graded quiz chapter 9
_____ will most likely increase the economy's long-run aggregate supply.
Advances in technology
(Figure: Determining SRAS Shifts) Which statement is NOT correct?
An increase in aggregate demand would lead to deflation.
________ inflation occurs when a supply shock reduces aggregate supply.
Cost-push
Which of the following may be an explanation for the shift in aggregate demand from A to B?
Interest rates fall and boost investment
A solution to the simultaneous emergence of deflation and unemployment is to use policies that shift the:
aggregate demand curve to the right.
The curve that shows how much GDP is demanded at various price levels is called:
aggregate demand.
According to Keynes, what determines the level of employment and income?
aggregate expenditures
Suppose the government raises income taxes, so consumers have less take-home pay. This policy action will cause a(n):
decrease in aggregate demand.
A shift of the aggregate _______ curve to the ________ would cause inflation to rise and employment to increase. Question
demand; right
Which of the following is NOT a reason the aggregate demand curve is negatively sloped?
income effect
When the price of a given product declines, the consumer's spendable income rises because it takes less income to purchase the same quantity. This is called the:
income effect.
The shift in aggregate demand depicted may be due to a(n):
increase in income taxes.
Government spending on Social Security:
increases aggregate demand.
If the amount of regulation in an economy increases, the aggregate supply curve shifts _____ and output supplied will be _____.
left; reduced
High family debt:
reduces the tendency to consume.
Cost-push inflation occurs when:
rising resource costs reduce short-run aggregate supply.
The idea that new spending creates more new spending is known as:
the multiplier effect.
Cost-push inflation is a situation in which:
the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts leftward.
The collapse of home values that began in 2008 led to ____ in Americans' consumption and _____ in their saving rates.
a decrease; an increase
In macroeconomics, the long run is:
a period long enough that participants in the economy will have enough time to gain all relevant information and enough time to act correctly on that information.