Macro Final
If Okun's law is U−Un =− 0.5 (Y− Y^P), and potential output grows at 2% per year, then a recession that causes output to decrease by one percentage point will cause unemployment to increase by ________. A. 3 percentage points B. 1 percentage point C. one−half percentage point D. 2 percentage points E. 1.5 percentage points
1.5 percentage points
Output per person is 170 in an economy in which 15 percent of the population are engaged in research and development, where their productivity is 0.002, and the total population size is 100 million. If this economy is on a balanced growth path, then output per person in the next period will be ________. A. 195.5 B. 176.2 C. 177.3 D. 175.1
177.3
Consider the five steps of developing an economic theory or model, listed below in random order. Use the pull-down numbers after each step to put them in order, where 1 is the first step and 5 is the last. Choose variables Create equations or graphs Identify a question of interest Make predictions with the model Compare the model's results with real-world data If a theory or model does not do a good job of explaining real-world data, then the next step is to A. revise the model, perhaps by changing the variables used. B. throw the model out entirely long dash— nothing in the model can be useful in this case. C. make economic predictions anyway long dash— don't second-guess yourself. D. rewrite equations so that they fit the data, plugging in numbers again and again until your model fits
2,3,1,5,4 revise the model, perhaps by changing the variables used
If the level of technology rises from 8 to 8.2 in one period, the growth rate of technology is ________. A. 0.2 percent B. 2.5 percent C. 20 percent D. two percent
2.5 percent
based on the data in this table U p π per 1 6 1 4 per 2 8 0 3.2 per 3 8 2 4.4 If the natural rate of unemployment is steady at 7 percent, and, in period four, there is no price shock and unemployment is 8 percent, then the inflation rate in period 4 will be ________ percent. A. 4.4 B. 1.6 C. 3.6 D. 3.4 E. none of the above
3.6
Suppose an item sells for $125 in the United States and for 62,500 pesos in Chile. According to the law of one price, the nominal exchange rate (pesos/dollar) should be ________. A. 31,313 B. either $125, or 62,500 pesos, but not both C. 500 D. 0.002
500
Based on the data in this table, U ρ π per 1. 6 1 4 per 2. 7 0 4.5 per 3. 6 2 ?? If the natural rate of unemployment is steady at 8 percent, what is the inflation rate in period 3? A. 8.5 percent B. 5.5 percent C. 7.5 percent D. 6.3 percent E. none of the above
7.5 percent
________ may cause a shift of the long−run aggregate supply curve. A. A price shock B. A major earthquake C. A change in expected inflation D. all of the above E. none of the above
A major earthquake
Which of the following is a primary objective of monetary policy? A. Achieving price stability B. Achieving a zero natural rate of unemployment C. Targeting a zero rate of inflation D. all of the above E. none of the above
Achieving price stability
The price of a barrel of oil doubled between 2007 and the middle of 2008. To make matters worse, a financial crisis hit the U.S. economy starting in August of 2007. Which of the following is true of the United Kingdom's experience? A. Eventually, the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy caused a negative demand shock leading to a further fall in output and an increase in the unemployment rate B. The financial crisis did not take hold right away so the AD curve did not immediately shift C. The increase in the price of oil immediately shifted the AS curve to the left D. all of the above E. none of the above
All of the above
In the long run ________. A. aggregate supply is fixed at the potential level of output B. there is enough time for prices to fully adjust so the classical dichotomy holds C. the amount of output an economy can produce is determined by real variables like capital, labor and technological advances D. all of the above E. none of the above
All of the above OR the economy reaches the potential output level consistent with the natural rate of unemployment
________ can counteract a currency depreciation. A. Autonomous monetary policy tightening B. Capital controls C. Purchase of international reserves D. Autonomous monetary policy easing
Autonomous monetary policy tightening
The legal system based on common law derives from the experience of which country? A. Rome. B. England. C. Germany. D. France.
England.
