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Mock Exams

ABF507 Mock Exam 2: 8 Core Topics (With Complete Answers)

2026年1月25日
12 分钟阅读
#ABF507#Mock Exam#Economics#GDP#Elasticity#Digital Finance#Monetary Policy#Regression

💬 评论

ABF507 Mock Exam 2 - 8 Core Topics (Alternative Scenarios)

📋 Exam Information

ItemDetails
Total Points100
Time Allowed120 minutes
Questions8 Questions
FormatCalculation + Essay

Question 1: GDP Measurement & Calculation (12 points)

Data for Country Beta (2025):

ComponentValue (€ billions)
Consumption (C)620
Investment (I)180
Government (G)240
Exports (X)200
Imports (M)160
Depreciation45
Net Factor Income from Abroad-15

Q1.1 (4 points)

Calculate GDP using the expenditure approach.

💡 Click to View Answer

Formula: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)

$GDP = 620 + 180 + 240 + (200 - 160)$ $= 620 + 180 + 240 + 40 = 1080$

Answer: GDP = €1,080 billion

Q1.2 (4 points)

Calculate GNP and NNP (Net National Product).

💡 Click to View Answer

GNP: $GNP = GDP + NFIA = 1080 + (-15) = 1065$

NNP: $NNP = GNP - Depreciation = 1065 - 45 = 1020$

  • GNP = €1,065 billion
  • NNP = €1,020 billion

Note: NFIA is NEGATIVE (-15), meaning more income flows OUT than IN. This is typical for countries with many foreign-owned businesses.

Q1.3 (4 points)

Country Beta's GDP deflator rose from 105 to 112 year-on-year. Calculate the inflation rate.

💡 Click to View Answer

$Inflation = \frac{Deflator_{new} - Deflator_{old}}{Deflator_{old}} \times 100%$

$= \frac{112 - 105}{105} \times 100% = 6.67%$

Inflation Rate = 6.67%


Question 2: Elasticity - Multiple Types with Midpoint Method (14 points)

Part A: Cross Elasticity (7 points)

When the price of coffee rises from $4 to $5, the quantity demanded of tea increases from 200 to 280 cups per week.

Calculate XED (Cross Elasticity of Demand) using the midpoint method. Are these goods substitutes or complements?

💡 Click to View Answer

$XED = \frac{%\Delta Q_{tea}}{%\Delta P_{coffee}} = \frac{(Q_2 - Q_1)/Q_{avg}}{(P_2 - P_1)/P_{avg}}$

Step 1: Averages

  • $Q_{avg} = (200 + 280) / 2 = 240$
  • $P_{avg} = (4 + 5) / 2 = 4.5$

Step 2: % Changes $%\Delta Q_{tea} = \frac{280 - 200}{240} = \frac{80}{240} = 33.33%$ $%\Delta P_{coffee} = \frac{5 - 4}{4.5} = \frac{1}{4.5} = 22.22%$

Step 3: XED $XED = \frac{33.33%}{22.22%} = +1.5$

XED = +1.5 (Positive = SUBSTITUTES)

When coffee price rises, tea demand increases. This confirms tea and coffee are substitutes (XED > 0).

Part B: Income Elasticity (7 points)

When average income rises from $40,000 to $50,000, demand for organic food increases from 100 to 150 units, while demand for instant noodles falls from 80 to 60 units.

Calculate YED for each good and classify them.

💡 Click to View Answer

Income Averages:

  • $Y_{avg} = (40000 + 50000) / 2 = 45000$
  • $%\Delta Y = \frac{10000}{45000} = 22.22%$

Organic Food:

  • $Q_{avg} = (100 + 150) / 2 = 125$
  • $%\Delta Q = \frac{50}{125} = 40%$
  • $YED = \frac{40%}{22.22%} = +1.8$

Instant Noodles:

  • $Q_{avg} = (80 + 60) / 2 = 70$
  • $%\Delta Q = \frac{-20}{70} = -28.57%$
  • $YED = \frac{-28.57%}{22.22%} = -1.29$
GoodYEDClassification
Organic Food+1.8Luxury good (YED > 1)
Instant Noodles-1.29Inferior good (YED < 0)

Question 3: Fintech Innovation & Banking (12 points)

Scenario:

Country Techland experiences explosive growth in peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platforms and cryptocurrency wallets. Traditional bank deposits are shrinking rapidly.

Q3.1 (6 points)

Analyze how fintech innovations challenge traditional banking and monetary policy.

💡 Click to View Answer

Challenge 1: Disintermediation

  • P2P platforms bypass banks entirely
  • Savers connect directly with borrowers
  • Banks lose traditional deposit → loan model
  • Credit creation outside banking system

Challenge 2: Regulatory Gaps

  • Fintech operates in regulatory gray zones
  • Not subject to same capital requirements
  • Consumer protection may be inadequate
  • Systemic risks may build up undetected

Monetary Policy Challenges:

Challenge 1: Interest Rate Transmission Weakened

  • P2P rates determined by market, not policy rate
  • Central bank rate changes ignored by platforms
  • Less influence over credit conditions

Challenge 2: Money Supply Measurement

  • Cryptocurrency not in M2 definition
  • P2P deposits may be miscounted
  • Velocity of digital money unknown

Q3.2 (6 points)

Recommend THREE regulatory responses to preserve financial stability.

