International Macro exam 2 CH 17, 18, 19, 20
Alan Auerbach and Yuriy Gorodnichenko of the University of California, Berkeley, analyzed data from mostly wealthy OECD member countries and found that for economies in recession, the multiplier is about
2
Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A rise in EP*/P makes domestic goods and services cheaper relative to foreign goods and services and shifts both domestic and foreign spending from foreign goods to domestic goods.
Which one of the following statements is the most accurate? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. An increase in disposable income improves the current account. B. An increase in income improves the current account. C. An increase in disposable income does not affect the current account. D. An increase in income worsens the current account. E. An increase in disposable income worsens the current account.
An increase in disposable income worsens the current account.
If the economy's output is initially above full employment, which of the following policy combinations could restore full employment and keep the exchange rate at the same level?
Contractionary monetary and fiscal policy.
At the end of the Bretton Woods system, what combination of policies would have maintained the system?
Contractionary monetary policy in the US and expansionary policy abroad.
Which one of the following statements is true? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. Countries with weak investment opportunities should invest more at home. B. Countries with weak investment opportunities should invest little abroad. C. Countries with weak investment opportunities should invest little abroad and channel their savings into more productive investment activity domestically. D. Countries with strong investment opportunities should invest little at home and channel their savings into more productive investment activity abroad. E. Countries with weak investment opportunities should invest little at home and channel their savings into more productive investment activity abroad.
Countries with weak investment opportunities should invest little at home and channel their savings into more productive investment activity abroad.
Which one of the following statements is the most accurate? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. Depreciation is a decrease in E when the exchange rate floats while devaluation is a rise in E when the exchange rate is fixed. B. Depreciation is a rise in E when the exchange rate floats while devaluation is a decrease in E when the exchange rate is fixed. C. Depreciation is a rise in E when the exchange rate is fixed while devaluation is a rise in E when the exchange rate floats. D. Depreciation is a rise in E when the exchange rate floats while devaluation is a rise in E when the exchange rate is fixed. Your answer is correct. E. None of the above.
Depreciation is a rise in E when the exchange rate floats while devaluation is a rise in E when the exchange rate is fixed.
Under fixed exchange rates, which one of the following statements is the MOST accurate?
Devaluation causes a rise in output.
Which one of the following statements is the most accurate? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. Fiscal policy has the same effect on output under fixed and flexible exchange rate regimes. B. Fiscal policy affects output more under fixed than under flexible exchange rate regimes. Your answer is correct. C. Fiscal policy cannot affect output under fixed exchange rate but does affect output under flexible exchange rate regimes. D. Fiscal policy affects output less under fixed than under flexible exchange rate regimes. E. Fiscal policy can affect output under fixed exchange rate but does not affect output under flexible exchange rate regimes.
Fiscal policy affects output more under fixed than under flexible exchange rate regimes.
Which one of the following statements is the most accurate? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a rise in domestic output must be accompanied by a depreciation of domestic currency, all else equal. B. For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a fall in domestic output must be accompanied by an appreciation of foreign currency, all else equal. C. For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a fall in domestic output must be accompanied by a depreciation of foreign currency, all else equal. D. For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a rise in domestic output must be accompanied by an appreciation of domestic currency, all else equal. Your answer is correct. E. For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a fall in domestic output must be accompanied by an appreciation of domestic currency, all else equal.
For asset markets to remain in equilibrium, a rise in domestic output must be accompanied by an appreciation of domestic currency, all else equal.
Under the price−specie−flow mechanism, what happens when, say, Great Britain's current account surplus is greater than its non−reserve financial account balance?
Gold reserves will flow into Great Britain.
Which of the following statements is TRUE? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. Governments continued with the gold standard during World War I and used gold to finance their massive military expenditures. B. Governments effectively suspended the gold standard during World War I and financed part of their massive military expenditures by borrowing money from other countries. C. Governments continued with the gold standard during World War I and increased gold reserves to finance the reconstruction process. D. Governments effectively suspended the gold standard during World War I and financed part of their massive military expenditures by printing money.
