Baidu Macroeconomics Week 1 - An Overview of Modern Macroeconomics
Both 1 and 2 1. Changes in government expenditures 2. Changes in taxes
Fiscal policy relies on:
All of the above Business executives interested in implementing their plans and strategies Policymakers interested in fighting recession or inflation Stock market investors interested in allocating funds to various assets
Forecasting the business cycle is important to:
Cost-push Inflation
If a world wide drought causes a rise in food prices and conflict in the Middle East causes oil prices to rise, this will contribute to:
Inflation
If actual output is above potential output, we run the risk of:
It goes up
If consumer confidence falls and unemployment rises, what happens to the probability of a recession?
Falls
If price inflation rises faster than wages, what happens to our purchasing power?
Increase government spending and cut taxes
If the government wants to use fiscal policy to stimulate the economy, it will:
Decrease the money supply
If the government wants to use monetary policy to fight inflation, it will:
Demand-pull inflation
President Lyndon Johnson's refusal to cut his Great Society programs to finance the Vietnam War resulted in:
Nominal GDP minus inflation
Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is equal to:
Lower taxes to lower the budget deficit
Supply side economics promises to:
Consumption, Investment, Government spending, and net exports
The "Flow of Expenditures" approach is calculated by adding:
The economy is self-correcting
The Classical economists believed that:
Keynesian economics
The Kennedy Tax Cut of 1964 was a modern day version of:
Printing too much money
The Monetarists believe that inflation is caused by:
Was moderately successful
The application of a massive fiscal and monetary policy after the Great Recession of 2007:
False
The theory of Rational Expectations supports the use of discretionary fiscal and monetary policies to control inflation and solve unemployment.
Benefit Borrowers
Unexpected inflation can:
All of the above Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan Collapse of a housing bubble China's entry into the World Trade Organization
What contributed to the slow growth of the United States during the 2000s?
Stimulating the economy to cure unemployment increases inflation
What is the Keynesian dilemma when it comes to curing stagflation?
Stagflation
When the economy simultaneously suffers from inflation and unemployment, this is called:
The PPI
Which type of inflation index measures changes in the cost of important raw materials?
Cyclical
Which type of unemployment do economists primarily focus on curing?
The 1990s
Which was the most prosperous decade?
John Maynard Keynes
Who famously said "in the long run, we're all dead."