Question 1 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose Country A and Country B only produce Computers and Toys with the same amount of resources.
Country A: 10 Computers OR 20 Toys
Country B: 15 Computers OR 45 Toys
If they open up for trade, which of the following is a mutually beneficial terms of trade for both countries?
- A.1 Computer = 1.5 Toys
- B.1 Computer = 2.5 Toys
- C.1 Computer = 3.5 Toys
- D.1 Toy = 0.6 Computers
Worked solution
Country A's opportunity cost of producing 1 Computer is 2 Toys (20/10). Country B's opportunity cost of producing 1 Computer is 3 Toys (45/15). For mutually beneficial trade, the price of 1 Computer must lie between 2 Toys and 3 Toys. Therefore, 1 Computer = 2.5 Toys is a mutually beneficial terms of trade.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is B (1 mark). Other options represent terms of trade outside the mutually beneficial range.
Question 2 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe central bank of a country decreases the required reserve ratio while the government increases the income tax rates simultaneously. What will be the effect on the interest rate and the real GDP of the country?
- A.Interest rate decreases; effect on real GDP is uncertain.
- B.Interest rate increases; real GDP decreases.
- C.Effect on interest rate is uncertain; real GDP decreases.
- D.Interest rate decreases; real GDP decreases.
Worked solution
A decrease in the required reserve ratio increases the money supply, which exerts a downward pressure on the interest rate. An increase in the income tax rate reduces disposable income and consumption, shifting the aggregate demand (AD) curve to the left and lowering real GDP, which also reduces the transaction demand for money, further lowering the interest rate. Thus, the interest rate must decrease. Since the money supply expansion increases AD while the tax hike reduces AD, the net effect on real GDP is uncertain.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is A (1 mark). Award 1 mark for identifying the correct directions of change for interest rate and real GDP.
Question 3 · Multiple Choice
1 marksA developer operates a private toll tunnel. Originally, the toll is $20 and the daily traffic is 50,000 vehicles. When the toll is raised to $24, the daily traffic falls to 45,000 vehicles. Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.The demand for using the tunnel is price-inelastic, and the tunnel operator's total revenue increases.
- B.The demand for using the tunnel is price-elastic, and the tunnel operator's total revenue increases.
- C.The demand for using the tunnel is price-inelastic, and the tunnel operator's total revenue decreases.
- D.The demand for using the tunnel is price-elastic, and the tunnel operator's total revenue decreases.
Worked solution
Original Total Revenue (TR) = $20 * 50,000 = $1,000,000. New TR = $24 * 45,000 = $1,080,000. Since the price increased and the total revenue increased, the demand is price-inelastic. Alternatively, the percentage change in price is +20% and the percentage change in quantity demanded is -10%. Since % change in Qd < % change in P, demand is price-inelastic.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is A (1 mark). Correctly calculating the TR and concluding the elasticity level.
Question 4 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose there is unexpected inflation in an economy. Which of the following individuals will gain?
- A.A retired teacher who receives a fixed monthly pension of $15,000.
- B.A bank that lent out a mortgage loan at a fixed interest rate of 3% per annum.
- C.A tenant who signed a 3-year tenancy contract with a fixed monthly rent.
- D.A holder of long-term government bonds that pay a fixed annual coupon.
Worked solution
Unexpected inflation reduces the real value of fixed nominal payments. The tenant pays a fixed nominal rent, which means the real cost of his housing expenses decreases as the general price level rises. Thus, the tenant gains. The other options involve receiving fixed nominal payments (pension, fixed interest payments, or bond coupons) and will lose purchasing power.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is C (1 mark). Real purchasing power analysis of fixed receipts vs. fixed payments.
Question 5 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the production data of a firm in the short run:
| Labor (units) | Total Product of Good X (units) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 10 |
| 2 | 22 |
| 3 | 36 |
| 4 | 46 |
| 5 | 54 |
At which unit of labor does the law of diminishing marginal returns begin to set in?
- A.The 2nd unit of labor
- B.The 3rd unit of labor
- C.The 4th unit of labor
- D.The 5th unit of labor
Worked solution
Let's calculate the marginal product (MP) of each unit of labor:
- 1st unit: MP = 10
- 2nd unit: MP = 22 - 10 = 12
- 3rd unit: MP = 36 - 22 = 14
- 4th unit: MP = 46 - 36 = 10
- 5th unit: MP = 54 - 46 = 8
Since MP increases up to the 3rd unit (from 12 to 14) and starts to decrease at the 4th unit (from 14 to 10), the law of diminishing marginal returns begins to set in at the 4th unit of labor.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is C (1 mark). MP calculation must show a decrease from the peak.
Question 6 · Multiple Choice
1 marksMiss Chan plans to spend her Saturday afternoon either attending a concert, watching a movie, or staying at home to study. Her order of preference is:
First preference: Attending a concert (ticket price: $400)
Second preference: Watching a movie (ticket price: $100)
Third preference: Staying at home to study (cost: $0)
Suppose she has already bought a non-refundable concert ticket for $400. On Saturday morning, she is offered a free ticket to the movie by her friend. What is her opportunity cost of attending the concert now?
- A.The value of watching the movie.
- B.The value of watching the movie plus the $400 ticket price.
- C.The value of studying at home.
- D.The value of watching the movie minus the $400 ticket price.
Worked solution
Opportunity cost is the value of the highest-valued option foregone. The $400 spent on the concert ticket is a non-refundable sunk cost, which should be ignored in decision-making. Since her friend offered her a free movie ticket, the movie option now costs $0 out-of-pocket and is her highest-valued alternative option foregone (second preference). Thus, the opportunity cost of attending the concert is simply the value of watching the movie.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is A (1 mark). Recognizing that sunk cost is excluded and the movie is the next best option.
