Multiple Choice Solutions (2 Viewers)

NotCricket

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Hi,

Here are the answers for the multi's. Ask me if you want any clarification.

1: A
2: B
3: D
4: B
5: C
6: C
7: B
8: C
9: D
10: A
11: D
12: B
13: D
14: A
15: A
16: C
17: D
18: A
19: B
20: C

I'm almost certain these are all correct, but obviously open to any well explained corrections.
 
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Cleavage

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Hi,

Here are the answers for the multi's. Ask me if you want any clarification.

1: A
2: B
3: D
4: B
5: C
6: C
7: A
8: C
9: D
10: A
11: D
12: B
13: D
14: A
15: A
16: C
17: D
18: A
19: B
20: C

I'm almost certain these are all correct, but obviously open to any well explained corrections.
I doth contest your answer for Q7

What is your reasoning?
 

mreditor16

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I'm having a go at them myself right now. What was your logic for Q7? Just want to clarify with another person...
 

NotCricket

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NAIRU eliminates all unemployment save for hidden and structural. Hence an increase in labour market flexibility would increase participation/encourage workers, taking hidden workers and putting them into the labour market which is saturated, raising unemployment. I think!
 

dim-sims

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:S I can't believe I screwed up 10. I don't know what I was bloody thinking.
 

Cleavage

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I considered 7B

If UE is on the NAIRU, UE is free from cyclical UE. Therefore any attempt to increase labour market flexibility will reduce structural/frictional and therefore UE. Hence, B or D

I selected B because increased labour market flexibility would allow some demographics groups, like young mothers, the ability to participate. therefore participation rate increases, therefore B
 

mreditor16

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Cleavage, do you agree with the rest of OP's answers? I'm just doing some cross-checking :)
 

Cleavage

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NAIRU eliminates all unemployment save for hidden and structural. Hence an increase in labour market flexibility would increase participation/encourage workers, taking hidden workers and putting them into the labour market which is saturated, raising unemployment. I think!
Contentious stuff ahahah we got the complete opposite

Apart from that, we got the same MC answers, I had mine checked over by my teacher and in her incredibly brief look, she said she didn't find anything incorrect
 

Phaze

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I considered 7B

If UE is on the NAIRU, UE is free from cyclical UE. Therefore any attempt to increase labour market flexibility will reduce structural/frictional and therefore UE. Hence, B or D

I selected B because increased labour market flexibility would allow some demographics groups, like young mothers, the ability to participate. therefore participation rate increases, therefore B
I agree with this. Flexibility would mean that more people from the hidden unemployed bracket will re-enter the work force seeking work due to the fact that their skills may have some sort of use now.
 

NotCricket

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I considered 7B

If UE is on the NAIRU, UE is free from cyclical UE. Therefore any attempt to increase labour market flexibility will reduce structural/frictional and therefore UE. Hence, B or D

I selected B because increased labour market flexibility would allow some demographics groups, like young mothers, the ability to participate. therefore participation rate increases, therefore B
NAIRU includes the elimination of frictional unemployment. It can't be D - the participatino rate won't decrease.

I believe that if you increase participation (young mothers) in a saturated labour market, they can't find work -> increasing U/E.

But you could definitely be right!
 

Phaze

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According to Independent Paper 2013 NAIRU and Natural Rate of Unemployment are not the same thing and are often mistaken for eachother.
 

Cleavage

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NAIRU includes the elimination of frictional unemployment. It can't be D - the participatino rate won't decrease.

I believe that if you increase participation (young mothers) in a saturated labour market, they can't find work -> increasing U/E.

But you could definitely be right!
I think its a bit of a dodgy question more than anything, belongs in an independent trial paper
 

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