By the time Paul Volcker took office as the new Federal Reserve chairman in 1979, both the inflation and unemployment rates were higher than during most of the 1950s, 60s and early 70s. The Federal Reserve implemented an autonomous tightening of monetary policy that resulted in the famous Volker Disinflation which was successful in bringing both problems under control. What would have been a likely long−run result had Mr. Volker conducted an expansionary monetary policy instead? A. Eventually, inflation would have been fixed and unemployment would have been made worse B. There would have been no effect on the unemployment and inflation rates C. Eventually, inflation would have been made worse and unemployment would not have been fixed D. Eventually, both the inflation and unemployment rates would have declined E. none of the above
Eventually, inflation would have been made worse and unemployment would not have been fixed
H I G F On the graph above, suppose the economy is at point F when there is a temporary positive supply shock. The new long−run equilibrium is at point ________. A. G B. H C. I D. F E. none of the above
F
On the graph, which pair of points best represents the impacts in the U. S. of the financial crisis and policy response from 2007 through 2008? A. K to G B. I to H C. G to J D. K to F E. H to I It would shift ________________
G to J
On the graph, which pair of points best represents a scenario in which the nominal interest rate and expected inflation decline equally? A. K to F B. I to H C. J to H D. G to K E. I to J
K to F
By the time Paul Volcker took office as the new Federal Reserve chairman in 1979, the inflation rate exceeded 10%. By 1982 the unemployment rate soared to 9.7% and inflation was cut to 6.2%. By the end of 1986 the unemployment rate was brought down to 7% and the inflation rate was brought further down to 1.9%. Which of the following is an appropriate description of the mechanism behind the Volcker Disinflation? A. With the Federal Reserve raising interest rates, the AD curve shifted to the left lowering the equilibrium level of inflation but inducing a negative output gap, which explains the lower inflation rate between 1979 and 1982 at the cost of a higher unemployment rate over the same period B. The AD curve shifted right due to the autonomous tightening of monetary policy which explains the lowering of the unemployment rate between 1982 and 1986 C. The LRAS curve shifted left due to the tightening of monetary policy generating a positive output gap or a negative unemployment gap which explains the lowering of the unemployment rate between 1982 and 1986 D. all of the above .E. none of the above
With the Federal Reserve raising interest rates, the AD curve shifted to the left lowering the equilibrium level of inflation but inducing a negative output gap, which explains the lower inflation rate between 1979 and 1982 at the cost of a higher unemployment rate over the same period
Which is a plausible cause of the movement in Figure 13.1 from point 1 to point 2? (from the zero lower bound bend to where AD1 and As cross below the ZLB) A. the central bank achieves a negative value for the nominal interest rate B. a decrease in expected inflation C. a change in expectations that causes a decline in the real interest rate for investments D. the economy's self−correcting mechanism E. none of the above
a change in expectations that causes a decline in the real interest rate for investments
The legal system in which the law is continually reinterpreted by judges is labeled________. A. a common law system. B. a Napoleonic system of law. C. a constitutional system. D. a tropicalismo system.
a common law system
In the short−run, an appreciation in the value of the U.S. dollar will tend to cause ________. A. a decrease in the level of income and higher inflation B. an increase in the level of income and higher inflation C. an increase in the level of income and lower inflation D. a decrease in the level of income and lower inflation
a decrease in the level of income and lower inflation
Which of the following will cause an increase in the marginal product of capital (MPK)? A. a decrease in the quantity of capital in use B. an increase in labor productivity C. a decrease in the quantity of labor in use D. all of the above E. none of the above
a decrease in the quantity of capital in use
A decrease in the value of a country's currency is known as ________. A. a depreciation of its value. B. a spot exchange rate. C. an appreciation of its value. D. a forward spotting.
a depreciation of its value.