Governments effectively suspended the gold standard during World War I and financed part of their massive military expenditures by printing money.
In the short run, with prices fixed, how would an increase in government spending affect the DD−AA equilibrium?
It will increase output and appreciate the currency.
Which of the following is TRUE of the current account balance?
Monetary expansion increases the current account balance.
When domestic and foreign currency bonds are imperfect substitutes, the domestic interest rate (R) can be written as
R = R* + (Ee − E)/E + ρ.
The interest parity condition can be written as
R = R* + (Ee − E)/E.
Which of the following statements is TRUE? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. The gold standard allowed monetary policy to pursue internal policy goals, but did not allow high degrees of exchange rate stability and international financial capital mobility. B. The gold standard did not allow high degrees of exchange rate stability, international financial capital mobility, and monetary policy to pursue internal policy goals. C. The gold standard allowed high degrees of exchange rate stability and international financial capital mobility, but did not allow monetary policy to pursue internal policy goals. D. The gold standard allowed high degrees of exchange rate stability, international financial capital mobility, and monetary policy to pursue internal policy goals.
The gold standard allowed high degrees of exchange rate stability and international financial capital mobility, but did not allow monetary policy to pursue internal policy goals.
Which of the following is an example of an "unconventional monetary policy" by a central bank?
The purchase of specific categories of assets with new money.
Under a reserve currency standard, what would happen if all countries were trying to simultaneously increase their holdings of foreign bonds (assume they all are perfect substitutes) in their official reserves?
There will be no problem.
Why was the IMF created?
To manage the system of fixed exchange rates after World War II.
Between the end of World War II and 1973, the main reverse currency that almost every country pegged the exchange rate of its money was the
U.S. dollar.
The top four major currencies in countries' international reserve holdings include
U.S. dollar, euro, British pound, and Japanese yen.
Which of the following statements is TRUE? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. Under a gold standard, countries with limited gold reserves cannot participate. B. Under a gold standard, each country is not responsible for pegging its currency's price in terms of the official international reserve asset, gold. C. Under a gold standard, each country fixes the price of its currency in terms of gold by standing ready to trade domestic currency for gold whenever necessary to defend the official price. Your answer is correct. D. Under a gold standard, all countries set the same price of their currency in terms of gold.
Under a gold standard, each country fixes the price of its currency in terms of gold by standing ready to trade domestic currency for gold whenever necessary to defend the official price.
Why did world central banks need to continue to accumulate dollars in the Bretton Woods system?
World gold was not rising fast enough to satisfy reserves demand.
Disposable income is defined as:
Y−T
Until the Civil War, the United States had
a bimetallic monetary standard consisting of silver and gold.
To hold the exchange rate constant,
a central bank must always be willing to trade currencies at the fixed exchange rate with the private actors in the foreign exchange market.
Under a floating exchange rate regime, an increase in money demand will lead to
a decline in output that is larger than would be under a fixed exchange rate regime.
In order to bring about a real depreciation of the dollar, the U.S. can hope for
a rise in foreign price levels or a fall in the dollar's nominal value in terms of foreign currencies.
A balance of payments crisis is best described as
a sharp change in foreign reserves sparked by a change in expectations about the future exchange rate.
The expectation of future devaluation causes a balance of payments crisis marked by
a sharp fall in reserves and a rise in the home interest rate above the world interest rate.
A system of managed floating exchange rates is
a system in which governments may attempt to moderate exchange rate movements without keeping exchange rates rigidly fixed.
A managed floating exchange rate refers to
an exchange rate that is not pegged, but does not float freely.
In long−run equilibrium after a permanent money−supply increase there follows:
an increase in exchange rate, E.
Under a floating exchange rate regime, an increase in the demand for a country's exports will lead to
an increase in output that is smaller than would be under a fixed exchange rate regime.
Advocates of flexible exchange rates claim that under flexible exchange rates, the central bank of
an overheated economy could cool down activity by contracting the money supply without worrying that undesired reserve inflow would undermine its stabilization effort.
