What would you expect to change in appearance of your graph

Assignment Help Microeconomics
Reference no: EM131421948

ASSIGNMENT

1. [Reading] Read ‘Primary Products and Economic Growth: An Empirical Measurement' (hereafter called C&G). When C&G was published, it started a controversy lasting decades. This question gives you a chance to see what all the fuss was about - and what Canadian economic historians have found worthy of long discussion.

a. Write a 3-2-1 report for the paper. Remember that you CAN'T just copy-and-paste text from the paper. You need to either cite quotes properly, and explain why you chose them, or use your own words. (12 marks)

i. What are the 3 most important concepts, ideas or issues in the reading?

Briefly explain why you chose them.

ii. What are the 2 concepts, ideas or issues in the article that you are having the most difficulty understanding, or that are missing but should have been included?

Briefly explain what you did to correct the situation (e.g. looked up an unfamiliar word or a missing fact), and the result.

iii. If you could ask the author1 question, what would it be?

Why is this question important?

b. C&G assumes that in the gadgets sector, demand for labour is perfectly elastic. Suppose instead that once a certain number of workers have been hired, demand for gadgetlabour becomes elastic, so that more workers will be hired only if the wage falls. (This is the standard downward-sloping demand relationship.) Would this increase or decrease the positive impact of a wheat boom, according to the model? Explain briefly. [Hint: If you're stuck, you may wish to skim through Frank Lewis's paper in the references. He deals with this issue.]

c. A later paper pointed out that C&G had missed a spot when it came to their empirical calculations. A lot of rent in the early prairies was paid via share-cropping agreements. Under sharecropping, a farmer would pay a share of the harvest (say, 20% of the wheat) as rent to the landowner. This type of rent did not show up in the census data used by C&G . Would failing to count sharecropping ‘rent' increase or decrease the positive impact of a wheat boom, compared to its ‘true' value? Explain briefly. [Hint: If you're stuck, you may wish to skim through Gordon Bertram's paper in the references. He deals with this issue.]

2. [‘Raphing] This question asks you to investigate the convergence (coming together) of British and North American wheat prices between the late 1800s and early 1900s. In an influential paper, C. Knick Harley attributed this mostly to falling transportation costs due to technological change.

If graphing by hand, use only the first eleven years of data (1845 - 1855). Otherwise, use the full data set (1845 - 1934).

a. Use the data series provided to plot nominal (not adjusted for inflation) prices for 1 bushel of wheat in Great Britain and Chicago . Note that there are 20 shillings in a pound (£) and 8 bushels in a quarter . Your graph should have:

i. Years on the Horizontal Axis, and Dollars Per Bushel on the Vertical Axis.

ii. Two line graphs: one for the price of wheat in Great Britain, and one for the price of wheat in Chicago. You will have to convert both price series! British prices are in shillings/quarter, and Chicago prices are in cents/bushel. You want both in dollars/bushel.

b. Suppose the only thing affecting grain prices over the period are transportation costs and minor random shocks. Assume the British price is the price paid by consumers, and the Chicago price is the price obtained by suppliers. Transportation can be thought of as a tax driving a wedge between consumers and producers, as in the tax incidence models you should have covered in Micro .

A major result of this model is that the burden of the tax is highest on the party with the lowest elasticity. If price elasticity of demand is lower than price elasticity of supply, consumers will pay most of the tax via higher after-tax prices. If the reverse is true, producers will pay most of the tax via lower take-home prices.

Consider your graph from part a. Given what you have plotted, and our simplifying assumptions, until 1900 (or 1855 if doing it by hand), which was higher: Britain's price elasticity of demand, or North America's (Chicago's) price elasticity of supply? Briefly explain your reasoning. [Hint: For any given change in transportation costs, which changed more: the after-transportation price paid by British consumers, or the take-home price obtained by Chicago wheat sellers?]

c. Although I've provided (approximate) consumer price indices for both countries, using them to deflate wheat prices is problematic. During this time period, wheat was an extremely important item of consumption, forming a sizable chunk of the basket of goods tracked by a consumer price index. Moreover, there is reason to believe that the relative importance of wheat in the average diet was different in Britain than in North America.