If government cuts taxes ________. A. after tax income and the equilibrium level of output remain unchanged B. after tax income should increase shifting AD to the right to a higher equilibrium level of output C. after tax income should increase shifting AD to the left to a lower equilibrium level of output D. after tax income remains unchanged but the equilibrium level of output would increase E. none of the above
after tax income should increase shifting AD to the right to a higher equilibrium level of output
Activists believe that ________. A. Keynes was right with his statement "in the longminus−run, we are all dead" B. frictions to the selfminus−correcting mechanism of markets prevent prices and wages from being very flexible C. it takes a very long time to reach the long run D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
By the time Paul Volcker took office as the new Federal Reserve chairman in 1979, both the inflation and unemployment rates were higher than during most of the 1950s, 60s and early 70s. The Federal Reserve implemented an autonomous tightening of monetary policy that resulted in the famous Volker Disinflation which was successful in bringing both problems under control. Which of the following is an appropriate description had Mr. Volker conducted an expansionary monetary policy instead? A. Due to the autonomous expansion of monetary policy, a temporary positive output gap might have ensued thereby decreasing the unemployment rate while exerting huge inflationary pressures in the economy B. Due to the autonomous expansion of monetary policy the unemployment rate might have artificially declined. However, the AS curve would then have shifted left to close the ensuing positive output gap thereby returning the unemployment rate to the levels prior to the Fed's action while, likely, making inflation even worse than before Mr. Volker took office C. The AD curve would have likely shifted right due to the Federal Reserve lowering of interest rates which might have resulted in a temporary decline in the unemployment rate but at the cost of skyrocketing inflation D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
By the time Paul Volcker took office as the new Federal Reserve chairman in 1979, the inflation rate exceeded 10%. By 1982 the unemployment rate soared to 9.7% and inflation was cut to 6.2%. By the end of 1986 the unemployment rate was brought down to 7% and the inflation rate was brought further down to 1.9%. Which of the following is an appropriate description of the mechanism behind the Volcker Disinflation? A. By 1982, it is likely that equilibrium output was lower than potential leading the AS curve to shift to the right to close the output gap toward a general equilibrium which explains the reduction in the unemployment rate and the further reduction in inflation between 1982 and 1986 B. The AD curve likely shifted left due to the autonomous tightening of monetary policy which explains the lowering of the inflation rate between 1979 and 1982 C. Due to the autonomous tightening of monetary policy, a negative output gap ensued which explains the increase in the unemployment rate between 1979 and 1982 D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
Nonactivists believe that ________. A. policy interventions should take place less frequently than what Keynesians advocate B. there is a very rapid self−correcting mechanism since prices and wages are very flexible C. lags to policy implementation are so long that even the "correct" policies may lead to undesirable consequences D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
The price of a barrel of oil doubled between 2007 and the middle of 2008. To make matters worse, a financial crisis hit the U.S. economy starting in August of 2007. Which of the following is true of the Chinese experience? A. The worldwide decline in demand led to a collapse of Chinese exports B. The Chinese economy was better able than the U.S. economy to weather the financial crisis with output growth starting to grow earlier and more quickly than that of the U.S. C. Instead of relying solely on the economy's self−correcting mechanism, much more aggressive fiscal expansions than those of the U.S. (in addition to a substantial monetary easing) served to shift the AD curve back to general equilibrium relatively quickly D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
When a temporary negative supply shock hits the economy, then in the short−run ________. A. the divine coincidence does not hold B. if the central bank focuses on stabilizing output, it cannot stabilize inflation C. if the central bank focuses on stabilizing inflation, it cannot stabilize output D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
Which of the following constitutes an input to the Cobb−Douglas production function? A. capital B. total factor productivity C. labor D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
Which of the following is true about the Taylor principle? A. it reflects the practice of monetary policy B. it explains the link between higher inflation and higher real interest rates C. it is the foundation for an upward sloping MP curve D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above
The MP curve may be used to represent (how) ________. A. how the real interest rate is related to the inflation rate B. movements of the real interest rate as a direct policy action of the Federal Reserve C. movements of the real interest rate that are independent of direct Federal Reserve action D. all of the above E. none of the above
all of the above if A. how the real interest rate is related to the inflation rate B. movements of the real interest rate as a direct policy action of the Federal Reserve C. movements of the real interest rate that are independent of direct Federal Reserve action OR movement of the real interest rate are determined but the inflation rate OR movements of the real interest rate is related to the inflation rate
The real business cycle model explains fluctuations in employment and unemployment with/by A. productivity shocks that alter real wages. B. voluntary choices workers make to maximize their well-being. C. the willingness of workers to shift work effort over time as real wages change. D. all of the above. E. A and C only.
all of the above.