When the central bank buys an asset from the public, ________ in central bank liabilities associated with the asset purchase causes the money supply to ________. When the central bank sells an asset to the public, ________ in central bank liabilities causes the money supply to ________.
an increase; expand; a decrease; shrink
By external balance, most economists mean
avoiding excessive imbalances in international payments.
Some claim that the long and agonizing periods of speculation preceding exchange rate realignments would
become less severe under floating.
Under fixed exchange rates, domestic asset transactions by the central bank
can be used to alter the level of foreign reserves but not to affect the state of employment and output.
In a financially integrated world in which funds can move instantly between national financial markets, fixed exchange rates
cannot be credibly maintained over the long run unless countries are willing to maintain controls over capital movements (as China does).
In a system of floating exchange rates,
central banks do not intervene in the foreign exchange market to fix rates.
Aggregate demand for an open economy's output is the sum of
consumption demand, investment demand, government demand, and net export demand.
Which of the following is one component of the "trilemma" that is faced by policy makers in choosing monetary arrangements? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. restrictions on international capital movements B. exchange rate stability C. tariffs and subsidies D. global inflation E. restrictions on the migration of labor
exchange rate stability
Organizations whose members agree to fix their mutual exchange rates while allowing their currencies to fluctuate in value against the currencies of nonmember countries are called
exchange rate unions.
Because a country with a current account deficit is transferring wealth to foreigners, domestic consumption is ________ over time and foreign consumption is ________.
falling; rising
Under the gold standard, the primary responsibility of a central bank was to
fix the exchange rate between its currency and gold.
The gold standard, like a reserve currency system, results in
fixed exchange rates between all currencies.
A central bank's international reserves consists of its holdings of
foreign assets and gold.
By internal balance, most economists mean
full employment and domestic price level stability.
In the short run, a permanent increase in the domestic money supply
has stronger effects on the exchange rate and output than an equal temporary increase.
Which of the following is NOT among the quantitative indicators for the U.S. Department of the Treasury to judge whether it should name a country a currency manipulator? Question content area bottom Part 1 A. official net intervention purchases of foreign currency totaling more than 2 percent of GDP, taking place in at least six of the past twelve months B. having an inflation rate of more than 10 percent a year C. having an overall (multilateral) current account surplus of more than 2 percent of GDP D. having a bilateral trade surplus of more than $20 billion with the United States
having an inflation rate of more than 10 percent a year
If one compares low-inflation economies with economies in which inflation is high and very volatile, the degree of exchange rate pass-through is likely to be The reasoning behind the correct response given above centers on the
higher in the high-inflation economies. ability and willingness of foreign sellers to alter their foreign currency prices.
The Current Account may fall after a real depreciation because
import orders are placed in advance and a depreciation raises the domestic price.
A temporary fiscal expansion (with full employment) will
increase GDP.
The outcome of the government's expansionary monetary policy that leads to high inflation without average gain in output is called
inflation bias.
By fixing the exchange rate, the central bank gives up its ability to
influence the economy through monetary policy.
If central banks were no longer obliged to intervene in currency markets to fix exchange rates, governments would be able to use monetary policy to reach
internal and external balance.
An increase in the real exchange rate
makes imports more expensive.
A sudden decrease in the U.S. price level
makes those with dollar debts worse off.
A government spending multiplier
measures the size of the increase in output caused by an increase in government spending.
In the short run
monetary expansion causes the CA to increase & fiscal expansion causes the CA to decrease.
When an economy is in a liquidity trap,
monetary policy cannot be used to influence the exchange rate.
To avoid procedural delays, governments are likely to respond to disturbances by changing ________ even when a shift in ________ would be more appropriate.
monetary policy; fiscal policy
A temporary increase in an economy's money supply produces
no change in the long-run expected exchange rate, a depreciation of its currency, and a rise in its output and employment.
A temporary fiscal expansion in an economy produces
no change in the long-run expected exchange rate, an appreciation of its currency, and a rise in its output and employment.
The international capital market is:
not really a single market, but a group of closely interconnected markets in which asset exchanges with some international dimension take place.