Question 7 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the government imposes an effective price ceiling on a good. If the demand for the good increases while the price ceiling remains unchanged, which of the following will occur?
- A.The quantity transacted increases and the shortage increases.
- B.The quantity transacted remains unchanged and the shortage increases.
- C.The quantity transacted decreases and the shortage remains unchanged.
- D.Both the quantity transacted and the shortage remain unchanged.
Worked solution
Under an effective price ceiling, there is a shortage because quantity demanded (Qd) exceeds quantity supplied (Qs). The quantity transacted is determined by the shorter side of the market, which is Qs at the price ceiling. When demand increases (the demand curve shifts to the right), Qd at the price ceiling increases further, while Qs remains unchanged. Therefore, the shortage (Qd - Qs) increases, while the quantity transacted (Qs) remains unchanged.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is B (1 mark). Explanation of short-side principle under price ceiling.
Question 8 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose an economy is initially operating at its long-run equilibrium. If there is a major technological breakthrough that increases the productivity of all industries, how will the price level and real GDP change in the short run?
- A.Price level decreases; real GDP increases.
- B.Price level increases; real GDP increases.
- C.Price level decreases; real GDP decreases.
- D.Price level remains unchanged; real GDP increases.
Worked solution
A major technological breakthrough increases overall productivity, which shifts both the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) and long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) curves to the right. In the AD-AS model, a rightward shift in SRAS along a downward-sloping aggregate demand (AD) curve leads to a decrease in the equilibrium price level and an increase in real GDP in the short run.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is A (1 mark). Analyzing shifts in the AS curve and the resulting changes on P and Y.
Question 9 · Multiple Choice
1 marksIn a closed economy, the following data are recorded:
- Private consumption expenditure: $500 million
- Gross private domestic investment: $150 million
- Government consumption expenditure: $100 million
- Depreciation: $20 million
- Indirect taxes: $30 million
- Subsidies: $10 million
What is the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) at market prices of this economy?
- A.$730 million
- B.$750 million
- C.$770 million
- D.$710 million
Worked solution
In a closed economy, Net exports (NX) = 0. Under the expenditure approach, GDP at market prices = C + I + G + NX = 500 + 150 + 100 + 0 = 750 million. Depreciation, indirect taxes, and subsidies are not used in calculating GDP at market prices using the expenditure approach.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is B (1 mark). Using the expenditure approach formula correctly.
Question 10 · Multiple Choice
1 marksUnder the Linked Exchange Rate System of Hong Kong, the Hong Kong dollar (HKD) is pegged to the US dollar (USD). If the US dollar depreciates against the Japanese Yen (JPY), which of the following is most likely to happen?
- A.Hong Kong's imports from Japan will become cheaper in terms of Hong Kong dollars.
- B.The number of Japanese tourists visiting Hong Kong will likely decrease.
- C.The prices of Japanese goods imported into Hong Kong will likely rise.
- D.The Hong Kong dollar will appreciate against the Japanese Yen.
Worked solution
Since the HKD is pegged to the USD, any depreciation of the USD against the JPY means the HKD also depreciates against the JPY. As the HKD depreciates against the JPY, Japanese goods become more expensive in terms of HKD, so their prices in Hong Kong will likely rise. Hong Kong imports from Japan become more expensive, and Japanese tourists will find Hong Kong cheaper to visit, so their number is likely to increase.
Marking scheme
Correct answer is C (1 mark). Analyzing exchange rate link and import prices.
Question 11 · Multiple Choice
1 marksMr. Chan has a free evening. He has three mutually exclusive options:
Option 1: Attend a concert. He has a ticket which was a free gift, but he can resell it for \$180. His valuation of the concert is \$300.
Option 2: Watch a movie. The movie ticket costs \$100, and his valuation of the movie is \$250.
Option 3: Work overtime and earn \$150.
What is the opportunity cost of attending the concert?
- A.\$180
- B.\$300
- C.\$330
- D.\$430
Worked solution
To find the opportunity cost of attending the concert, we must identify the highest-valued alternative option forgone.
If he does not attend the concert, he can resell the ticket for \$180.
Therefore, the net value of his alternatives including the cash from the resold ticket is:
- Watching the movie: Valuation (\$250) - Ticket cost (\$100) + Ticket resale value (\$180) = \$330.
- Working overtime: Earnings (\$150) + Ticket resale value (\$180) = \$330.
Both options yield a net value of \$330. Thus, the opportunity cost of attending the concert is \$330.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No marks for other options.
Question 12 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the market demand for public transport is price inelastic. If the government provides a subsidy of \$1 per trip to public transport operators, how will this affect consumer spending on public transport and the total revenue of the operators (including the subsidy)?
- A.Consumer spending increases; Total revenue of operators (including subsidy) increases
- B.Consumer spending increases; Total revenue of operators (including subsidy) decreases
- C.Consumer spending decreases; Total revenue of operators (including subsidy) increases
- D.Consumer spending decreases; Total revenue of operators (including subsidy) decreases
Worked solution
A subsidy to operators shifts the supply curve downwards/to the right. This leads to a decrease in the market price paid by consumers and an increase in the quantity transacted. Since demand is price inelastic, the percentage decrease in price is larger than the percentage increase in quantity demanded, causing consumer spending to decrease. On the other hand, the net price received by operators (market price + subsidy) increases, and quantity transacted also increases, so the total revenue of operators (including the subsidy) must increase.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No marks for other options.
Question 13 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe government imposes a price ceiling on a certain good below its equilibrium price. Under which of the following conditions will the shortage of the good be smaller?
