Econ ch 16
The Fed dealt with high inflation in the 1980s by
reducing the money supply and causing aggregate demand to fall
If the economy is hit by a negative real shock that reduces real GDP growth below its long-run potential rate, what is the appropriate monetary policy to move real GDP growth back to the long-run rate without raising inflation
No monetary policy can achieve this goal.
When people believe that a central bank will stick with its policy, monetary policy is likely to have
high credibility
increasing M
increases inflation, dampens loss in real growth
Uncertainty always causes
investment decrease
Disinflation in the 1980s was a result of
leftward shifts in the aggregate demand curve due to money supply reductions
In response to a negative spending shock, a condition of lower market confidence makes monetary policy easing
less effective in raising real GDP growth.
Monetary policy is
less effective when dealing w real shocks than AD shocks
Monetary policy works best to counteract
negative aggregate demand shocks.
In a worst-case scenario, the Federal Reserve is least successful at counteracting a negative _____ shock.
real
Although the Federal Reserve may increase the monetary base, the larger monetary aggregates (M1 and M2) and thus aggregate demand won't increase very much in response if
Banks are slow to lend
What is the difference between disinflation and deflation
Disinflation is a slower increase in prices, whereas deflation is a decrease in prices.
Which BEST describes U.S. economic conditions in the 1980s
Disinflation occurred because of the deliberate actions of the Fed.
What is a possible reason for the Fed's inability to prevent a recession
Much of the information about the economy is unknown when the Fed is making policy
Why is monetary policy not fully effective in combating a negative supply shock
When countering a negative supply shock to reduce unemployment, Fed action will raise inflation.
If a real economic shock shifts the LRAS curve to the left, which of the following will NOT further reduce real GDP growth and inflation
a monetary policy rule that is credible
Under Paul Volcker, the Fed reduced the inflation rate in the early 1980s by more than 10 percentage points, causing
a severe recession to take place.
The BEST type of negative shock for the Federal Reserve to respond to is a negative shock to
ad
If the Federal Reserve wishes to avoid short-run increases in the unemployment rate, the correct response to a negative AD shock would be
an increase in money supply growth.
A potential problem with expansionary monetary policy is that banks can
be unwilling to lend
In the short run, if the Federal Reserve responds to a negative real shock with an increase in money supply growth, the inflation rate will increase because of
both the real shock and the increased money supply growth
A negative shock to AD
creates less inflation than before, less M, less growth, and more unemployment
A decrease in the price level is called
deflation
A significant decrease in the rate of inflation is called
disinflation