received by producers rises to the floor price, and the quantity they sell increases to the quantity supplied at that price. Thus, producer surplus increases significantly. Consumer surplus decreases because consumers pay a higher price and buy a smaller quantity.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 30 · MC
1 marks
A Hong Kong resident owns a flat in London and rents it out to a British citizen. At the same time, a Japanese consultant is hired by a Hong Kong firm to work in Hong Kong for two weeks. How would the rental income received by the Hong Kong resident and the salary earned by the Japanese consultant affect Hong Kong's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross National Income (GNI)?
  1. A.The rental income is included in Hong Kong's GDP; the salary is included in Hong Kong's GNI.
  2. B.The rental income is included in Hong Kong's GNI; the salary is included in Hong Kong's GDP.
  3. C.Both the rental income and the salary are included in Hong Kong's GDP.
  4. D.Both the rental income and the salary are included in Hong Kong's GNI.

Answer

B

Worked solution

1. Rental income received by a Hong Kong resident from a London property is factor income earned by a Hong Kong resident from abroad. It is included in Hong Kong's GNI, but not in GDP, as the production (housing service) took place outside Hong Kong.\n2. The salary earned by a Japanese consultant working in Hong Kong for two weeks is factor income earned by a non-resident within the domestic territory of Hong Kong. It is included in Hong Kong's GDP (since the economic activity took place in Hong Kong) but excluded from Hong Kong's GNI.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for selecting correct option B. Incorrect options award 0 marks.
Question 31 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Country A and Country B produce Smart Watches (W) and Smart Glasses (G). With the same amount of resources, their maximum outputs are: \n\n* Country A: \( 40 \) units of W or \( 20 \) units of G\n* Country B: \( 30 \) units of W or \( 30 \) units of G\n\nSuppose transportation cost per unit of Smart Watch traded is \( 0.1 \) units of Smart Glasses, and it is borne by the exporter. Which of the following is a mutually beneficial terms of trade for both countries?
  1. A.1W = 0.4G
  2. B.1W = 0.55G
  3. C.1W = 0.8G
  4. D.1W = 1.1G

Answer

C

Worked solution

First, calculate the opportunity cost of producing 1W for each country:\n- For Country A: \( 1\text{W} = 20 / 40 = 0.5\text{G} \)\n- For Country B: \( 1\text{W} = 30 / 30 = 1\text{G} \)\n\nCountry A has a comparative advantage in producing Smart Watches (W) because its opportunity cost is lower (\( 0.5\text{G} < 1\text{G} \)). Therefore, Country A will export W and Country B will import W.\n\nFor Country A (the exporter) to gain from trade, the price of 1W must cover both its domestic opportunity cost and the transportation cost:\n\( \text{Minimum price} = 0.5\text{G} + 0.1\text{G} = 0.6\text{G} \).\n\nFor Country B (the importer) to gain from trade, the price of 1W must be lower than its domestic opportunity cost of producing W:\n\( \text{Maximum price} = 1\text{G} \).\n\nThus, the mutually beneficial terms of trade must satisfy:\n\( 0.6\text{G} < 1\text{W} < 1\text{G} \).\nOnly Option C (\( 1\text{W} = 0.8\text{G} \)) falls within this range.

Marking scheme

Correct option is C (1 mark).
Question 32 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose the central bank increases the required reserve ratio and at the same time sells government bonds to the public in the open market. Which of the following is the most likely effect on the money supply and the nominal interest rate in the short run?
  1. A.Money supply increases; Nominal interest rate decreases.
  2. B.Money supply decreases; Nominal interest rate increases.
  3. C.Money supply decreases; Nominal interest rate decreases.
  4. D.Money supply increases; Nominal interest rate increases.

Answer

B

Worked solution

An increase in the required reserve ratio reduces the bank multiplier and the lending capacity of commercial banks, which decreases the money supply. Simultaneously, selling government bonds to the public decreases the monetary base as the public pays the central bank, which also decreases the money supply. As the money supply decreases, ceteris paribus, the equilibrium nominal interest rate will increase in the money market.

Marking scheme

Correct option is B (1 mark).
Question 33 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose a technological breakthrough significantly lowers the production cost of electric vehicles (EVs). At the same time, the government announces an increase in the annual registration tax for traditional petrol vehicles (a substitute for EVs). What are the effects of these two events on the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity of electric vehicles?
  1. A.Equilibrium price increases, while equilibrium quantity change is uncertain.
  2. B.Equilibrium price decreases, while equilibrium quantity change is uncertain.
  3. C.Equilibrium quantity increases, while equilibrium price change is uncertain.
  4. D.Equilibrium quantity decreases, while equilibrium price change is uncertain.

Answer

C

Worked solution

The technological breakthrough reduces production costs, which increases the supply of EVs (supply curve shifts right). The tax increase on petrol vehicles makes petrol vehicles more expensive to own, which increases the demand for their substitute, EVs (demand curve shifts right). When both demand and supply increase, the equilibrium quantity of EVs will definitely increase. However, the effect on the equilibrium price depends on the relative magnitudes of the shifts. Thus, the change in equilibrium price is uncertain.