💡 Click to View Answer

Response 1: Prudential Regulation for Fintech

  • License P2P lenders as financial institutions
  • Apply capital and liquidity requirements
  • Regular audits and stress tests
  • Protects consumers and system

Response 2: Sandbox Approach

  • Controlled testing environment for innovation
  • Monitor risks before full deployment
  • Balance innovation with safety
  • Learn before regulating

Response 3: Interoperability Requirements

  • Require fintech to integrate with central bank systems
  • Enable monitoring of money flows
  • Preserve policy transmission channels
  • Example: Real-time payment systems

Question 4: Demographic Transition & Economic Growth (12 points)

Scenario:

Country Silverland has seen its dependency ratio (dependents/working-age) rise from 0.4 to 0.7 over 20 years. Pension costs have doubled, and productivity growth has stalled.

Q4.1 (6 points)

Explain TWO economic consequences of rising dependency ratio.

💡 Click to View Answer

Consequence 1: Fiscal Pressure

  • More retirees claim pensions and healthcare
  • Fewer workers pay taxes
  • Tax base shrinks while spending rises
  • Budget deficits and national debt increase
  • May require benefit cuts or tax increases

Consequence 2: Slower GDP Growth

  • GDP growth = Labor growth + Productivity growth
  • Shrinking workforce = negative labor contribution
  • Need higher productivity just to maintain output
  • Per-capita growth may decline

$\text{GDP Growth} \approx \underbrace{n}{\text{Labor↓}} + \underbrace{g}{\text{Productivity}}$

Q4.2 (6 points)

Propose TWO policy responses to mitigate negative effects.

💡 Click to View Answer

Policy 1: Raise Retirement Age

  • Increases effective labor supply
  • Reduces pension payouts duration
  • Utilizes experienced workers
  • Challenge: resistance from workers

Policy 2: Pro-Natalist Policies

  • Child subsidies, parental leave
  • Childcare support
  • Long-term fix (20+ years to affect workforce)
  • Has worked in France, Scandinavian countries

Policy 3: Immigration

  • Import working-age labor
  • Immediate impact on dependency ratio
  • Brings skills and entrepreneurship
  • Political challenges in some countries

Policy 4: Automation Investment

  • Replace workers with robots/AI
  • Boost productivity to offset labor decline
  • Maintain output with fewer workers

Question 5: Credit Crunch & Deflation (10 points)

Scenario:

After a sovereign debt crisis, Country Rustland's banks tightened lending standards dramatically. Bank credit to private sector fell 20% year-on-year. Property prices dropped 15%.

Question: Analyze the transmission mechanism from credit crunch to deflation.

💡 Click to View Answer

Stage 1: Credit Supply Shock

  • Banks fear defaults → raise lending standards
  • Fewer loans approved
  • Interest spreads widen
  • Money multiplier falls

Stage 2: Aggregate Demand Collapse

  • Households can't borrow for consumption
  • Firms can't finance investment
  • Property buyers disappear (prices fall 15%)
  • C↓ + I↓ → AD shifts LEFT

Stage 3: Deflationary Pressure $AD↓ \rightarrow P↓$

  • Firms cut prices to move inventory
  • Wage growth turns negative
  • General price level falls

Stage 4: Debt Deflation Spiral (Fisher Effect)

  • Real value of debt rises as prices fall
  • Borrowers struggle to repay
  • More defaults → more bank losses
  • Banks tighten further
  • Self-reinforcing downward spiral

Stage 5: Expectations Anchor

  • If deflation expected, consumers delay purchases
  • "Why buy today if cheaper tomorrow?"
  • Further reduces demand
  • Hard to escape once entrenched

Question 6: Exchange Rate & Interest Rate Policy (12 points)

Scenario:

Country Floatland allows its currency to float freely. Its central bank cuts rates from 4% to 2% to stimulate a stagnant economy. Within weeks, the currency depreciates 10%.

Q6.1 (6 points)

Explain TWO channels through which rate cuts lead to currency depreciation.

💡 Click to View Answer

Channel 1: Interest Rate Parity

  • Lower rates reduce returns on domestic assets
  • International investors seek higher yields elsewhere
  • Sell domestic currency to buy foreign assets
  • Increased supply of domestic currency → depreciation

$i_{domestic}↓ < i_{foreign} \Rightarrow \text{Capital Outflow} \Rightarrow \text{Currency↓}$

Channel 2: Inflation Expectations

  • Rate cut signals easier monetary policy
  • Markets expect higher future inflation
  • Currency's purchasing power expected to fall
  • Speculators sell currency in advance

Q6.2 (6 points)

Discuss TWO potential benefits and TWO risks of allowing this depreciation.

