Microeconomics/Macroeconomics 2010

<p>How do you change the aggregate supply?
Isn’t fiscal and monetary all on the aggregate demand?</p>

<p>is there a grade calculator that I can use? Can someone tell me what it is?</p>

<p>Also, can someone link me an online multiple chocie? i hear 2005 is out, but I can’t find it</p>

<p>how badly can I bomb the FRQ with a 58/60 and still get a 5?</p>

<p>^^^^ Motion1234, the correct answer is E. Bright Company does not have an option in which it will perform better than if it had chosen the other option no matter which option Sparkle Company chooses.</p>

<p>That’s not #19 on macro >_<.</p>

<p>@antonio: you can get a 33% and still get a 5 on either exam.</p>

<p>^ My bad haha. The answer is A for 19 Macro. If Canadian consumers increase their demand for foreign goods, more Canadian dollars will be injected into the international economy. Demand for Mexican Pesos would increase as Canadian consumers need Pesos to purchase Mexican goods. Because the supply of Canadian dollars in the international economy increases, the value of the currency will depreciate causing Canadian exports to become cheaper and thus increase in quantity.</p>

<p>Jersey: can you answer all of my questions too?</p>

<p>I’m done for tonight, good luck everyone :)</p>

<p>Link to the 20 AP Macro questions? (the one from CB/AP Central)</p>

<p>Does anyone know if the questions from Princeton Review are harder or easier than the real AP exam?</p>

<p>Do we need to know the different types of bonds (high yield/jump bonds, BBB, A, AA, AAA…)?</p>

<p>Do the questions on 5 steps to a 5 accurately reflect the level of difficulty on the real test? Are they harder? Easier?</p>

<p>I don’t think we need to know bonds, I think you mean junk bonds not jump bonds. If it is on the test just know AAA is the best w/ lowest interest rate b.c it is the safest.</p>

<p>^Though not anymore…</p>

<p>Ha. My teacher taught us jump, but wikipedia says otherwise. Thanks for your input!</p>

<p>My input shifted your score to the right. :smiley:
My lame attempt at an economic joke</p>

<p>So i got a 52/60 on the 2005 test. Is that good enough to ge ta five on micro?</p>

<p>^^ assuming you get at at least 60 % on the FRQs. you will get a five.</p>

<p>The conversion is something like MC(6/7) + Frqs or something. And 73+ is a 5</p>

<p>*(this is just one type of scoring system)</p>

<p>thanks mate</p>

<p>anyone have the 2005 macro econ test?</p>

<p>just wondering,
how does the 2005 macro test compare to the ones more recently?
it seems a lot easier than the 2008 audit exam and the 1995 test</p>