Marking scheme

Correct option is C (1 mark).
Question 34 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
In an economy initially in long-run equilibrium, there is an increase in business optimism about future economic growth, which leads to an increase in planned investment. At the same time, there is a surge in international crude oil prices. What will be the immediate short-run effects on the real GDP and general price level?
  1. A.The general price level will rise, and the real GDP will increase.
  2. B.The general price level will rise, and the effect on real GDP is uncertain.
  3. C.The general price level will fall, and the effect on real GDP is uncertain.
  4. D.The real GDP will decrease, and the effect on the general price level is uncertain.

Answer

B

Worked solution

Increased planned investment shifts the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve to the right. A surge in crude oil prices increases the cost of production across industries, which shifts the Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve to the left. The rightward shift of AD increases both real GDP and the price level. The leftward shift of SRAS increases the price level but decreases real GDP. Combined, the general price level will definitely rise. The net change in real GDP is uncertain and depends on which shift is larger.

Marking scheme

Correct option is B (1 mark).
Question 35 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose a small open economy imports smartphones. Initially, there is free trade. Now, the government decides to impose a tariff of \( \$T \) per smartphone imported, which reduces the quantity of imports. Which of the following statements is correct if the government instead replaces the tariff with an import quota that restricts the import quantity to the exact same level as under the tariff?
  1. A.Domestic smartphone price under the quota will be higher than that under the tariff.
  2. B.Government revenue under the quota will be higher than that under the tariff.
  3. C.Domestic production of smartphones under the quota will be the same as that under the tariff.
  4. D.Consumer surplus under the quota will be larger than that under the tariff.

Answer

C

Worked solution

Under both trade barriers, the import quantity is restricted to the exact same level. Because the domestic demand and domestic supply curves remain unchanged, the equilibrium price that clears the domestic market must be identical under both the tariff and the quota. Consequently, the domestic quantity supplied (domestic production) is the same under both. Government revenue under the tariff is positive, whereas under a quota with free distribution of licenses, government revenue is zero, making Option B incorrect.

Marking scheme

Correct option is C (1 mark).
Question 36 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose coffee and sugar are complements in consumption. When the supply of sugar decreases due to a bad harvest, the price of sugar rises significantly. At the same time, the total revenue of coffee shops from selling coffee decreases. Which of the following must be correct?
  1. A.The demand for coffee is price elastic.
  2. B.The demand for sugar is price inelastic.
  3. C.The demand for coffee has decreased.
  4. D.The supply of coffee has decreased.

Answer

C

Worked solution

Since coffee and sugar are complements in consumption, an increase in the price of sugar (due to a decrease in its supply) will lead to a decrease in the demand for coffee (the demand curve for coffee shifts to the left). This shift to the left causes both the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity of coffee to decrease, which explains why the total revenue of coffee shops decreases. Thus, the demand for coffee must have decreased.

Marking scheme

Correct option is C (1 mark).
Question 37 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
An economy is experiencing a severe recession. The government wants to stimulate aggregate demand. Which of the following combinations of fiscal policy measures would be most effective in increasing aggregate demand?
  1. A.Increasing the profits tax rate and reducing transfer payments to low-income families.
  2. B.Decreasing the personal income tax rate and increasing government expenditure on infrastructure projects.
  3. C.Implementing a balanced budget by reducing government expenditure and tax rates by the same amount.
  4. D.Increasing the stamp duty on stock transactions and issuing government bonds to finance it.

Answer

B

Worked solution

To stimulate aggregate demand (expansionary fiscal policy), the government can decrease taxes (which increases disposable income and thus consumption/investment) and increase government expenditure (which directly increases aggregate demand). Option B combines both a tax cut and an expenditure increase, making it highly effective.

Marking scheme

Correct option is B (1 mark).
Question 38 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
In a closed economy with no government sector, the marginal propensity to save (MPS) is \( 0.25 \). If planned investment increases by \( \$50 \) million, what will be the change in the equilibrium national income?
  1. A.An increase of $12.5 million
  2. B.An increase of $50 million
  3. C.An increase of $150 million
  4. D.An increase of $200 million

Answer

D

Worked solution

In a closed economy with no government, the multiplier is given by:\n\( \text{Multiplier} = \frac{1}{\text{MPS}} = \frac{1}{0.25} = 4 \).\n\nThe change in equilibrium national income (\( \Delta Y \)) is:\n\( \Delta Y = \text{Multiplier} \times \Delta I = 4 \times \$50 \text{ million} = \$200 \text{ million} \) (increase).

Marking scheme

Correct option is D (1 mark).
Question 39 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose a small open economy is an exporter of agricultural products. If the government introduces an export subsidy of \( \$s \) per unit of agricultural exports, which of the following will happen in the domestic market?
  1. A.The domestic price of agricultural products will fall, and domestic consumption will increase.
  2. B.The domestic price of agricultural products will rise, and domestic consumption will decrease.
  3. C.The volume of exports will decrease, and producer surplus will decrease.
  4. D.Domestic consumers will benefit, while domestic producers will suffer.