According to the Romer model, an increase in population will cause________. A. an immediate increase in output per capita and a permanent decrease in output per capita. B. an immediate decrease in output per capita and a permanent increase in output per capita. C. an immediate increase in output per capita and a permanent increase in output per capita. D. an immediate and permanent decrease in output per capita.
an immediate decrease in output per capita and a permanent increase in output per capita.
An increase in the value of the U.S. dollar will tend to cause, other things the same ________. A. a decrease in the volume of U.S. exports and imports. B. an increase in the volume of U.S exports and imports. C. an increase in the volume of U.S. exports. D. an increase in the volume of U.S. imports.
an increase in the volume of U.S. imports.
Suppose than an economy has output Y = AK^0.3 x L^0.7, that Y equals $19 trillion, capital K is $27 trillion, and labor L is 125 million workers. Given this information, what is the closest approximation of total factor productivity A? A. close to 0.4 B. around 0.25 C. less than 0.01 D. roughly 0.33 E. exactly 144
around 0.25
The equilibrium real interest rate is the rate ________. A. controlled by the central bank B. at which the inflation rate is low C. at which the output gap is zero D. all of the above E. none of the above
at which the output gap is zero
Which of the following is a likely objective of monetary policy? A. Achieving a zero inflation gap B. Stabilizing economic activity C. avoiding large changes in unemployment D. all of the above E. none of the above
avoiding large changes in unemployment OR A. Achieving price stability B. Stabilizing economic activity C. Closing the output gap to zero OR Achieving a zero inflation gap
Capital and labor are distinct from technology since________. A. capital and labor are physical things. This is the correct answer.B. technology is exogenous C. technology is a physical thing. D. technology is rival in its use
capital and labor are physical things.
If depreciation is less than investment ________. A. capital per−worker is constant. B. capital per worker is greater than saving C. capital per−worker is rising. D. capital per−worker is falling.
capital per−worker is rising.
The aggregate demand curves in Figure 13.1 have a positively−sloped portion. The reason this can happen is ________. A. a sudden increase in potential output B. rising inflation causes financial frictions to increase C. sloppy editing D. the monetary policy response to declining inflation causes the real interest rate to fall, which causes output to rise E. changes in expected inflation cause the real interest rate to change in the opposite direction
changes in expected inflation cause the real interest rate to change in the opposite direction
Sciences other than economics also design models to explain the behavior of endogenous variables based on assumptions about the environment and changes in exogenous variables. Suppose you have to design a model that links child obesity and diabetes. In this study, __________________ would be the exogenous variable and ________________ would be the endogenous variable.
childhood obesity= exo, diabetes = endo
Suppose the nominal exchange rate −− Canadian dollar per Brazilian real −− is constant. If the price level in Brazil rises by four percent, while the price level in Canada rises by eight percent, then the real exchange rate −− Brazilian goods for Canadian goods minus−minus− has ________ by ________ percent. A. risen; two B. declined; one−half C. risen; one−half D. declined; four
declined; four
Population growth is similar to depreciation, in that ________. A. each helps to explain how economies can sustain a positive growth rate of output B. each lowers the capital−labor ratio C. each tends to encourage saving D. capital wears out faster when used by more workers
each lowers the capital−labor ratio
A central bank can control the real interest rate precisely, so long as ________ remains constant. A. monetary policy B. the nominal interest rate C. expected inflation D. all of the above E. none of the above
expected inflation
A depreciation of the exchange rate is most likely to be celebrated by ________. A. consumers B. central bankers C. importers D. exporters
exporters
Within rich economies, there is strong evidence of convergence ________. A. of capital stocks, rather than output B. with developing economies. C. leading to military conflict. D. for regions within a country.
for regions within a country.
