Investment
*The marginal cost of investment for the firm is equal to*
1.
*A temporary increase in government spending that leads to only a small decline in lifetime wealth likely shifts the output demand curve to the*
right by more than the rightward shift in output supply.
*In the real intertemporal model, an adverse sectoral shock acts to*
reduce real output and increase the real interest rate.
*A decrease in credit market frictions does not*
reduce the real interest rate.
*If the interest rate goes up, what happens to the investment demand curve?*
It stays put.
*Any increase in the present value of taxes for the consumer implies*
a decrease in lifetime wealth and an increase in current labor supply.
*Any increase in the present value of taxes implies*
a decrease in lifetime wealth and an increase in the current labor supply.
*The equilibrium effects of a prospective future increase in total factor productivity include*
a decrease in the real wage and an increase in the real interest rate.
*The demand for current consumption, as plotted against the interest rate, shifts to the right due to all of the following except*
a increase in future taxes.
*The response of output following a natural disaster includes*
an increase in output demand and a decrease in output supply.
*The equilibrium effects of a temporary increase in total factor productivity include*
an increase in the real wage and a decrease in the real interest rate.
*A decrease in future total factor productivity and a decrease in current total factor productivity*
both increase current output.
*In the real intertemporal model with investment*
consumers make choices over current consumption and leisure, and future consumption and leisure.
*The condition, MRSC,C' = 1 + r, describes the representative consumer's*
consumption - savings decision.
*In the real intertemporal model with investment, there is intertemporal substitution with respect to*
consumption and leisure.
*When drawn against the real interest rate, the output demand curve unambiguously shifts to the right if*
current capital decreases.
*When drawn against the real interest rate, the optimal investment schedule shifts to the right if the*
current capital stock K decreases.
*When drawn against the real interest rate, the output supply curve unambiguously shifts to the right if*
current or future taxes increase.
*The condition, MRS1,C = w, describes the representative consumer's*
current period work - leisure decision.
*When drawn against the current wage, the current labor supply shifts to the right if*
current taxes increase.
*When drawn against the real interest rate, output supply increases if*
current total factor productivity increases.
*An increase in lifetime wealth*
decrease current labor supply and increase current consumption demand.
*When drawn against the current real wage, the labor demand curve is*
downward sloping because the marginal product of labor declines with the quantity of labor employed.
*In determining the benefit of additional investment to the representative firm, we consider the marginal product of*
future capital
*The demand for goods, given the real interest rate*
increases one-for-one with an increase in government spending.
*When drawn against the real interest rate, the output supply curve is upward sloping because labor supply is*
increasing in the real interest rate and labor demand is independent of the real interest rate.
*If future total factor productivity increases*
investment demand increases.
*The marginal propensity to consume out of income*
is smaller than one.
*Firms discount future profits at the interest rate r because*
it is the same rate as for households.
*Output supply is increasing in the interest rate because*
labor supply is increasing in the interest rate.
*Next period's capital is equal to current-period investment*
plus the amount of current capital left over after depreciation.
*When drawn against current income, the slope of the Cd (r) + Id (r) + G curve is equal to the marginal*
propensity to consume.
*The intertemporal substitution of leisure effect is used to justify the assumption that current labor supply increases when the*
real interest rate increases.
*The assumption that current-period labor supply is positively related to the current-period real wage is justified as long as the*
substitution effect dominates the income effect in the short run.
*In general equilibrium*
supply equals demand for all goods in all periods.
*At the end of the future period, in the real intertemporal model with investment*
the firm can convert capital one-for-one into consumption goods.
*A consumer may increase her saving by*
working more hours and consuming fewer goods in the present period.