- A.Both demand and supply are more price elastic.
- B.Both demand and supply are more price inelastic.
- C.Demand is more price elastic while supply is more price inelastic.
- D.Demand is more price inelastic while supply is more price elastic.
Worked solution
Shortage is the difference between quantity demanded and quantity supplied at the price ceiling. If both demand and supply are more price inelastic (steeper curves), for a given price drop from the equilibrium level, the increase in quantity demanded and the decrease in quantity supplied will be smaller. Therefore, the shortage will be smaller.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer B. No marks for other options.
Question 14 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the output of a firm with a fixed amount of machinery:
$$\begin{array}{|c|c|} \hline \text{No. of workers} & \text{Total output (units)} \\ \hline 1 & 10 \\ \hline 2 & 22 \\ \hline 3 & 36 \\ \hline 4 & 46 \\ \hline 5 & 52 \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.The law of diminishing marginal returns sets in when the 3rd worker is employed.
- B.The law of diminishing marginal returns sets in when the 4th worker is employed.
- C.Average product is increasing when the 4th worker is employed.
- D.The total product starts to decrease when the 4th worker is employed.
Worked solution
Let's calculate the marginal product (MP) for each worker:
- 1st worker: MP = 10
- 2nd worker: MP = 22 - 10 = 12
- 3rd worker: MP = 36 - 22 = 14
- 4th worker: MP = 46 - 36 = 10
- 5th worker: MP = 52 - 46 = 6
Since MP increases up to the 3rd worker (14 units) and starts to decrease with the 4th worker (10 units), the law of diminishing marginal returns sets in when the 4th worker is employed.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer B. No marks for other options.
Question 15 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the amount of resources required to produce one unit of clothing and one unit of food in Country A and Country B:
$$\begin{array}{|c|c|c|} \hline & \text{Clothing (1 unit)} & \text{Food (1 unit)} \\ \hline \text{Country A} & 4 \text{ units} & 2 \text{ units} \\ \hline \text{Country B} & 6 \text{ units} & 5 \text{ units} \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.Country A has a comparative advantage in producing clothing.
- B.Country B has an absolute advantage in producing food.
- C.If the terms of trade are 1 unit of clothing = 1.5 units of food, both countries can gain from trade.
- D.Country B has a comparative advantage in producing food.
Worked solution
Let's calculate opportunity costs:
- In Country A, opportunity cost of 1 unit of clothing = 4/2 = 2 units of food. Opportunity cost of 1 unit of food = 2/4 = 0.5 units of clothing.
- In Country B, opportunity cost of 1 unit of clothing = 6/5 = 1.2 units of food. Opportunity cost of 1 unit of food = 5/6 = 0.83 units of clothing.
Country B has a comparative advantage in clothing (1.2 < 2 food). Country A has a comparative advantage in food (0.5 < 0.83 clothing).
Mutually beneficial terms of trade for 1 unit of clothing must lie between 1.2 and 2 units of food. Since 1.5 units of food lies within this range, both countries can gain from trade.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No marks for other options.
Question 16 · Multiple Choice
1 marksWhich of the following combinations of policies would most effectively curb high inflation and reduce a government budget deficit?
- A.Increase the corporate profits tax rate and decrease government transfer payments.
- B.Decrease the personal income tax rate and decrease the discount rate.
- C.Increase government expenditure on infrastructure and increase the reserve requirement ratio.
- D.Decrease the stamp duty on property transactions and sell government bonds to the public.
Worked solution
To curb high inflation, the government needs contractionary policies that reduce aggregate demand (AD). To reduce a budget deficit, fiscal policies must either increase government revenue or decrease government expenditure.
- Increasing the corporate profits tax rate is contractionary (reduces AD) and increases government revenue (reduces deficit).
- Decreasing government transfer payments is contractionary (reduces AD) and decreases government expenditure (reduces deficit).
Therefore, Option A achieves both goals.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer A. No marks for other options.
Question 17 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the actual inflation rate is 5%, while the expected inflation rate was 2%. Which of the following parties will gain?
- A.A creditor who lent out a sum of money at a fixed nominal interest rate.
- B.A tenant who signed a two-year lease with a fixed nominal monthly rent.
- C.An employee whose nominal salary is adjusted annually according to the actual inflation rate.
- D.A retired person living on a fixed pension.
Worked solution
Unexpected inflation is 3% (5% - 2%). Under unexpected inflation, real wealth is redistributed from creditors to debtors, and from landlords to tenants if lease terms are fixed.
- A tenant with a fixed nominal rent pays less in real terms than expected, thus gaining.
- A creditor with a fixed nominal interest rate receives repayment with lower real purchasing power than expected, thus losing.
- A pensioner with a fixed pension suffers a loss in real purchasing power.
- An employee whose salary is adjusted to actual inflation is protected but does not gain from the unexpected inflation.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer B. No marks for other options.
Question 18 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe balance sheet of a banking system is as follows:
$$\begin{array}{lr|lr} \hline \text{Reserves} & \$300 \text{ million} & \text{Deposits} & \$1,000 \text{ million} \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Suppose the required reserve ratio is 20%. If the public deposits \$100 million of cash into the banking system, and the banks do not hold excess reserves in the end, the maximum possible change in the money supply is:
- A.+\$400 million
- B.+\$500 million
- C.+\$900 million
- D.+\$1,000 million
Worked solution
Initially, required reserves = \$1,000M \times 20\% = \$200M. Actual reserves = \$300M, so initial excess reserves = \$100M.
When the public deposits \$100M cash:
- Cash in circulation decreases by \$100M ($\Delta C = -\$100M$).