Answer

B

Worked solution

When the government provides an export subsidy of \( \$s \), exporters can receive the world price plus \( \$s \) for every unit they sell abroad. To be willing to sell domestically, domestic consumers must pay this higher price. Thus, the domestic price rises to \( P_{\text{world}} + s \). At this higher price, domestic quantity demanded (consumption) decreases, domestic quantity supplied increases, and the volume of exports increases. Consumer surplus decreases and producer surplus increases.

Marking scheme

Correct option is B (1 mark).
Question 40 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The government imposes a price ceiling on residential rentals that is set below the market equilibrium level. Which of the following is an expected consequence of this policy?
  1. A.There will be a surplus of residential rentals.
  2. B.The quantity of residential rentals traded in the market will increase.
  3. C.Landlords may reduce the quality of housing maintenance to lower costs.
  4. D.The total revenue of landlords will definitely increase.

Answer

C

Worked solution

A price ceiling below the equilibrium level leads to a shortage of residential rentals. Since landlords cannot charge higher rental prices to clear the market, they may resort to non-price adjustments, such as reducing the quality of housing maintenance, to lower their costs and increase effective returns. The quantity traded decreases to the quantity supplied at the ceiling price (which is lower than equilibrium), and total revenue (Price x Quantity) decreases.

Marking scheme

Correct option is C (1 mark).
Question 41 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose the government reduces the personal income tax rate. At the same time, the central bank sells government bonds to the public. Which of the following is/are possible outcome(s)?
(1) The general price level remains unchanged.
(2) The real interest rate increases.
(3) The private consumption expenditure decreases.
  1. A.(1) and (2) only
  2. B.(1) and (3) only
  3. C.(2) and (3) only
  4. D.(1), (2) and (3)

Answer

D

Worked solution

(1) is a possible outcome: The tax cut shifts Aggregate Demand (AD) to the right, while the bond sale shifts AD to the left. Since the net effect on AD is uncertain, AD could remain unchanged, leading to an unchanged general price level.
(2) is a possible outcome: The tax cut increases transaction demand for money, and the bond sale reduces the money supply. Both effects push up the interest rate, so the real interest rate increases.
(3) is a possible outcome: Private consumption increases due to the tax cut but decreases due to a higher interest rate. If the latter effect dominates, private consumption will decrease.
Therefore, all three outcomes are possible.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct option D.
Reject options A, B, and C as they omit one or more possible outcomes.
Question 42 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The table below shows the maximum outputs of Smartphones and Watches of Country X and Country Y with the same amount of resources.
$$\begin{array}{|c|c|c|c|} \hline & \text{Smartphones (units)} & & \text{Watches (units)} \\ \hline \text{Country X} & 200 & \text{OR} & 100 \\ \hline \text{Country Y} & 120 & \text{OR} & 80 \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Suppose Country X and Country Y trade with each other. The transportation cost per unit of Watch traded is 0.2 units of Smartphones, which is borne by the importer. Which of the following can be the mutually beneficial terms of trade for 1 unit of Watch?
(1) 1.4 Smartphones
(2) 1.6 Smartphones
(3) 1.75 Smartphones
(4) 1.85 Smartphones
  1. A.(1) and (2) only
  2. B.(2) and (3) only
  3. C.(3) and (4) only
  4. D.(1) and (4) only

Answer

B

Worked solution

Opportunity cost of 1 unit of Watch:
- Country X: \(200 / 100 = 2\) Smartphones.
- Country Y: \(120 / 80 = 1.5\) Smartphones.
Since Country Y has a lower opportunity cost in producing Watches, Country Y will export Watches and Country X will import Watches.
Let \(T\) be the price of 1 Watch in terms of Smartphones.
- For Country Y (exporter) to gain: \(T > 1.5\) Smartphones.
- For Country X (importer) to gain: The total cost including transport cost must be less than its domestic opportunity cost, i.e., \(T + 0.2 < 2 \implies T < 1.8\) Smartphones.
Thus, the mutually beneficial terms of trade must lie between 1.5 and 1.8 Smartphones. Both (2) and (3) fall within this range.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct option B.
Reject other options because only statements (2) and (3) lie in the range \(1.5 \text{ Smartphones} < T < 1.8 \text{ Smartphones}\).
Question 43 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Coffee and tea are substitutes in consumption. Suppose a pest disease severely damages tea plantations, while the price of coffee beans (an input for making coffee) decreases. In the coffee market, the equilibrium price ____________ and the equilibrium quantity ____________.
  1. A.must rise ... is uncertain
  2. B.must fall ... is uncertain
  3. C.is uncertain ... must increase
  4. D.is uncertain ... must decrease

