Foram encontradas 390 questões.
To many Western economists and policymakers the solution is simple: emerging economies should allow more flexibility in their exchange rates. This would permit them to raise interest rates, and a stronger currency would help to curb import prices. But the links between exchange rates and inflation are complicated. Stephen Jen, of Morgan Stanley, argues that revaluation could encourage investors to expect further appreciation, which would attract yet more inflows of hot money and so exacerbate inflation. This is the problem that China now faces.
According to the text:
Item 4: inflation is influenced by inflows of hot money.
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Julgue a seguinte afirmativa:
Item 0: De acordo com a hipótese da renda permanente, aumentos previsíveis da renda não afetam o consumo, ou seja, não ocorre a sensibilidade excessiva do consumo.
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Podem ser associados ao período conhecido como “milagre econômico brasileiro” (1968-1973):
Item 1: o aumento do grau de capacidade ociosa da economia ao longo do período, fruto do crescimento dos investimentos externos diretos;
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Indeed, official figures understate inflationary pressures in many emerging economies. Widespread government subsidies and price controls are one reason, and price indices are often skewed by a lack of data or government cheating. China's true inflation rate may be higher because the consumer-price index does not properly cover private services. Delays in data collection in India can mean big revisions to inflation: the final number for early March was almost two percentage points higher than the original. The latest wholesale-price inflation rate might therefore be pushed up to 9-10%. If measured correctly, five of the ten biggest emerging economies could have inflation rates of 10% or more by mid-summer. Two-thirds of the world's population may then be struggling with double-digit inflation.
The recent jump has been caused mainly by surging oil and food prices. For example, in China food prices have risen by 22% in the past year, whereas non-food prices have gone up by only 1.8%. Governments have responded with more price controls and export bans. India's government has suspended futures trading in several commodities, which it blames (wrongly) for high prices. In the short run such measures may help to cap inflation and avoid social unrest, but in the long run they do more harm than good. Preventing prices from rising reduces the incentive for farmers to increase supply and for consumers to curb demand, prolonging the very imbalance that has stoked prices.
According to the text:
Item 2: all ten biggest emerging economies will have inflation rates of 10% by mid-summer;
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Sobre a política salarial adotada no Brasil ao longo do século XX pode-se afirmar:
Item 1: em sua criação, o salário mínimo possuía valores regionalmente diferenciados e excluía os trabalhadores do campo;
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Depois de várias tentativas fracassadas, implementou-se, no governo Itamar Franco, um plano de estabilização bem sucedido. No que se refere ao Plano Real, pode-se afirmar que:
Item 3: da mesma forma que na época do Plano Cruzado, a estratégia de combate à inflação do Plano Real não pôde contar com liquidez nos mercados financeiros internacionais;
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Um monopolista produz um certo bem de acordo com uma tecnologia para a qual o custo marginal de produção é constante e igual a 4. Existem N consumidores idênticos e de tal sorte que a demanda inversa agregada por esse bem é dada por P = 10 – Q, em que P é o preço e Q a quantidade total demandada. Julgue a seguinte afirmativa:
Item 1: A perda de bem-estar (ou deadweight loss) decorrente do uso da regra de mark-up pelo monopolista é DWL = 9.
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Tall tales
(From The Economist print edition, May 24th 2008)
The rollercoaster, rags-to-riches story of a remarkable animation studio
PIXAR'S characters—whether the heroic toys of “Toy Story”, the father and son fish of “Finding Nemo”, the insects in “A Bug's Life” or the rat-chef of “Ratatouille”—are full of yearning; for a child to play with, a lost family member, or to become something that seems far out of reach. The small company that imagined them is just the same. Right from the beginning, Pixar, officially a computer-hardware business, secretly dreamed of a more creative life making feature films.
Ed Catmull's ambition at school had been to become an animator at Disney, but he gave up because he couldn't draw. Computer animation, he realised, having graduated in computer science and physics, could be a way to overcome this. So Mr Catmull brought together a small group of people to form a computer-graphics group, which later became Pixar. Their early attempts were uninspiring, however. Two years in the making, the 1977 film, “Tubby the Tuba”, looked bad and the story did not work. Mr Catmull and his colleagues quickly realised that fancy technology was not enough, and that story-telling was just as vital to computer animation as to the hand-drawn sort. Under John Lasseter, a young animator rejected by Disney, Pixar started to develop a new kind of cartoon, which eschewed fairy-tale plots and entertained adults as well as children.
Pixar soon drew the attention of George Lucas, director of the “Star Wars” films, and its future seemed assured. But all Mr Lucas really wanted was for the little company to make whizzy special effects for Lucasfilm's movies, not expensive computer-animated films of its own. At one point, in 1985, Pixar, losing money fast, was nearly sold to General Motors and Philips Electronics, which wanted its computer-graphics modelling tools to help design cars and transform medical scans into three-dimensional images. Even when Steve Jobs, a cofounder of Apple, came to the rescue, Pixar was still in danger. Its pretence to be a computer company was going badly: sales of the Pixar Image Computer were slow. The only significant way the company was earning money was by making cartoon advertisements to sell other companies' products.
But there was reason for hope. “Tin Toy”, a short animated film, won an Oscar in 1988, and that was enough to keep Pixar alive and, crucially, to attract the interest of Disney. Together, the two studios made “Toy Story”, which became a critical and financial success.
Several more hits followed, and Pixar astounded Hollywood with its consistency. The studio became widely revered for its creative culture and for its insistence on originality. There are few American companies with as saintly a reputation. In 2006 Disney bought Pixar for $7.4 billion, and promptly put Messrs Catmull and Lasseter in charge of Disney's own animation unit.
A number of interesting things about Disney emerge in this excellent, readable account of Pixar's early years. David Price claims, for instance, that Disney's chief executive, Michael Eisner, considered shutting down the company's animation unit after he took over as chief executive in 1984, an astonishing fact given the subsequent success of cartoon films such as “The Lion King”. Mr Price also makes clear just how much Pixar owes to Disney: it was the larger company's marketing for “Toy Story”, for instance, that gave Mr Jobs the confidence to launch an initial public offering of shares in Pixar in 2005.
Mr Price leaves Pixar and its animators in the arms of Mickey Mouse and friends, and assumes that all will be well. So far, the acquisition has undoubtedly benefited Disney. Creative types who left the animation giant in recent years are beginning to return, and morale is high at the company as Pixar prepares next month to launch its ninth feature film, “Wall-E”, about a robot in the year 2700. But will the company have the same energy in future, and what will happen when Mr Lasseter has his next “creative” spat with Disney? Pixar's life from here on, safely tucked away inside a powerful corporation, is likely to be less visible. But that does not mean it will be any less interesting.
The article's first paragraph leads the reader to expect:
Item 3: to read about a small ambitious company;
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O Índice de Preços ao Consumidor IPC de um país é baseado em uma cesta de consumo com dois bens: bem A e bem B. Entre 2007 e 2008, o preço do bem A varia !$ α !$% e o preço do bem B varia !$ β !$%. O IPC é um Índice de Laspeyres, cujos pesos são dados pelas quantidades consumidas de cada bem em 2007. Julgue as seguintes afirmativas:
Item 1: Se A e B são bens complementares e !$ α ≠ β !$, a variação do IPC subestima a mudança do custo de vida entre 2007 e 2008.
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Podem ser associados ao período conhecido como “milagre econômico brasileiro” (1968-1973):
Item 4: tanto as importações como as exportações cresceram significativamente ao longo do período, sendo que a taxa de crescimento das exportações de bens manufaturados cresceu acima da taxa média de crescimento das exportações.
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