A key difference between human capital and technology is that ________. A. technology is an input in the production of new technology B. human capital is excludable C. scarce resources are used in the production of human capital D. human capital is nonrival
human capital is excludable
If the rate of inflation in Country A is higher than in Country B, then ________. A. in nominal terms, country A's currency should depreciate B. in nominal terms, country B's currency should depreciate C. the law of one price will not hold D. purchasing power parity does not apply
in nominal terms, country A's currency should depreciate
In the long run, following a combination of a negative demand shock and a temporary negative supply shock, ________. A. inflation is permanently reduced, while output returns to potential output B. output returns to potential output, while inflation may be higher or lower than its initial value C. inflation is permanently increased, while output returns to potential output D. both inflation and output return to the original longminus−run equilibrium values E. none of the above
inflation is permanently reduced, while output returns to potential output
An increase in the overall price level is referred to as _______ , while a decrease in the overall price level is referred to as _______ . Which of the following is true about inflation? A. Inflation was quite low in the United States until World War I and then increased markedly until World War II. B. Hyperinflation refers to periods of especially high and destructive inflation. C. The inflation rate tends to be about the same in most countries at any given time. D. Inflation was very low from the 1960s to the early 1980s in the United States.
inflation, deflation, Hyperinflation refers to periods of especially high and destructive inflation.
The observation that countries with high rates of population growth don't have higher per capita income ________. A. is consistent with the Romer model as applied to individual countries B. suggests that the Solow model is unrealistic C. is not supported by most empirical studies D. implies that technology doesn't work as well in countries where the population is growing rapidly
is consistent with the Romer model as applied to individual countries
If expected inflation rises, monetary policy ________. A. will prevent any increase in the real interest rate B. must be tightened, to prevent further increases in inflation and expected inflation C. is rendered ineffective D. is designed to increase the nominal interest rate by more than the increase in expected inflation E. none of the above
is designed to increase the nominal interest rate by more than the increase in expected inflation
The New Keynesian model, is Keynesian in that ________. A. expectations are assumed to be rational. B. it assumes wages and prices are sticky. C. changes in the money supply are taken to be the single most important influence on business movements. D. the velocity of money is a constant.
it assumes wages and prices are sticky.
An increase in the saving rate results in a higher steady state ________. A. growth rate of output per worker B. level of consumption per worker C. growth rate of capital D. level of capital per worker
level of capital per worker
Throughout 2008, inflation and the real interest rate declined together. The cause is a combination of ________. A. monetary policy tightening and inversion of the MP curve B. increased government spending and movement along a fixed MP curve C. declining autonomous spending and movement along a fixed MP curve D. monetary policy easing and declining autonomous spending E. none of the above
monetary policy easing and declining autonomous spending
On the graph above, suppose the economy has moved from point H to point G. If the shock was temporary and inflation expectations are adaptive, the economy will next ________. A. remain at point G B. move to point F C. return to point H D. move to a point between points G and H E. none of the above It would shift ________________
move to a point between points G and H
The relative price of one currency in terms of another is known as the ________ A. real exchange rate. B. nominal exchange rate. C. domestic price level. D. real interest rate.