Answer

C

Worked solution

1. Pest damages tea plantations -> Supply of tea decreases -> Price of tea rises. Since coffee and tea are substitutes, consumers switch to coffee, shifting the demand for coffee to the right.
2. The decrease in the price of coffee beans reduces the production cost of coffee, shifting the supply of coffee to the right.
3. When both demand and supply of coffee shift to the right, the equilibrium quantity must increase, while the effect on the equilibrium price is uncertain.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct option C.
Reject other options as they incorrectly state the changes in equilibrium price or quantity.
Question 44 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
Suppose an economy is initially operating at its long-run equilibrium. A technological advancement increases productivity across all industries. Simultaneously, the government increases the corporate profit tax rate. In the short run, the general price level will ____________ and the real output ____________.
  1. A.decrease ... will increase
  2. B.decrease ... is uncertain
  3. C.is uncertain ... will increase
  4. D.is uncertain ... is uncertain

Answer

B

Worked solution

1. Technological advancement increases productivity, shifting the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve to the right. This exerts a downward pressure on the price level and an upward pressure on real output.
2. An increase in the corporate profit tax rate reduces after-tax profits of firms, discouraging investment expenditure. This shifts the aggregate demand (AD) curve to the left. This exerts a downward pressure on both the price level and real output.
3. Combining both effects: the price level will definitely decrease, while the change in real output is uncertain.

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct option B.
Reject other options because the change in price level is certain (decrease) and the change in real output is uncertain.
Question 45 · Multiple Choice
1 marks
The balance sheet of a banking system is as follows:
$$\begin{array}{lr|lr} \text{Assets (\$ million)} & & \text{Liabilities (\$ million)} & \\ \hline \text{Reserves} & 240 & \text{Deposits} & 1200 \\ \text{Loans} & 960 & & \\ \end{array}$$
Suppose the required reserve ratio is 20% and the banking system initially holds no excess reserves. A depositor withdraws $50 million from the banking system and holds it as cash. Assuming there is no other cash leakage and banks do not hold excess reserves, the money supply will ____________.
  1. A.decrease by $50 million
  2. B.decrease by $200 million
  3. C.decrease by $250 million
  4. D.increase by $200 million

Answer

B

Worked solution

1. Let the initial cash held by the public be \(C\). Initial money supply \(M_1 = C + \text{Deposits} = C + 1200\).
2. After withdrawing $50 million, cash held by the public increases to \(C + 50\).
3. Reserves in the banking system decrease to \(240 - 50 = 190\) million.
4. Since banks hold no excess reserves, final deposits \(D_2 = \text{New Reserves} / \text{Required Reserve Ratio} = 190 / 0.2 = 950\) million.
5. Final money supply \(M_2 = (C + 50) + 950 = C + 1000\) million.
6. Change in money supply = \(M_2 - M_1 = (C + 1000) - (C + 1200) = -200\) million (i.e., decreases by $200 million).

Marking scheme

Award 1 mark for the correct option B.
Reject other options because they do not correctly account for both the cash expansion effect and the deposit contraction effect.

Paper 2 Section A (Short Questions)