The percent by which import prices rise when the home currency depreciates by 1% is the degree of
pass−through from exchange rates to import prices.
The "rules of the game" under the gold standard can best be described as which of the following:
selling domestic assets in a deficit and buying assets in a surplus.
Inflation targeting is a process where a central bank
sets a specific inflation target to help set inflation expectations.
Under the fixed rate regime foreign countries could hold their dollar exchange rates constant by
setting their domestic interest rate equal to the U.S. interest rate.
In the short run, a tax decrease
shifts the DD-curve to the right, increases output, and appreciates the currency.
A combination of stagnating output and high inflation is called
stagflation.
Central banks sometimes carry out equal foreign and domestic asset transactions in opposite directions to nullify the impact of their foreign exchange operations on the domestic money supply. This type of policy is called
sterilized foreign exchange intervention.
Fiscal expansion
stimulates aggregate demand and causes output to rise.
When countries begin to have trouble meeting their payments on past foreign loans, foreign creditors become reluctant to lend them new funds and may even demand immediate repayment of the earlier loans. Economists refer to such an event as a sudden ________ in foreign lending.
stop
In the short−run, we assume that the money prices of goods and services are
temporarily fixed.
Which currency is not only the key vehicle currency in the global foreign exchange market but also the dominant invoice currency?
the U.S. dollar
The global financial crisis in 2007 started as a result of
the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis.
In the short run, a country's overall output level depends on ________; in the long run, domestic output depends only on ________.
the aggregate demand for its products; the available domestic supplies of factors of production such as labor and capital
What is a reverse currency?
the currency central banks hold in their international reserves
Under fixed exchange rate, the response of an economy to a temporary fall in foreign demand for its exports is
the currency remains the same, and output decreases.
Under flexible exchange rate, the response of an economy to a temporary fall in foreign demand for its exports is
the currency depreciates, and output falls.
Under a fixed exchange rate, the foreign exchange market is in equilibrium when the interest parity condition holds—that is
the domestic and foreign interest rates are equal, R=R*.
The collapse of the Bretton Woods system marked
the end of fixed exchange rates and a move to floating exchange rates.
A J-curve describes
the gradual effect of real depreciation on the current account.
Imperfect asset substitutability assumes:
the returns on foreign and domestic currency differ and are influenced by risk.
The J−curve illustrates which of the following?
the short−term effects of depreciation on the current account
If a country's nominal interest rate is zero, then
the country's economy is in a liquidity trap.
A. Central banks that were persistently losing gold
took actions that resulted in pushing domestic interest rates upward.
The economy as a whole is in equilibrium only
when both the output market and the asset markets are in equilibrium.
If an economy is in a liquidity trap, then the nominal interest rate is ________ and the only effective policy that can be used to stimulate the economy is ________.
zero or negative; expansionary fiscal policy
Britain returned to the gold standard in ________, then left again in ________ when foreign holders of sterling lost confidence in Britain's promise to maintain the currency's value and began converting their sterling to gold.
1925; 1931
The global financial crisis of 2007−2008 resulted in a(n) ________ of the Swiss franc as foreign currency flowed ________ the country. As result, Swiss products became ________ competitive in world markets.
appreciation; into; less
The net foreign wealth of an economy with a ________ is ________ over time.
deficit; falling
With imperfect asset substitutability, sterilized purchases of foreign exchange can cause the home currency to ________, and sterilized sales of foreign exchange can cause the home currency to ________.
depreciate; appreciate
A real ________ of the home currency raises aggregate demand for home output, other things equal; a real ________ lowers aggregate demand for home output.
depreciation; appreciation
Because each consumer demands ________ goods and services as his or her real income ________, consumption will ________ as disposable income ________ at the aggregate level.
more; rises; increase; increases
Given P and P*, a rise in E ________ net exports and ________ the current account.
raises; improves
Under a gold standard, whenever a country is losing reserves and seeing its money supply ________ as a consequence, foreign countries are gaining reserves and seeing their money supplies ________.
shrink; expand