econ 111 extra credit practice
the price of imported oil rises. if the government wanted to stabilize output which of the following could do it
increase government expenditures or increase the money supply
according to liquidity preference theory the slope of the money demand curve is explained as
people will want to hold more money as the cost of holding it falls
Liquidity preference theory is most revenant to the
short run and supposes that the interest rate adjusts to bring money supply and money demand into balance
the price level adjusts
to balance the supply and demand for money
critics of stabilization policy argue that
-there is a lag between the time policy is passed and the time policy has an impact on the economy -the impact of policy may last longer than the problem it was designed to offset -policy can be a source of, instead of a cure for, economic fluctuations
assuming a multiplier effect but no crowding-out or investment accelerator effects a $100 billion increase in government expenditures shifts aggregate
demand rightward by more than $100 billion
if the stock market booms then
aggregate demand increases which the fed could offset by decreasing the money supply
slope of aggregate demand curve
as the price level increases the interest rate rises so spending falls
the interest rate adjusts to
balance the supply and demand for loanable funds
output is determined by
the amount of capital labor and technology
Liquidity preference theory assumes
the interest rate adjusts to bring the money market into equilibrium
Shifts in the aggregate-demand curve can cause inflation
the level of output and in the level of prices
classical theory assumes
the price level adjusts to bring the money into equilibrium