Answer all questions in this section in the spaces provided.
8 Question · 44 marks
Question 1 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose the government of Country A increases the profits tax rate on corporations.
(a) Explain the effect of this tax policy on aggregate demand in the short run. (3 marks)
(b) Explain whether this policy is an expansionary or contractionary fiscal policy, and its effect on the government's budget balance in the short run. (2.5 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) An increase in the profits tax rate reduces the after-tax profits of firms. This reduces their incentive to invest, leading to a decrease in private investment expenditure (\(I\)). Since investment expenditure is a component of aggregate demand (\(AD = C + I + G + NX\)), aggregate demand will decrease in the short run. (3 marks)
(b) This is a contractionary fiscal policy. (1 mark) In the short run, the increase in the tax rate increases tax revenue, which helps improve the government budget balance (i.e., reduces budget deficit or increases budget surplus). (1.5 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Identify that after-tax profits of firms decrease, reducing private investment expenditure (\(I\)). [2 marks]
- Explain that aggregate demand (\(AD\)) decreases. [1 mark]
(b)
- Identify it as a contractionary fiscal policy. [1 mark]
- Explain that tax revenue increases, leading to an improvement in the government budget balance (reducing deficit/increasing surplus). [1.5 marks]
Question 2 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Country B is a small open economy that imports wheat. Suppose the world price of wheat is \(P_W\). The government decides to impose a tariff of \(t\) per unit on imported wheat.
(a) Explain how this tariff affects the domestic production and consumption of wheat. (3.5 marks)
(b) Explain the change in consumer surplus after the tariff is imposed. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) After the tariff is imposed, the domestic price of wheat increases from \(P_W\) to \(P_W + t\). At this higher price, domestic producers are willing and able to produce more wheat, so domestic production increases from \(Q_{S1}\) to \(Q_{S2}\). On the other hand, consumers are less willing and able to buy wheat, so domestic consumption decreases from \(Q_{C1}\) to \(Q_{C2\). (3.5 marks)
(b) Since the domestic price rises from \(P_W\) to \(P_W + t\) and domestic consumption decreases, the consumer surplus decreases. The reduction in consumer surplus is represented by the area between \(P_W + t\) and \(P_W\) bounded by the demand curve. (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explanation that price increase leads to an increase in domestic production. [1.5 marks]
- Explanation that price increase leads to a decrease in domestic consumption. [2 marks]
(b)
- Correctly state that consumer surplus decreases. [1 mark]
- Explain that this is due to a higher price paid and lower quantity consumed. [1 mark]
Question 3 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose that electronic books (e-books) and printed books are substitutes.
(a) Explain the immediate effect of a technological breakthrough that lowers the production cost of e-books on the market for printed books. (3.5 marks)
(b) Suggest one other factor that could lead to a decrease in the demand for printed books. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) A technological breakthrough that lowers the production cost of e-books will increase the supply of e-books, causing the price of e-books to fall. Since e-books and printed books are substitutes, a drop in the price of e-books will lead to a decrease in the demand for printed books. As a result, both the equilibrium price and quantity of printed books will fall. (3.5 marks)
(b) Other factors include: a change in consumer preferences (e.g., people prefer digital media over paper), a decrease in the price of e-readers (which are complements to e-books), or a decrease in consumer income (if printed books are normal goods). (2 marks for any one valid factor)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explain that the technological breakthrough increases the supply of e-books, lowering their price. [1.5 marks]
- Explain that because they are substitutes, a lower price of e-books leads to a decrease in the demand for printed books. [1 mark]
- State that both equilibrium price and quantity of printed books will decrease. [1 mark]
(b)
- Identify one valid factor (e.g., preference shift, decrease in income for normal goods, decrease in price of complements) with brief explanation. [2 marks]
Question 4 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose an economy is initially operating at its long-run equilibrium. There is a sudden and significant increase in international oil prices.
(a) Explain the effect of this shock on the price level and real output in the short run. (3.5 marks)
(b) What type of macroeconomic phenomenon does this situation represent? (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) International oil is a crucial production input for many industries. A significant increase in oil prices raises the production cost of firms. This leads to a decrease in short-run aggregate supply (\(SRAS\)), shifting the \(SRAS\) curve to the left. As a result, the price level rises and the real output (real GDP) decreases. (3.5 marks)
(b) This situation, characterized by a rising price level (inflation) and falling real output (stagnant growth/recession), represents "stagflation". (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explain that rising oil prices increase production costs, leading to a decrease in \(SRAS\) (leftward shift of \(SRAS\)). [1.5 marks]
- Explain that the price level increases. [1 mark]
- Explain that the real output (real GDP) decreases. [1 mark]
(b)
- Correctly identify the term "stagflation". [2 marks]
Question 5 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose the central bank of Country C lowers the required reserve ratio of commercial banks.
(a) Explain how this policy affects the money supply in the economy. (3.5 marks)
(b) State the effect of this monetary policy on the nominal interest rate. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) When the required reserve ratio is lowered, commercial banks have more excess reserves. They are able to expand credit by granting more loans, which increases the maximum banking multiplier (\(1 / \text{required reserve ratio}\)). As a result of credit creation, the money supply increases. (3.5 marks)
(b) The increase in money supply shifts the money supply curve to the right. Given the money demand, the equilibrium nominal interest rate will decrease. (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explain that a lower required reserve ratio increases excess reserves and increases the maximum banking multiplier. [2 marks]
- Explain that banks can grant more loans, leading to an increase in money supply through credit creation. [1.5 marks]
(b)
- Correctly state that the nominal interest rate decreases. [1 mark]
- Briefly explain with reference to money demand and money supply. [1 mark]
Question 6 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Under free trade, Country X imports shoes from Country Y. Suppose Country X imposes an import quota on shoes.
(a) Explain how the import quota affects the total revenue of foreign exporters if the domestic demand for imported shoes is price inelastic. (3.5 marks)
(b) State who gains from the imposition of this quota, other than domestic producers. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) An import quota restricts the quantity of imports, which creates a shortage of shoes at the original price. This causes the price of imported shoes in Country X to rise. Since the domestic demand for imported shoes is price inelastic, the percentage increase in price is greater than the percentage decrease in the quantity of imports. Therefore, the total revenue of foreign exporters (who can sell at the higher price) will increase. (3.5 marks)
(b) The holders of import licenses (quota holders) gain by buying at the world price and selling at the higher domestic price (earning quota rents). (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explain that the import quota reduces import quantity and raises the price. [1 mark]
- Define/apply price inelastic demand: percentage increase in price is larger than percentage decrease in quantity. [1.5 marks]
- Conclude that total revenue of foreign exporters increases. [1 mark]
(b)
- Correctly identify quota license holders / importers who obtain the licenses as beneficiaries. [2 marks]
Question 7 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose the government of City Z imposes a price ceiling on residential rents that is set below the market equilibrium level.
(a) Explain the effects of this policy on the quantity of rental housing transacted and show whether a shortage or surplus occurs. (3.5 marks)
(b) Apart from a change in transacted quantity, explain one non-price rationing method that may emerge under this price ceiling. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) When a price ceiling is set below the equilibrium rent, the quantity demanded of rental housing increases, while the quantity supplied by landlords decreases. The transaction quantity will be determined by the short side of the market, which is the quantity supplied. Therefore, the transacted quantity decreases. Since the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at the price ceiling, a shortage of rental housing occurs. (3.5 marks)
(b) Since price can no longer clear the market, non-price rationing methods will emerge. For example, landlords may use "first-come, first-served" (queuing) or personal relationship (favoritism) to allocate flats, or they may bundle tenancy with mandatory fees (key money) to circumvent the control. (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Explain that quantity demanded increases and quantity supplied decreases at the price ceiling. [1.5 marks]
- State that transacted quantity decreases (determined by quantity supplied). [1 mark]
- State that a shortage occurs. [1 mark]
(b)
- Identify and briefly explain one valid non-price rationing method (e.g., queuing, favoritism, tie-in sales/black market). [2 marks]
Question 8 · Short Answer
5.5 marks
Suppose an economy is experiencing a recessionary (deflationary) gap.
(a) With the aid of an AS-AD diagram, illustrate this situation. (3.5 marks)
(b) Explain how the economy can automatically adjust back to its long-run full-employment equilibrium in the long run without government intervention. (2 marks)