One of the main problems can be summarized as follows. If the price index used to correct for inflation has wheat as a major component of its basket, then it will be difficult to tell whether a change in the price of wheat represents a change in relative prices, or is merely part of a change in general prices. We would expect farmers to react to the former by increasing supply, but not necessarily to the latter. For a deeper discussion of the issues, see Peterson&Tomek.

i. What would you expect to change in the appearance of your graphfor part a. if you deflated wheat prices using a price index that was strongly correlated with the price of wheat? (That is, that is high when the price of wheat is high, and low when the price of wheat is low, regardless of what's happening to other prices.) Explain briefly.

ii. Plot British wheat prices against the British price index until 1900 (or until 1855, if doing it by hand). This should be a scatter plot with shillings/quarter on the horizontal axis, and the British price index on the vertical axis. Calculate the R2 value for this series (in Excel, create a trendline and ask that the R2 be printed on the graph). I've done the same thing for the Chicago prices and the American price index, so that you may compare the two. Which of the two regions shows higher correlation between wheat prices and the price index - Britain or Chicago?Explain briefly.

3. [Research] In this question, you are asked to perform a (forward) citation search using Google Scholar. A forward citation search finds articles that include the article you are looking up in their lists of references. This can be very useful to find what the latest research is on a controversial topic, or if you are confident that any paper about the topic you are researching will be certain to cite a certain ‘classic' paper.

Pick ONE of the following two articles to use as the basis of the search:

• Edward J. Chambers and Donald F. Gordon, "Primary Products and Economic Growth: An Empirical Measurement," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 74, 1966, pp. 315 - 332.

o If you pick this one, you'll be investigating later research on the importance of the wheat boom to Canada's economy.

• C. Knick Harley, "Transportation, the world wheat trade, and the Kuznets Cycle, 1850 - 1913," Explorations in Economic History, Vol. 17, 1980, pp. 218 - 250.

o If you pick this one, you'll be investigating later research on the convergence of wheat prices in the 19th and early 20th century.

a. For this section, you will find an article published since 1981 that advances the topic under study (impact of the wheat boom or price convergence). Start by going to https://scholar.google.ca . It's best to do this with a university connection, or at home while connected to the university via VPN. (It will make more articles available to you for free.)

i. Type your article's name into the search bar, and hit enter or click on the magnifying glass.

ii. You should see your article show up. At the bottom of its summary, you'll see ‘Cited by [Number]'. Click on that. It will take you to a list of articles that have referenced the one you looked up.

iii. Under ‘Any Time', click on ‘Custom Range' and set the date range to 1981 - 2017, then hit ‘Search'.

iv. To narrow things down, let's find articles that reference wheat. Click the square next to ‘Search within citing articles' at the top of the list. Enter ‘wheat' in the main search bar at the top of the page and hit enter or click on the magnifying glass.

v. Look through the summaries until you find an article that is available at UVic (these will usually have a [PDF] link next to them, or a Get This @UVic) and relevant to the topic you are looking up. For the first article, this will be the impact of the wheat boom on the Canadian economy. For the second, this will be the convergence of wheat prices around the turn of the 20th century. (Hint: Feel free to refine your search using additional terms such as ‘convergence', ‘boom' or ‘Canada' if you are still feeling overwhelmed.)

vi. Cite the article you have found (the TA has to be able to look it up easily), and briefly explain why you chose it.

b. Briefly explain the contribution that the article makes to the topic under discussion.

You're not expected to read the whole article - it's probably enough to get the information from the abstract, or to skim the introduction and conclusion.

For example, if you chose the second article, your answer might be along the lines of, "The article I chose says that reduced transaction costs in the form of less grain-related British government regulations and paperwork were just as important as technological advances in advancing price convergence of wheat between 1846 and 1857. Both reduced the cost of transporting wheat from Winnipeg to Liverpool, as shown in a recently discovered data set."

Useful References (UVic connection or VPN needed for free access)

Question 1

Edward J. Chambers and Donald F. Gordon, "Primary Products and Economic Growth: An Empirical Measurement," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 74, 1966, pp. 315 - 332.

Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/1829150

Frank Lewis, "The Canadian Wheat Boom and Per Capita Income: New Estimates," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 83, 1975, pp. 1249 - 1257.

Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/1830860

Gordon W. Bertram, "The Relevance of the Wheat Boom in Canadian Economic Growth," The Canadian Journal of Economics, Vol. 6, 1973, pp. 545 - 566.

Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/134090

Geoff McIntyre, "When is Farming Not Farming?", MPN, October 27, 2011. https://www.mnp.ca/en/posts/when-is-farming-not-farming

John Phair, "Panel members favour renting over share-cropping," todaysfarmer.ca, December 30, 2010. https://www.todaysfarmer.ca/2010/12/30/panel-members-favour-renting-over-share-cropping

Grant Diamond, "Share cropping: is it farm or rental income?", The Western Producer, February 4th, 2016. https://www.producer.com/2016/02/share-cropping-is-it-farm-or-rental-income/

Question 2

C. Knick Harley, "Transportation, the world wheat trade, and the Kuznets Cycle, 1850 - 1913," Explorations in Economic History, Vol. 17, 1980, pp. 218 - 250.

Available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/001449838090011X

Anonymous, "Tax Incidence: How the Tax Burden is Shared between Buyers and Sellers," thismatter.com, https://thismatter.com/economics/tax-incidence.htm

E. T. Collins, "Dietary Change and Cereal Consumption in Britain in the Nineteenth Century," The Agricultural History Review, Vol. 23, 1975, pp. 97 - 115.

Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/40273664

Jennifer K. Bond and Olga Liefert, "Wheat's Role in the U.S. Diet," USDA Economic Research Service, October 26, 2016.

Available at https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/crops/wheat/wheats-role-in-the-us-diet/

George Fisher, The Instructor, or, Young Man's Best Companion, T. Martin & Co., London, 1810.

1811 edition archived at https://archive.org/details/instructororyou00accgoog

HikaruHanawa Peterson and William G. Tomek, "Implications of Deflating Commodity Prices for Time-Series Analysis," Conference on Applied Commodity Price Analysis, Forecasting, and Market Risk Management, 2000, No. 18944.

Archived at https://purl.umn.edu/18944

Question 3

Edward J. Chambers and Donald F. Gordon, "Primary Products and Economic Growth: An Empirical Measurement," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 74, 1966, pp. 315 - 332.

Available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/1829150

C. Knick Harley, "Transportation, the world wheat trade, and the Kuznets Cycle, 1850 - 1913," Explorations in Economic History, Vol. 17, 1980, pp. 218 - 250.

Available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/001449838090011X

DATA APPENDIX (BY HAND FIGURES ONLY, SEE EXCEL SHEET FOR FULL SERIES)

Year

Price of Wheat

Exchange Rate

Price Indices

British Price

Chicago Price

Consumer Price Index

Retail Price Index

(shillings/quarter)

(cents/bushel)

(dollars/pound)

US, 1967 = 100

Britain, 2010 = 100

1845

57.875

60.958

4.87

28

1.296

1846

55.070

52.292

4.82

27

1.324

1847

70.854

60.417

4.79

28

1.403

1848

50.327

68.667

4.87

26

1.277

1849

43.964

57.625

4.81

25

1.236

1850

40.215

64.583

4.87

25

1.199

1851

38.493

45.167

4.91

25

1.171

1852

41.201

44.667

4.9

25

1.180

1853

53.985

72.958

4.89

25

1.267

1854

72.509

108.083

4.88

27

1.366

1855

74.812

130.125

4.89

28

1.372

Article: THE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: PRIMARY PRODUCTS AND ECONOMIC GROWTH AN EMPIRICAL MEASUREMENT* by EDWARD J. CHAMBERS AND DONALD F. GORDON.

