MacroEcon: Chapter 11 Homework
1) According to the graph, the change in exports demand produces ______ level of real GDP and ______ real interest rate. 2) Given the relationship between net capital outflows and the domestic real interest rate, it can be determined that net capital outflows will ______.
1) higher, higher 2) decrease
Which of the following were shocks that the US economy experienced during 2007-2009 period?
A decrease in real estate values, which affected the IS curve. A financial crisis, which increased the risk premium investors required before making loans. A surge in oil prices, which affected only the Phillips curve.
Why does the article argue that a flatter Phillips curve may be bad news if there is high inflation? With a relatively flat Phillips curve, it would require _____ in unemployment to significantly reduce inflation
a large increase
According to the Phillips curve equation, it is possible to have a high inflation rate even if the unemployment rate is high if
a negative supply shock occurs expected inflation is high
Based on the experience of countries leaving the gold standard and devaluing their currencies during the Great Depression, the ultimate effect on the Greek economy of abandoning the euro may be
a reversal of its economic decline.
What is the effect on real GDP and inflation Real GDP ______ and the inflation rate ______.
decreases, changes in an indeterminate way
What policy should the Fed pursue to attempt to prevent deflation?
decreasing the target interest rate
What causes a movement along the Phillips curve with the output gap on the horizontal axis?
demand shocks
what couses the phillips curve to shift?
supply shocks changes in expected inflation
a postive supply shock will cause
a downwards shift on the output gap phillips curve
A column published in the New York Times in 2012 observes that "Greece suffers from a crippling competitiveness gap and is locked into the euro." 1) What is a "competitiveness gap"? 2) Was Greece's competitiveness gap connected to its use of the euro?
1) A divergence between rates of change in productivity among trading partners. A divergence between the inflation rates among trading partners. A divergence between production costs among trading partners. 2)In part, yes, since Greece's participation in the monetary union prevented it from using monetary policy to reduce domestic inflation.
ome economists were concerned that the financial crisis of 2007 minus −2009 would lead to problems with deflation. The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco's Economic Letter stated: "A popular version of the well-known Phillips curve model of inflation predicts that we are on the cusp of a deflationary spiral in which prices will fall at ever-increasing rates over the next several years." Source: "The Risk of Deflation," FRBSF Economic Letter, March 27, 2009. *How might a deflationary spiral occur in the Phillips curve model? 1)Falling prices can cause the expectation that prices will _____. This in turn shifts the Phillips curve toward _____ inflation rates, and as prices ____, inflation expectations _____ again, and so forth. 2) a deflationary spiral did not happen because inflation expectations________.
1) fall further, lower, fall, fall 2) were well-anchored
Explain how the equilibrium real interest rate, net capital outflows, and the level of net exports are determined in an open economy. 1) In an open exonomy the equilibrium real interest rate is set by _____. 2) Given the real interest rate, the relative attrectiveness of domestic assets is determined, and this sets the level of _____. 3) Finally, net exports become determined since they are, by definition, equal to_____.
1) the intersection of the IS and MP curves 2) net capital outflows 3) net capital outflows
The Greek unemployment rate rose from 7.5% during the first quarter of 2008 to 21.7% during the second quarter of 2012. Because Greece uses the euro rather than its own currency, the country is not able to devalue its currency in an attempt to stimulate the economy. Suppose Greece abandoned the euro as its currency and reintroduced its former currency, the drachma, with an exchange rate of 1 euro = 1 drachma. In the open economy version of the IS-MP model given to the right, show the effect on Greece's output gap and inflation rate if the country then devalued the drachma to 1 euro = 2 drachma. 2) According to the graph, the devaluation will result in an output gap that is _____ and an inflation rate that is ________.
Graph: higher interest rates 2) larger, higher
Recent evidence suggests that the Phillips curve has flattened. An article in the Economist states: "A flatter Phillips curve is good news when unemployment is falling. But it also implies bad news if inflation rises significantly." Source: "Curve Ball," Economist, September 28, 2006. If firms find it difficult to raise prices, why might the result be a flatter Phillips curve?
If firms cannot easily raise prices, then unemployment can fall without a significant rise in inflation, and the Phillips curve is relatively flat.
What effect would an increase in productivity have on the Phillips curve? What effect would the productivity increase have on inflation?
PC1 down to PC 2 the productivity increase would decrease inflation
What is different about the MP curve in a fixed exchange rate system as compared to a floating exchange rate system?
With both systems the MP curve is horizontal, but in the fixed exchange rate system a lower limit exists to its downward shifts.
How would the effect of a demand shock be different if the Phillips curve is relatively flat? A given increaes in demand would result in a relatively _______ increse in inflation
smaller
What is the equation for the output gap Phillips curve?
πt=πet+bYt−st
The Phillips curve equation is given (in the textbook) by
πt=πet-a(Ut-Un) −st
The output gap can be difficult to measure because potential GDP must be estimated, and economists' estimates differ. In 2012, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that potential GDP was about $1 trillion lower than the CBO's 2007 forecast had predicted. 1) Was the output gap larger or smaller (in absolute value) in 2012 than it would have been if the CBO's 2007 forecast had been correct? 2) If the CBO's 2007 forecast had been correct, is it likely that the inflation rate in 2012 would have been higher or lower than it actually was?
1) Smaller, since output would have been even farther below potential had the 2007 forecast been correct. 2) Lower, since a larger negative persistent output gap translates into even more slack in resource markets and hence less pressure on costs and prices.