- Bank reserves increase by \$100M, making total reserves = \$300M + \$100M = \$400M.
Since banks hold no excess reserves in the end, the maximum deposits supported by \$400M of reserves is:
Final Deposits = \$400M / 0.2 = \$2,000M.
Change in deposits ($\Delta D$) = \$2,000M - \$1,000M = +\$1,000M.
Thus, the maximum change in money supply ($\Delta M_s = \Delta C + \Delta D$) is:
$-\$100M + \$1,000M = +\$900M$.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No marks for other options.
Question 19 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the government of an economy reduces the personal income tax rate and at the same time, the price of imported raw materials rises. In the short run, the general price level of the economy will ________ and the real GDP will ________.
- A.rise ... rise
- B.rise ... be uncertain
- C.be uncertain ... rise
- D.be uncertain ... fall
Worked solution
- Reducing the personal income tax rate increases disposable income, leading to higher consumption and investment, which shifts Aggregate Demand (AD) to the right. This causes the price level and real GDP to rise.
- A rise in imported raw material prices increases production costs, shifting Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) to the left. This causes the price level to rise and real GDP to fall.
Combining both effects, the general price level will definitely rise, while the effect on real GDP is uncertain.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer B. No marks for other options.
Question 20 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose a small open economy imports a certain good from the world market. If the government imposes an import tariff on this good such that the quantity of imports is reduced, which of the following will occur?
- A.Domestic consumption of the good will increase.
- B.Domestic production of the good will decrease.
- C.Consumer surplus will decrease while domestic producer surplus will increase.
- D.Government revenue will decrease.
Worked solution
An import tariff increases the domestic price of the imported good:
- Domestic price rises, causing domestic consumption (quantity demanded) to decrease (A is incorrect).
- Domestic production (quantity supplied) increases (B is incorrect).
- Consumer surplus decreases due to the higher price and lower consumption, while domestic producer surplus increases due to the higher price (C is correct).
- Government revenue increases because of the tariff collected (D is incorrect).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct answer C. No marks for other options.
Question 21 · Multiple Choice
1 marksInitially, a student has three mutually exclusive options for his Saturday afternoon: Option 1: Study at home (Valuation: $150); Option 2: Watch a movie (Ticket price: $80, Valuation: $210); Option 3: Play video games (Valuation: $110). If the price of the movie ticket decreases to $70, the student will ______ and the opportunity cost of his choice will ______.
- A.still choose to study ... remain unchanged
- B.still choose to study ... increase
- C.choose to watch the movie ... increase
- D.choose to watch the movie ... decrease
Worked solution
Initially, the net benefits of the three options are: Option 1: $150; Option 2: \(210 - 80 = 130\); Option 3: $110. The student chooses Option 1 (Study). The opportunity cost of studying is the net benefit of Option 2, which is $130. After the ticket price decreases to $70, the net benefit of Option 2 becomes \(210 - 70 = 140\). Since \(150 > 140\), the student still chooses to study. The opportunity cost of studying increases to $140.
Marking scheme
B is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 22 · Multiple Choice
1 marksGood A and Good B are close substitutes. When the price of Good A increases, what will happen to the total revenue of Good A and the demand for Good B?
- A.Total revenue of Good A increases; demand for Good B increases.
- B.Total revenue of Good A increases; demand for Good B decreases.
- C.Total revenue of Good A decreases; demand for Good B increases.
- D.Total revenue of Good A decreases; demand for Good B decreases.
Worked solution
Since Good A and Good B are close substitutes, the demand for Good A is price-elastic (\(E_d > 1\)). When the price of Good A increases, the percentage decrease in quantity demanded of A is larger than the percentage increase in price, leading to a decrease in its total revenue. Furthermore, since they are substitutes, an increase in the price of Good A will cause consumers to buy more of Good B, shifting the demand curve for Good B to the right (increase in demand).
Marking scheme
C is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 23 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the government imposes a price ceiling on rental housing that is set below the equilibrium rent. Later, the demand for rental housing increases. Which of the following will occur as a result of the increase in demand?
- A.The market price of rental housing will increase.
- B.The shortage of rental housing will increase.
- C.The quantity of rental housing transacted will increase.
- D.The producer surplus of landlords will increase.
Worked solution
An effective price ceiling is set below the equilibrium price, resulting in a shortage where quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. When demand increases (the demand curve shifts to the right), the quantity demanded at the ceiling price increases, while the quantity supplied remains unchanged at the fixed ceiling price. Therefore, the shortage of rental housing increases.
Marking scheme
B is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 24 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the relationship between the number of workers and the total product of a firm, with other inputs being fixed. Worker(s): 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; Total product (units): 10, 24, 36, 46, 52, 55. Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.The marginal product of the 2nd worker is 12 units.
- B.The Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns sets in when the 3rd worker is hired.
- C.The average product of labor is maximized when the 4th worker is hired.
- D.The total product decreases when the marginal product starts to decline.
Worked solution
The marginal products (MP) are: 1st worker = 10; 2nd worker = 14; 3rd worker = 12; 4th worker = 10; 5th worker = 6; 6th worker = 3. Since MP increases from 10 to 14 and then falls to 12 with the 3rd worker, the Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns sets in when the 3rd worker is hired. Average products (AP) are: 10, 12, 12, 11.5, 10.4, 9.17, which is maximized at 2 and 3 workers, not 4.
Marking scheme
B is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 25 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the required reserve ratio of a banking system is 20%, and the system initially holds no excess reserves. A customer withdraws $50 million of cash from his deposit in a bank. If banks do not hold any excess reserves afterward, what is the maximum change in the money supply?
