Econ HW 10
When taxes decrease, consumption
increases as shown by a shift of the aggregate demand curve to the right.
A change in the expected price level is likely to cause...
a shift in the short run aggregate supply curve
The classical dichotomy and monetary neutrality are represented graphically by
a vertical long-run aggregate-supply curve
This shifts short run aggregate supply left
an increase in price expectations
The equation: quantity of output supplied = natural rate of output + z (actual price level - expected price level), where z is a positive number, represents
an upward- sloping short-run aggregate supply curve
Other things the same, if the price level is lower than expected, then some firms believe that the relative price of what they produce has
decrease, so they decrease production
Most economists believe that money neutrality
does not hold in the short run
Suppose the economy is in long run equilibrium. If there is a sharp increase in the minimum wage as well as an increase in taxes, then in the short run, real GDP will
fall and the price level might rise, fall, or stay the same. In the long run, the price level might rise, fall, or stay the same but real GDP will be lower.
During a recession the economy experiences
falling employment and income
Aggregate demand shifts left if
government purchases decrease and shifts left if stock prices fall
The misconceptions theory of the short-run aggregate supply curve says that if the price level is higher than people expected, then some firms believe that the relative price of what they produce has
increase, so they increase priduction
Other things the same, an increase in the price level makes consumers feel
less wealthy, so the quantity of goods and services demanded falls.
As the price level rises
people will want to hold more money, so the interest rate rises.
The sticky-wage theory of the short-run aggregate supply curve says that when the price level rises more than expected
production is more profitable and employment rises.
Most economists believe that in the short run
real and nominal variables are highly intertwined and that money can temporarily move real GDP away from its long-run trend.
An unexpected increase in the price level that temporarily lowers real wages and induces more employment and output in an economy, occurs in
sticky-wage theory
Aggregate demand includes...
the quantity of goods and services the government, households, firms, and customers abroad want to buy.
When the Fed buys bonds
the supply of money increases and so aggregate demand shifts right.
According to classical macroeconomic theory, changes in the money supply affect
variables measured in terms of money but not variables measured in terms of quantities or relative prices
if output is above its natural rate, then according to sticky-wage theory...
will strike bargains for higher wages. In response to the higher wages firms will produce less at an given price level