Attachment:- Attachments.rar

Reference no: EM131421948

Questions Cloud

Research various international strategies : Research various international strategies. Take one that you find interesting and investigate it more in depth. Tell why the approach you selected is a good approach for your company or some other company that you are interested in to increase inte..
Estimate the critical value of t for a confidence interval : Using the t tables, software, or a calculator, estimate the critical value of t for a 90% confidence interval with df = 17.
What is the temperature of the gas in kelvins : What is the temperature of the gas in kelvins? Express your answer to three significant figures.
Estimate critical value of t for a confidence interval : Using the t tables, software, or a calculator, estimate the critical value of t for a 95% confidence interval with df = 7.
What would you expect to change in appearance of your graph : ECON 321- What would you expect to change in the appearance of your graph for part a. if you deflated wheat prices using a price index that was strongly correlated with the price of wheat?
Select three distinct jobs of your choice : Select three distinct jobs of your choice. Go to the Occupational Information Network (O*NET). Review the major tasks for each job. Then, for each job, identify what you believe is the most appropriate performance appraisal method. Discuss the rat..
What do you know about writing in your field : What do you know about writing in your field? What is the tone adopted by most authors? Can scholarship in this field be understood by a general audience? Why or why not?
What is the minimum mass of ethylene glycol : What is the minimum mass of ethylene glycol (ethane-1,2-diol, C2H6O2) that must be dissolved in 14.5 kg of water to prevent the solution from freezing at -22.0° C? (Assume ideal behaviour.)
Problem regarding the pressure of the gas : A sample of a gas is in a sealed container. The pressure of the gas is 275 torr , and the temperature is 25 °C . If the temperature changes to 91 °C with no change in volume or amount of gas, what is the new pressure, P2, of the gas inside the con..

Reviews

Write a Review

Microeconomics Questions & Answers

  The free rider problem

Question: Explain why the free rider problem makes it difficult for perfectly competitive markets to provide the Pareto efficient level of a public good.

  Failure of the super committee is good thing for economy

Some commentators have argued that the failure of the “Super committee” is good thing for the economy?  Do you agree?

  Case study analysis about optimum resource allocation

Case study analysis about optimum resource allocation: -  Why might you suspect (even without evidence) that the economy might not be able to produce all the schools and clinics the Ministers want? What constraints are there on an economy's productio..

  Fixed cost and vairiable cost

Questions:  :   Which of the following are likely to be fixed costs and which variable costs for a chocolate factory over the course of a month?  Explain your choice.

  Problem - total cost, average cost, marginal cost

Problem - Total Cost, Average Cost, Marginal Cost: -  Complete the following table of costs for a firm.  (Note: enter the figures in the  MC   column  between  outputs of  0 and 1, 1 and 2, 2 and 3, etc.)

  Oligopoly and demand curve problem

Problem based on Oligopoly and demand curve,  Draw and explain the demand curve facing each firm, and given this demand curve, does this mean that firms in the jeans industry do or do not compete against one another?

  Impact of external costs on resource allocation

Explain the impact of external costs and external benefits on resource allocation;  Why are public goods not produced in sufficient quantities by private markets?  Which of the following are examples of public goods (or services)? Delete the incorrec..

  Shifts in demand and movements along the demand curve

Describe the differences between shifts in demand and movements along the demand curve. What are the main factors which can shift the demand curve? Explain why they cause the demand curve to shift. Use examples and draw graphs to support your discuss..

  Article review question

Article Review Question: Read the following excerpts from the article "Fruit, veg costs surge' by Todd, Dagwell, published in the Herald on January 25th 2011 and answer questions below:

  Long-term growth, international trade & globalization

Long-term Growth, International Trade & Globalization:- This question deals with concepts such as long-term growth, international trade and globalization. Questions related to trade deficit, trade surplus, gains from trade, an international trade sce..

  European monetary union (emu) in crisis

"Does the economic bailout of Spain and Greece spell the beginning of the end for the European Monetary Union (EMU)?"

  Development game “settlers of catan”

Read the rules of the game, the overview and the almanac for the Development Game "Settlers of Catan"

Free Assignment Quote

Assured A++ Grade

Get guaranteed satisfaction & time on delivery in every assignment order you paid with us! We ensure premium quality solution document along with free turntin report!

All rights reserved! Copyrights ©2019-2020 ExpertsMind IT Educational Pvt Ltd