Answer

See solution / 參閱詳細分析

Worked solution

(a) In the diagram, the vertical \(LRAS\) is plotted at the full-employment output level \(Y_f\). The short-run equilibrium output \(Y_1\) (where the downward-sloping \(AD\) intersects the upward-sloping \(SRAS\)) is to the left of \(LRAS\) (i.e., \(Y_1 < Y_f\)). The distance between \(Y_1\) and \(Y_f\) represents the recessionary gap. (3.5 marks)
(b) In the long run, due to the recession and high unemployment, workers are willing to accept lower nominal wages, and other input prices will fall. This reduces production costs for firms, causing the short-run aggregate supply (\(SRAS\)) to increase (the \(SRAS\) curve shifts to the right) until real GDP returns to the full-employment level \(Y_f\). (2 marks)

Marking scheme

(a)
- Correctly draw the downward-sloping \(AD\), upward-sloping \(SRAS\), and vertical \(LRAS\) at \(Y_f\). [1.5 marks]
- Show the short-run equilibrium output \(Y_1\) is less than \(Y_f\), identifying the recessionary gap. [2 marks]
(b)
- Explain that wages and input prices fall in the long run due to high unemployment. [1 mark]
- Explain that \(SRAS\) increases (shifts rightwards) to restore full employment. [1 mark]

Paper 2 Section B (Structured Questions)

Answer all questions in this section in the spaces provided. Note that one question includes an essay with quality-of-communication marks.
3 Question · 60 marks
Question 1 · Case Study & Extended Essay
20 marks
Answer all parts of this question. Country A and Country B are two countries producing Food (F) and Clothing (C) with the same total amount of resources. Their maximum outputs are: Country A can produce 100 units of Food OR 50 units of Clothing. Country B can produce 80 units of Food OR 80 units of Clothing. (a)(i) Explain which country has a comparative advantage in producing Food. (3 marks) (ii) Find the range of mutually beneficial terms of trade for 1 unit of Clothing. (3 marks) (b) Suppose Country A is a small open economy. The world price of Clothing is $10. The government of Country A decides to impose an import tariff of $2 per unit on Clothing. (i) Explain how this import tariff affects the consumer surplus of Country A's consumers and the government revenue of Country A. (4 marks) (ii) If the government replaces the tariff with an import quota that restricts the import quantity to the same level as under the tariff, compare the economic welfare of Country A under these two policies. (4 marks) (c) The government of Country A argues that trade protection on clothing is necessary to protect its domestic 'infant industry'. Critically evaluate this argument from the perspective of economic efficiency. (6 marks)

Answer

a(i) Country A has comparative advantage in Food because its opportunity cost (0.5C) is lower than Country B's (1C). a(ii) 1 unit of Food < 1 unit of Clothing < 2 units of Food. b(i) Consumer surplus decreases, government revenue increases. b(ii) National welfare is lower under quota because government loses tariff revenue to foreign exporters (quota rents), leading to larger deadweight loss. c Infant industry argument lacks efficiency incentives, government lacks perfect information to choose winners, and it causes allocative inefficiency.