- A.Decrease by $250 million
- B.Decrease by $200 million
- C.Decrease by $150 million
- D.Increase by $50 million
Worked solution
When the customer withdraws $50 million of cash, bank reserves decrease by $50 million. The maximum decrease in deposits is \(50 / 0.20 = 250\) million. Since the cash in public circulation increases by $50 million, the net change in the money supply is: change in deposits (\(-250\) million) + change in cash (\(+50\) million) = \(-200\) million. Thus, the money supply decreases by $200 million.
Marking scheme
B is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 26 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the amount of labor hours required to produce 1 unit of computer and 1 unit of wine in Country X and Country Y. Country X: 1 unit of Computer requires 10 hours, 1 unit of Wine requires 5 hours; Country Y: 1 unit of Computer requires 8 hours, 1 unit of Wine requires 2 hours. Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.Country Y has a comparative advantage in producing computers.
- B.The opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of wine in Country X is 2 units of computers.
- C.If the terms of trade are 1 unit of computer for 3 units of wine, both countries can gain from trade.
- D.Country X has an absolute advantage in producing both goods.
Worked solution
Let's calculate opportunity costs. For Country X: 1 Computer = 2 Wine (1 Wine = 0.5 Computer). For Country Y: 1 Computer = 4 Wine (1 Wine = 0.25 Computer). Thus, Country X has a comparative advantage in producing computers, and Country Y has a comparative advantage in producing wine. The terms of trade for 1 Computer must lie between 2 Wine and 4 Wine for mutually beneficial trade. Since 3 Wine lies in this range, both countries gain. Country Y has the absolute advantage in both goods because it requires fewer hours (8 < 10 and 2 < 5).
Marking scheme
C is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 27 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose there is an unanticipated inflation in an economy. Who of the following will benefit?
- A.A creditor who lent out a sum of money at a fixed nominal interest rate.
- B.A worker whose nominal wage is adjusted annually according to the actual inflation rate of the previous year.
- C.A tenant who signed a long-term lease with fixed monthly rental payments.
- D.A retired person living on a fixed pension.
Worked solution
Unanticipated inflation reduces the purchasing power of money. For a tenant with a fixed monthly rental payment, the real value of the rent paid decreases. Hence, the tenant benefits at the expense of the landlord. Debtors/tenants benefit while creditors/landlords lose. Workers with backward-looking adjustments and retired people with fixed pensions will lose real purchasing power.
Marking scheme
C is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 28 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose an economy is experiencing a recessionary gap. The government decides to increase its spending on infrastructure and simultaneously reduce the corporate income tax rate. Which of the following is the most likely effect of these policies on the government budget deficit and the aggregate demand in the short run?
- A.Government budget deficit increases; aggregate demand increases.
- B.Government budget deficit decreases; aggregate demand increases.
- C.Government budget deficit increases; aggregate demand decreases.
- D.Government budget deficit decreases; aggregate demand decreases.
Worked solution
Increasing government spending (\(G \uparrow\)) and reducing taxes (\(T \downarrow\)) are expansionary fiscal policies. These policies directly and indirectly increase Aggregate Demand (\(AD\)). At the same time, because government spending rises while tax revenues fall, the government's budget balance will deteriorate, meaning the budget deficit will increase (or budget surplus will decrease).
Marking scheme
A is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 29 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose the government of an economy increases the import tariff on raw materials, which are widely used in domestic production. At the same time, the government reduces the personal income tax rate. In the short run, how will the price level and real output of the economy change?
- A.Price level increases; real output increases.
- B.Price level increases; real output is uncertain.
- C.Price level decreases; real output is uncertain.
- D.Price level is uncertain; real output decreases.
Worked solution
An increase in the import tariff on raw materials increases production costs, shifting the Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve to the left, which increases the price level and decreases real output. A reduction in the personal income tax rate increases disposable income, leading to an increase in private consumption and shifting the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve to the right, which increases both the price level and real output. Thus, the price level definitely increases, while the effect on real output is uncertain.
Marking scheme
B is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Question 30 · Multiple Choice
1 marksWhich of the following items should be included in the calculation of Hong Kong's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the current year? (1) The salary of a Japanese chef working in a restaurant in Central, Hong Kong. (2) The value of a second-hand smartphone sold by a teenager on an online platform. (3) The government's cash payout of $10,000 to all permanent residents.
- A.(1) only
- B.(1) and (2) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
(1) is included because GDP measures the value of production within the domestic boundary. Since the catering service is produced in Hong Kong, the Japanese chef's labor income is part of HK's GDP. (2) is excluded because second-hand goods do not involve current production (the value of the smartphone was already counted in the year of production). (3) is excluded because government cash payouts are transfer payments, which do not involve any current production of goods or services.
Marking scheme
A is the correct option. 1 mark for the correct answer.
Suppose Country A and Country B only produce Smartphones and T-shirts. With all their resources, the maximum outputs of both countries are as follows:
Country A: 100 Smartphones OR 200 T-shirts
Country B: 60 Smartphones OR 240 T-shirts
Which of the following statements is correct?
- A.Country A has a comparative advantage in producing T-shirts.
- B.The opportunity cost of producing 1 Smartphone in Country B is 0.25 T-shirts.
- C.If the mutually beneficial exchange ratio is 1 Smartphone = 3 T-shirts, Country B will import Smartphones.
- D.Country A has an absolute advantage in producing both goods.
Worked solution
Let us calculate the opportunity cost of producing \(1\) Smartphone:
- Country A: \(\frac{200}{100} = 2\) T-shirts
- Country B: \(\frac{240}{60} = 4\) T-shirts
Since Country A has a lower opportunity cost in producing Smartphones (\(2\text{ T-shirts} < 4\text{ T-shirts}\)), Country A has a comparative advantage in producing Smartphones, while Country B has a comparative advantage in producing T-shirts.