💡 Click to View Answer

BENEFITS:

Benefit 1: Export Competitiveness

  • Domestic goods cheaper for foreigners
  • Exporters gain market share
  • Tourism increases
  • Improves trade balance (J-curve effect)

Benefit 2: Import Substitution

  • Imports become expensive
  • Consumers switch to domestic alternatives
  • Supports local industries

RISKS:

Risk 1: Imported Inflation

  • Oil, commodities priced in USD
  • Import prices rise 10%+
  • Cost-push inflation
  • May force central bank to reverse cuts

Risk 2: Foreign Debt Burden

  • If government/firms borrowed in USD
  • Debt becomes 10% more expensive in local currency
  • Could trigger defaults
  • Financial instability

Question 7: Regression Analysis - Economic Growth (14 points)

Model (Panel of Emerging Markets):

$$Growth = 2.1 - 0.4 \times Inflation_{(2.85)} + 0.8 \times TradeOpen_{(3.10)} + 0.5 \times Education_{(1.45)}$$

Figures in brackets are t-statistics. Critical value = 2.0

Q7.1 (6 points)

Identify which variables are statistically significant and interpret the TradeOpenness coefficient.

💡 Click to View Answer

Statistical Significance (|t| > 2.0):

| Variable | t-stat | |t| | Significant? | |----------|--------|-----|--------------| | Inflation | 2.85 | 2.85 | ✅ YES | | TradeOpenness | 3.10 | 3.10 | ✅ YES | | Education | 1.45 | 1.45 | ❌ NO |

TradeOpenness Interpretation:

  • Coefficient = +0.8
  • For each 1-unit increase in trade openness, economic growth increases by 0.8 percentage points
  • Highly significant (t = 3.10)
  • Confirms benefits of international trade

Q7.2 (8 points)

Discuss why Education might not be significant despite theory suggesting it should matter. Propose TWO explanations.

💡 Click to View Answer

Explanation 1: Time Lag

  • Education's benefits take decades to materialize
  • Child educated today → productive worker in 20 years
  • Cross-sectional data may miss this lag
  • Panel data might show effect over longer horizon

Explanation 2: Measurement Issues

  • "Education" may be poorly measured
  • Years of schooling ≠ quality of education
  • School enrollment ≠ actual learning
  • Better measure might show significance

Explanation 3: Multicollinearity

  • Education may correlate with TradeOpenness
  • Open economies invest more in education
  • Effect captured by trade variable
  • Check correlation matrix

Explanation 4: Threshold Effects

  • Education only matters after certain level
  • Linear model misses non-linear relationship
  • Could try quadratic term: Education²

Question 8: Monetary vs Fiscal Policy - Stagflation (14 points)

Scenario:

Country Stuckland faces stagflation: inflation at 8% and unemployment at 9%. The economy is simultaneously experiencing high prices and high unemployment.

Q8.1 (8 points)

Explain why stagflation is particularly challenging for policymakers. Discuss the trade-offs.

💡 Click to View Answer

The Stagflation Dilemma:

Traditional Policy Responses:

  • High inflation → Tight monetary policy (raise rates)
  • High unemployment → Loose fiscal/monetary policy (lower rates, increase spending)

The Problem:

  • These responses are CONTRADICTORY
  • Can't tighten AND loosen simultaneously

Trade-off 1: Fight Inflation

  • Raise interest rates
  • Reduces AD → lowers inflation
  • BUT: Also reduces output and employment
  • Makes unemployment WORSE

Trade-off 2: Fight Unemployment

  • Cut rates, increase spending
  • Boosts AD → creates jobs
  • BUT: With supply constraints, prices rise
  • Makes inflation WORSE

Root Cause Matters:

  • Demand-pull inflation: can fix with tightening
  • Cost-push (stagflation): Supply-side problem
  • AD policy alone cannot solve

Q8.2 (6 points)

Recommend a policy mix to address stagflation. Explain your reasoning.

💡 Click to View Answer

Recommended Approach: Supply-Side Focus + Gradual Tightening

Monetary Policy:

  • Gradual, measured rate increases
  • Anchor inflation expectations without crushing economy
  • Communicate clearly to maintain credibility

Fiscal Policy:

  • Resist temptation for demand stimulus
  • Focus on supply-side measures:
    • Reduce regulatory burdens
    • Cut taxes on production (not consumption)
    • Invest in infrastructure (long-term supply boost)

Supply-Side Reforms:

  • Energy policy: increase domestic production
  • Labor market flexibility
  • Trade agreements: reduce input costs
  • Technology investment: boost productivity

Example: Volcker Approach (1980s USA)

  • High rates to kill inflation expectations
  • Short-term pain (recession)
  • Long-term gain (stable prices enabled growth)

Key Insight: $\text{Stagflation} = \text{Supply Shock} \rightarrow \text{Need Supply-Side Solution}$


🏁 Summary

QTopicPoints
1GDP & National Income12
2Elasticity (XED, YED)14
3Fintech & Banking12
4Demographic Transition12
5Credit Crunch & Deflation10
6Exchange Rate & Interest Rate12
7Regression Analysis14
8Stagflation Policy14
Total100

Good luck! Show all working for partial credit.