Worked solution

a(i) The opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of Food in Country A is \( 50/100 = 0.5 \) units of Clothing. The opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of Food in Country B is \( 80/80 = 1 \) unit of Clothing. Since Country A has a lower opportunity cost in producing Food than Country B (\( 0.5\text{C} < 1\text{C} \)), Country A has a comparative advantage in producing Food. a(ii) For Country B, the opportunity cost of 1 unit of Clothing is 1 unit of Food. For Country A, the opportunity cost of 1 unit of Clothing is \( 100/50 = 2 \) units of Food. For trade to be mutually beneficial, the terms of trade for 1 unit of Clothing must lie between the opportunity costs of the two countries: \( 1\text{ unit of Food} < 1\text{ unit of Clothing} < 2\text{ units of Food} \). b(i) An import tariff increases the domestic price of Clothing. As price rises, consumer surplus of Country A's consumers decreases. Since the tariff is levied on each imported unit, the government collects tariff revenue, so government revenue increases. b(ii) Both policies restrict imports to the same level, resulting in the exact same price, domestic production, and consumption. Hence, consumer surplus and producer surplus changes are identical. However, under a tariff, the government earns tariff revenue. Under a quota, this revenue (quota rent) is typically captured by foreign exporters holding import licenses. Therefore, Country A's national welfare is lower under a quota than under a tariff, representing a larger deadweight loss for the domestic economy. c The infant industry argument states that temporary protection allows young firms to gain experience and achieve economies of scale. However, it is critically evaluated because: 1. Lack of competition reduces incentives to improve productivity, leading to permanent dependency and inefficiency. 2. The government lacks perfect information to correctly identify which industries will become competitive, leading to resource misallocation. 3. Even if temporary, protectionism causes deadweight loss and reduces economic efficiency in the short run.

Marking scheme

a(i) Opportunity cost of Food in Country A (0.5C) (1 mark). Opportunity cost of Food in Country B (1C) (1 mark). Correct comparison and conclusion (1 mark). a(ii) Opportunity cost of Clothing in Country A (2F) (1 mark). Opportunity cost of Clothing in Country B (1F) (1 mark). Correct range of terms of trade (1 mark). b(i) Explain decrease in consumer surplus (2 marks). Explain increase in government revenue (2 marks). b(ii) State identical effects on price, consumer surplus, and producer surplus (2 marks). Explain why quota leads to lower welfare for Country A due to quota rents captured by foreign exporters instead of government tariff revenue (2 marks). c Define/explain infant industry argument (2 marks). Critique 1: Lack of efficiency incentives/complacency (2 marks). Critique 2: Government lack of information/resource misallocation (2 marks). Max 6 marks for part c.
Question 2 · Case Study & Extended Essay
20 marks
Answer all parts of this question. An economy is currently experiencing a severe recession with high unemployment. Policy makers are debating whether to implement monetary policy or fiscal policy to stimulate economic growth. (a) Suppose the central bank decides to conduct open market operations by purchasing government bonds from the public. (i) Explain, with reference to the credit creation process, how this policy affects the money supply of the economy. (5 marks) (ii) Explain how this monetary policy affects the interest rate, investment expenditure, and aggregate demand. (4 marks) (b) Suppose the government decides to implement an expansionary fiscal policy by increasing infrastructure spending. (i) Explain how an increase in government spending affects the equilibrium output and price level in the short run. (5 marks) (ii) Evaluate how the effectiveness of the above monetary policy and fiscal policy is affected under each of the following scenarios: - The economy is in a 'liquidity trap'. - There is a strong 'crowding-out effect'. (6 marks)

Answer

a(i) Central bank bond purchase increases public bank deposits and bank reserves, leading to multiple credit expansion and higher money supply. a(ii) Money supply increases, interest rate falls, investment rises, and AD shifts right. b(i) Increased government spending directly increases AD, shifting the AD curve to the right. Under an upward-sloping SRAS, both equilibrium output and price level increase. b(ii) Under a liquidity trap, monetary policy is ineffective because interest rates cannot fall further; fiscal policy remains effective. Under a strong crowding-out effect, expansionary fiscal policy raises interest rates and crowds out private investment, reducing fiscal policy's effectiveness.

Worked solution

a(i) When the central bank purchases bonds from the public, it injects new reserves into the banking system as the public deposits the sales proceeds into commercial banks. Commercial banks now hold excess reserves and will make new loans to borrowers. The borrowers will spend the loans, and the recipients will deposit the money back into banks, leading to a chain of credit creation. Total deposits expand by a multiple of the initial deposit (multiplied by the reciprocal of the required reserve ratio), which ultimately increases the money supply of the economy. a(ii) An increase in the money supply shifts the money supply curve to the right, causing the interest rate to fall. A lower interest rate reduces the borrowing costs for firms, prompting them to increase investment expenditure (I). Since investment is a key component of Aggregate Demand (\( \text{AD} = \text{C} + \text{I} + \text{G} + \text{NX} \)), the aggregate demand curve shifts to the right. b(i) Government infrastructure spending (G) is a component of Aggregate Demand. An increase in G directly shifts the AD curve to the right. Since the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve is upward-sloping, this rightward shift in the AD curve leads to a shortage at the original price level. As the price level rises, firms increase production, resulting in a higher short-run equilibrium real output and a higher general price level. b(ii) Under a 'liquidity trap', the demand for money is horizontal (highly elastic) at a very low interest rate. The monetary expansion fails to lower interest rates further or stimulate investment, making monetary policy completely ineffective. Fiscal policy is highly effective here as it directly stimulates AD. Under a strong 'crowding-out effect', the government's borrowing to finance infrastructure spending increases the demand for loanable funds, pushing up interest rates. This higher interest rate discourages private investment and consumption, which offsets a large portion of the expansionary effect of government spending, rendering fiscal policy less effective.