Since Country B has a comparative advantage in T-shirts, it will specialize in and export T-shirts, and import Smartphones.
If the mutually beneficial exchange ratio is \(1\text{ Smartphone} = 3\text{ T-shirts}\), which lies between the two countries' opportunity costs (\(2\text{ T-shirts} < 3\text{ T-shirts} < 4\text{ T-shirts}\)), both countries can benefit from trade. Country B will import Smartphones, which is correct.
Option A is incorrect because Country B has a comparative advantage in T-shirts.
Option B is incorrect because the opportunity cost of \(1\) Smartphone in Country B is \(4\) T-shirts.
Option D is incorrect because Country B has an absolute advantage in producing T-shirts (\(240 > 200\)).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Suppose an economy is experiencing a recessionary gap. Which of the following combinations of fiscal and monetary policies would most effectively help close this gap?
- A.Decrease the income tax rate & decrease the discount rate
- B.Increase the government spending & sell government bonds in the open market
- C.Decrease the social welfare payments & decrease the cash reserve ratio
- D.Increase the profits tax rate & buy government bonds in the open market
Worked solution
To close a recessionary gap, expansionary policies are required to increase aggregate demand (AD).
- Decreasing the income tax rate is an expansionary fiscal policy, which increases household disposable income and consumption, shifting the AD curve to the right.
- Decreasing the discount rate is an expansionary monetary policy, which lowers borrowing costs for commercial banks, encouraging lending and investment, shifting the AD curve to the right.
The other options contain at least one contractionary policy which would reduce AD.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option A. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
When the price of a good falls from \(\$20\) to \(\$16\), its quantity demanded increases from \(100\) units to \(130\) units. Which of the following statements about this good is correct?
- A.The demand for the good is unit elastic.
- B.Total revenue increases because the percentage change in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage change in price.
- C.Total revenue decreases because the percentage change in quantity demanded is smaller than the percentage change in price.
- D.The demand for the good is perfectly elastic.
Worked solution
Let us calculate the percentage changes:
- Percentage change in price: \(\%\Delta P = \frac{16 - 20}{20} \times 100\% = -20\%\)
- Percentage change in quantity demanded: \(\%\Delta Q_d = \frac{130 - 100}{100} \times 100\% = 30\%\)
Since the percentage change in quantity demanded (\(30\%\)) is greater than the percentage change in price (\(20\%\)), the demand for the good is price elastic. When demand is elastic, a fall in price leads to an increase in total revenue.
- Original total revenue: \(\$20 \times 100 = \$2,000\)
- New total revenue: \(\$16 \times 130 = \$2,080\)
Thus, total revenue increases because the percentage change in quantity demanded is greater than the percentage change in price. This corresponds to option B.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Suppose the actual inflation rate is \(5\%\) while the expected inflation rate was \(2\%\). Who among the following will BENEFIT from this unexpected inflation?
- A.A retiree who receives a fixed monthly pension of $10,000
- B.A landlord who has just signed a 3-year tenancy contract with a fixed monthly rent
- C.A borrower who has taken out a home mortgage loan at a fixed interest rate of 4% per annum
- D.A saver who holds a 1-year fixed-term deposit at a bank with an interest rate of 3% per annum
Worked solution
When actual inflation (\(5\%\)) is higher than expected inflation (\(2\%\)), unexpected inflation occurs:
- Borrowers with fixed nominal interest rate loans benefit because they repay their debt with money that has less purchasing power than expected. The real interest rate they pay decreases (from expected \(4\% - 2\% = 2\%\) to actual \(4\% - 5\% = -1\%\)). This corresponds to option C.
- Fixed-pension retirees (Option A) and landlords with fixed rents (Option B) lose purchasing power because their fixed nominal income buys fewer goods and services than expected.
- Fixed-rate savers (Option D) lose because the real return on their deposit is lower than expected (\(3\% - 5\% = -2\%\) instead of \(3\% - 2\% = 1\%\)).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
The table below shows the production data of a firm in the short run, where labour is the only variable input.
| Labour (units) | Total Product (units) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 12 |
| 2 | 26 |
| 3 | 42 |
| 4 | 56 |
| 5 | 66 |
At which unit of labour does the law of diminishing marginal returns begin to set in?
- A.The 2nd unit of labour
- B.The 3rd unit of labour
- C.The 4th unit of labour
- D.The 5th unit of labour
Worked solution
Let us calculate the marginal product (MP) of each unit of labour:
- 1st unit of labour: \(MP = 12 - 0 = 12\) units
- 2nd unit of labour: \(MP = 26 - 12 = 14\) units
- 3rd unit of labour: \(MP = 42 - 26 = 16\) units
- 4th unit of labour: \(MP = 56 - 42 = 14\) units
- 5th unit of labour: \(MP = 66 - 56 = 10\) units
The marginal product increases up to the 3rd unit of labour (reaching \(16\) units) and starts to decline at the 4th unit of labour (dropping to \(14\) units). Thus, the law of diminishing marginal returns begins to set in at the 4th unit of labour.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Kelvin currently works as an accountant earning \(\$30,000\) per month. He is considering resigning to open a coffee shop. If he resigns, his estimated monthly revenue from the coffee shop is \(\$80,000\), and the operating costs (including rent, ingredients, and staff wages) will be \(\$60,000\). What is Kelvin's opportunity cost of opening the coffee shop?
- A.$30,000 per month
- B.$60,000 per month
- C.$90,000 per month
- D.$110,000 per month
Worked solution
Opportunity cost is the total value of the highest-valued alternative option forgone when making a decision.
By choosing to open the coffee shop, Kelvin has to forgo:
1. His current salary as an accountant: \(\$30,000\) per month (implicit cost / forgone income).
2. The operating cost of running the coffee shop: \(\$60,000\) per month (explicit cost / financial cost).
Therefore, the total opportunity cost of opening the coffee shop is:
\(\text{Opportunity Cost} = \$30,000 + \$60,000 = \$90,000\) per month.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
The government imposes a price floor on Good Y that is set below its market equilibrium price. Which of the following is the most likely result of this policy?
- A.There will be a shortage of Good Y.
- B.There will be a surplus of Good Y.
- C.The market price and quantity transacted of Good Y will remain unchanged.
- D.The quality of Good Y will improve to attract more customers.
Worked solution
A price floor is the minimum price allowed by law.
- If a price floor is set below the equilibrium price, the market price can naturally remain at the higher equilibrium level because the floor does not prevent the price from rising or staying above it.
- Therefore, the price floor is non-binding (ineffective), and the market price and quantity transacted will remain unchanged at the equilibrium levels. Option C is correct.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Suppose there is a technological breakthrough that widely increases productivity across all manufacturing sectors in Hong Kong. In the AS-AD model, how will this affect the equilibrium price level and real GDP in the short run?
- A.Price level increases, real GDP increases
- B.Price level decreases, real GDP increases
- C.Price level increases, real GDP decreases
- D.Price level decreases, real GDP decreases
Worked solution
A technological breakthrough increases overall manufacturing productivity and reduces unit costs of production. This shifts the Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve to the right.
- Under a constant Aggregate Demand (AD) curve, a rightward shift of the SRAS curve leads to a lower equilibrium price level and a higher level of equilibrium real GDP.
- Therefore, option B is correct.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Assume that the required reserve ratio of the banking system is \(10\%\) and banks do not hold excess reserves. The public does not hold cash (i.e., all money is deposited in banks). If a customer withdraws \(\$5,000\) cash from Bank A and keeps it under his mattress, what will be the maximum change in the money supply in the economy?
- A.A decrease of $50,000
- B.A decrease of $45,000
- C.A decrease of $5,000
- D.No change, because the cash is still within the economy.
Worked solution
Money Supply (\(M\)) = Cash held by the public (\(C_p\)) + Deposits (\(D\)).
1. When the customer withdraws \(\$5,000\) cash, \(C_p\) increases by \(\$5,000\) (\(\Delta C_p = +\$5,000\)).
2. The reserves in the banking system decrease by \(\$5,000\).
3. Given a required reserve ratio of \(10\%\), the maximum deposit contraction is:
\(\Delta D = \Delta \text{Reserves} \times \frac{1}{\text{Required Reserve Ratio}} = -\$5,000 \times \frac{1}{0.10} = -\$50,000\).
4. The maximum change in the money supply is:
\(\Delta M = \Delta C_p + \Delta D = +\$5,000 + (-\$50,000) = -\$45,000\).
Thus, the money supply decreases by a maximum of \(\$45,000\) (Option B).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Which of the following items would be INCLUDED in the calculation of Hong Kong's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the current year?
- A.The commission earned by a Hong Kong real estate agent for selling a 20-year-old residential flat this year.
- B.The market value of a second-hand car sold by an individual to his friend this year.
- C.The government cash payout of $10,000 to all permanent residents of Hong Kong this year.
- D.The value of voluntary teaching services provided by a Hong Kong university student in a rural school in Mainland China this year.
Worked solution
Let us analyze the options:
- Option A: The commission earned by the real estate agent represents payment for productive services provided in Hong Kong in the current year. Thus, it is included in Hong Kong's GDP.
- Option B: The sale of a second-hand car is a transfer of ownership of a pre-existing asset. No new production takes place, so it is excluded.
- Option C: Government cash payouts are transfer payments and do not involve any production of goods or services, so they are excluded.
- Option D: The voluntary teaching services are unpaid (non-market transaction) and are provided in Mainland China (outside Hong Kong's economic territory), so they are excluded.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option A. No marks are awarded for incorrect options.
Question 41 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose a piece of land owned by a developer can be used for three projects: Project A, Project B, or Project C. The developer's valuation of the three projects is: Project A > Project B > Project C.
Which of the following will lead to an increase in the opportunity cost of choosing Project A?
(1) The estimated construction cost of Project B decreases.
(2) The expected revenue of Project C increases significantly but remains less valuable than Project B.
(3) A government tax is newly imposed on Project A.
(4) The expected revenue of Project B increases but is still lower than that of Project A.
- A.(1) and (3) only
- B.(1) and (4) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(2) and (4) only
Worked solution
The opportunity cost of choosing Project A is the value of the highest-valued option forgone, which is Project B.
- (1) If the construction cost of Project B decreases, the net value of Project B increases. Since Project B remains the second-best option (or becomes the best option), the value of the forgone alternative increases. Thus, the opportunity cost of choosing Project A increases.
- (2) Since Project C remains less valuable than Project B, Project B is still the highest-valued forgone option. The opportunity cost of Project A remains unchanged.
- (3) A tax on Project A decreases the net value of Project A, but does not affect the value of Project B. If Project A is still chosen, its opportunity cost is unchanged.
- (4) If the expected revenue of Project B increases but is still lower than Project A, Project B remains the second-best option and its net value increases. Thus, the opportunity cost of choosing Project A increases.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. Reject all other options.