Marking scheme

a(i) Injecting reserves/initial deposit (1 mark). Banks loan out excess reserves (1 mark). Deposit expansion process (1 mark). Formula or concept of money multiplier (1 mark). Conclusion on increased money supply (1 mark). a(ii) Shift in money supply / drop in interest rate (2 marks). Rise in investment (1 mark). Shift of AD to the right (1 mark). b(i) Mentioning G is a component of AD (1 mark). Direct rightward shift of AD curve (2 marks). Explanation of the upward-sloping SRAS leading to higher equilibrium output and price level (2 marks). b(ii) Liquidity trap: explain why monetary policy is ineffective due to unresponsive interest rates (2 marks); fiscal policy is effective (1 mark). Crowding-out effect: explain government borrowing raising interest rates (1 mark); crowding out private investment/C (1 mark); conclusion on reduced fiscal policy effectiveness (1 mark).
Question 3 · Case Study & Extended Essay
20 marks
Read the following information about Country X and answer the questions. Country X has recently experienced a major technological breakthrough in Artificial Intelligence (AI), which has been rapidly adopted across all business sectors to automate production processes. To further boost long-term competitiveness, the government of Country X also announced a significant reduction in the corporate profit tax rate. (a) Explain how the breakthrough in AI technology affects the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) and long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) of Country X. (4 marks) (b) Explain how the reduction in the corporate profit tax rate affects the aggregate demand (AD) and short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) of Country X. (5 marks) (c) With the aid of an AD-AS diagram, analyze the combined effects of the AI technology breakthrough and the corporate profit tax cut on Country X's equilibrium output and price level in the short run. (5 marks) (d) Write an essay to assess whether supply-side policies (such as promoting technology R&D and tax cuts) are superior to demand-management policies (such as increasing transfer payments to households) in achieving long-term economic growth and price stability. (6 marks) [Note: 1 of these marks is allocated to the quality of communication.]

Answer

a AI technology increases productivity, shifting both SRAS and LRAS to the right. b Profit tax cut increases investment, shifting AD to the right. It also reduces business costs, shifting SRAS to the right. c Combined effects: Both AD and SRAS shift to the right, causing equilibrium output to definitely rise, while the effect on the equilibrium price level is uncertain. d Supply-side policies achieve long-term growth with price stability but have a long time lag. Demand-management policies quickly address short-term recessions but can cause inflation in the long run. Thus, supply-side policies are superior for long-term growth and price stability, while demand-management is better for short-run stabilization.

Worked solution

a The breakthrough in AI technology increases the productivity of both labor and capital. This increases the total productive capacity of the economy, shifting the Long-run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) curve to the right. Simultaneously, the automation of production processes reduces production costs per unit of output, shifting the Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve to the right. b A reduction in the corporate profit tax rate increases the post-tax profits of firms, raising their expected rate of return. This encourages firms to increase investment expenditure (I), shifting the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve to the right. At the same time, the tax cut lowers the cost of doing business, which encourages business expansion and entry of new firms, shifting the SRAS curve to the right. c In the AD-AS diagram, the AD curve shifts to the right (due to increased investment from the tax cut), and the SRAS curve shifts to the right (due to both the AI technology breakthrough and the tax cut). Because both curves shift to the right, the equilibrium output definitely increases. However, the effect on the equilibrium price level is indeterminate (uncertain), as a rightward shift in AD tends to push prices up, while a rightward shift in SRAS tends to push prices down. The final direction of the price level depends on the relative magnitude of these shifts. d Supply-side policies (such as promoting tech R&D and tax cuts) are designed to expand the productive capacity of the economy, shifting LRAS and SRAS to the right. In the long run, this allows the economy to achieve economic growth while putting downward pressure on prices, thereby securing growth with price stability. However, these policies suffer from long time lags and are costly to implement. Demand-management policies (such as transfer payments), on the other hand, shift AD to the right. While they can quickly lift an economy out of a recession, they do not expand long-run productive capacity. Continuous demand stimulus will eventually cause inflation in the long run without changing the real potential output. Therefore, supply-side policies are superior for achieving long-term economic growth and price stability, whereas demand-management policies are more appropriate for short-run stabilization. (Quality of Communication: Arguments are structured logically with clear transitions, correct use of economic terminology, and structured comparison.)

Marking scheme

a Explain shift of LRAS to the right due to productivity increase (2 marks). Explain shift of SRAS to the right due to cost reduction (2 marks). b Explain why tax cut increases investment and shifts AD to the right (3 marks). Explain why tax cut reduces business costs and shifts SRAS to the right (2 marks). c Rightward shift in AD and SRAS correctly shown or described (2 marks). Conclude that equilibrium output definitely increases (2 marks). Conclude that equilibrium price level is indeterminate/uncertain (1 mark). d Evaluate supply-side policies: explain growth with price stability, and note the time-lag limitation (2 marks). Evaluate demand-management policies: explain short-term effectiveness but long-term inflationary risks (2 marks). Make a clear comparison and conclusion (1 mark). Quality of Communication: awarded for clear, coherent, and logical presentation of arguments with proper economic terms (1 mark).