Question 42 · Multiple Choice
1 marksSuppose Good X is an inferior good and its demand is perfectly inelastic. If the government imposes a per-unit tax on the sellers of Good X, and at the same time, consumers' income increases, how will the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity of Good X change?
- A.Equilibrium price will rise, while equilibrium quantity will decrease.
- B.Equilibrium price will fall, while equilibrium quantity will remain unchanged.
- C.Equilibrium price will be uncertain, while equilibrium quantity will decrease.
- D.Equilibrium price will be uncertain, while equilibrium quantity will remain unchanged.
Worked solution
- Since Good X is an inferior good, an increase in consumers' income will decrease its demand. Since the demand is perfectly inelastic, the vertical demand curve shifts to the left, which leads to a decrease in the equilibrium quantity.
- The per-unit tax on sellers shifts the supply curve vertically upwards.
- The leftward shift of the demand curve exerts a downward pressure on price, while the upward shift of the supply curve exerts an upward pressure on price. Therefore, the net effect on the equilibrium price is uncertain.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option C. Reject all other options.
Question 43 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the production data of a firm in the short run:
$$\begin{array}{|c|c|} \hline \text{Number of labor (units)} & \text{Total product (units)} \\ \hline 1 & 15 \\ \hline 2 & 32 \\ \hline 3 & 45 \\ \hline 4 & 56 \\ \hline 5 & 65 \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Which of the following statements are correct?
(1) The law of diminishing marginal returns begins to apply when the 3rd unit of labor is employed.
(2) The average product of labor reaches its maximum when the 2nd unit of labor is employed.
(3) The marginal product of the 4th unit of labor is 11 units.
- A.(1) and (2) only
- B.(1) and (3) only
- C.(2) and (3) only
- D.(1), (2) and (3)
Worked solution
First, calculate the Marginal Product (MP) and Average Product (AP) for each unit of labor:
- For 1 unit: $MP = 15$, $AP = 15$
- For 2 units: $MP = 32 - 15 = 17$, $AP = 32 / 2 = 16$
- For 3 units: $MP = 45 - 32 = 13$, $AP = 45 / 3 = 15$
- For 4 units: $MP = 56 - 45 = 11$, $AP = 56 / 4 = 14$
- For 5 units: $MP = 65 - 56 = 9$, $AP = 65 / 5 = 13$
Now evaluate the statements:
- (1) MP increases from 15 to 17, and then decreases to 13. Therefore, MP begins to decrease when the 3rd unit of labor is employed. Statement (1) is correct.
- (2) AP is 15, 16, 15, 14, 13 respectively. The maximum AP is 16 when the 2nd unit is employed. Statement (2) is correct.
- (3) The MP of the 4th unit of labor is $56 - 45 = 11$ units. Statement (3) is correct.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option D. Reject all other options.
Question 44 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe following is the balance sheet of a banking system:
$$\begin{array}{l|r} \hline \text{Assets (\$)} & \text{Liabilities (\$)} \\ \hline \text{Reserves: } 300 & \text{Deposits: } 1500 \\ \text{Loans: } 1200 & \\ \hline \end{array}$$
Suppose the required reserve ratio is 20%.
If the public withdraws $50 of cash from the banking system, and banks do not hold any excess reserves in the end, the change in the money supply will be:
- A.a decrease of $250
- B.a decrease of $200
- C.a decrease of $150
- D.an increase of $50
Worked solution
- When the public withdraws $50 cash, actual reserves in the banking system decrease by $50 (from $300 to $250), and cash in public hands increases by $50.
- Since the required reserve ratio is 20% and there are no excess reserves in the end, the maximum deposits the banking system can support is: $250 / 0.20 = $1250.
- The change in deposits is: $1250 - $1500 = -$250.
- The change in the money supply is: Change in cash in public hands + Change in deposits = +$50 + (-$250) = -$200 (i.e., a decrease of $200).
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. Reject all other options.
Question 45 · Multiple Choice
1 marksThe table below shows the amount of resources required to produce one unit of Good X and one unit of Good Y in Country A and Country B:
$$\begin{array}{|c|c|c|} \hline & \text{Good X} & \text{Good Y} \\ \hline \text{Country A} & 4 \text{ units} & 2 \text{ units} \\ \hline \text{Country B} & 3 \text{ units} & 3 \text{ units} \\ \hline \end{array}$$
If the terms of trade are 1 unit of Good X = 1.5 units of Good Y, which of the following statements is correct?
- A.Country A will export Good X and gain 0.5 units of Good Y for each unit of Good X exported.
- B.Country B will export Good X and gain 0.5 units of Good Y for each unit of Good X exported.
- C.Country B will export Good Y and gain 0.5 units of Good X for each unit of Good Y exported.
- D.Country A will import Good Y and gain 0.5 units of Good X for each unit of Good Y imported.
Worked solution
- Let's calculate the opportunity cost of producing 1 unit of Good X:
- In Country A: $4 / 2 = 2$ units of Good Y.
- In Country B: $3 / 3 = 1$ unit of Good Y.
- Since Country B has a lower opportunity cost in producing Good X ($1 < 2$), Country B has a comparative advantage in producing Good X. It will specialize in and export Good X.
- Correspondingly, Country A has a comparative advantage in producing Good Y and will export Good Y.
- Under the terms of trade ($1 \text{ X} = 1.5 \text{ Y}$), Country B exports $1 \text{ X}$ and receives $1.5 \text{ Y}$. Since Country B's domestic cost of producing $1 \text{ X}$ is $1 \text{ Y}$, Country B's gain per unit of Good X exported is: $1.5 \text{ Y} - 1 \text{ Y} = 0.5$ units of Good Y.
Marking scheme
Award 1 mark for the correct option B. Reject all other options.