nominal exchange rate
Nonconventional monetary policy attempts to reduce financial frictions by ________. A. reversing the expansion of the central bank's balance sheet that has made it costly for businesses to invest B. increasing the expected future shortminus−term interest rate C. purchasing shortminus−term assets, which raises their price and reduces the credit spread D. all of the above E. none of the above
none of the above
Technological advances lead to ________. A. an upward movement along the long run AS curve B. a shift of the short run AS curve up C. a shift of the long run AS curve to the left D. all of the above E. none of the above
none of the above
The aggregate demand curve shifts to the right when there is ________. A. a decrease in inflation B. a negative price shock C. a decrease in the nominal interest rate D. all of the above E. none of the above
none of the above
In recent decades, the trend among central banks has been to adopt ________. A. price stability as a central goal B. high employment as a central goal C. a dual mandate that gives equal weight to both price stability and low unemployment. D. a target of zero inflation E. none of the above
price stability as a central goal
In the Solow model, which of the following is an exogenous variable? A. consumption per worker B. investment per worker C. productivity .D. the capitalminus−labor ratio
productivity
Autonomous tightening of monetary policy involves ________. A. raising interest rates and shifting the MP curve to the left B. lowering interest rates and shifting the MP curve to the right C. lowering interest rates and shifting the MP curve to the left D. raising interest rates and shifting the MP curve to the right E. none of the above
raising interest rates and shifting the MP curve to the left
An increase in inflation leads to higher ________. A. real interest rate B. output C. spending D. all of the above E. none of the above
real interest rate
The theory of purchasing power parity suggests that, in the long−run, exchange rates are determined by ________. A. the most significant monetary authorities, including the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of England and the Bank of Japan. B. relative interest rate levels. C. the GDP values for the two countries. D. relative price levels.
relative price levels.
The graph might represent the ________. A. response to an increase in the total population B. response to a rise in the productiveness of research and development C. response to a rise in the saving rate D. response to an increase in the fraction of the population engaged in research and development
response to an increase in the fraction of the population engaged in research and development
The Romer model is distinct from the Solow model in that the former assumes that________. A. an increase in price affects quantity demanded, rather than demand. B. technology is fixed. C. output per worker is fixed. D. some labor is devoted to producing new technology.
some labor is devoted to producing new technology.
A central bank with a hierarchical mandate will seek ________ as a condition of pursuing other goals. A. the approval of the legislature B. moderate interest rates C. high employment D. stable inflation E. none of the above
stable inflation
Because original ideas are likely to become known and used by others, without the inventor's knowledge or consent, ________. A. new ideas contribute little to economic growth B. technology is the key driver of economic growth C. we refer to ideas as rival D. technology is inherently exogenous
technology is the key driver of economic growth
Which of the following is nonrival in character? A. capital. B. a desk. C. labor. D. technology.
technology.
To analyze aggregate productivity, economists typically assume ________. A. that the hours each person works varies with the wage rate B. that output can increase only if inputs have become more productive C. that all of the capital and labor in the economy are fully utilized D. all of the above E. none of the above
that all of the capital and labor in the economy are fully utilized
The forward exchange rate is relevant to transactions ________. A. that involve a transfer of funds within a corporate entity. B. crossing state lines. C. that require a future transfer of funds. D. that require an immediate transfer of funds.
that require a future transfer of funds.
The spot exchange rate is relevant to transactions ________. A. that require an immediate transfer of funds. B. within a corporation, or between a corporate holding company and a subsidiary. C. that involve a movement across state lines. D. that require a future transfer of funds.
that require an immediate transfer of funds.
If the economy is at point 1 in Figure 13.1 and there is no policy intervention, what happens next? (zero lower bound graph) A. the economy moves to the left along the AS curve B. the AS curve shifts down, causing both output and inflation to decline C. the AS curve shifts up, causing both output and inflation to rise D. the economy moves to point 2 E. the economy remains at point 1
the AS curve shifts down, causing both output and inflation to decline
If the Federal Reserve raises interest rates in an autonomous tightening ________ . A. the MP curve shifts up, there is an upward movement along the IS curve, and the AD curve shifts to the left to a lower level of equilibrium output B. the MP curve shifts down, there is an upward movement along the IS curve and the AD curve shifts to the left to a higher level of equilibrium output C. the MP curve shifts up, there is a downward movement along the IS curve and the AD curve shifts to the right to a lower level of equilibrium output D. the MP curve shifts down, there is a downward movement along the IS curve and the AD curve shifts to the right to a higher level of equilibrium output E. none of the above
the MP curve shifts up, there is an upward movement along the IS curve, and the AD curve shifts to the left to a lower level of equilibrium output
graph shows slope= 1.43xga1 and slope=1.43xga2 On the graph, the constant value 1.43 is ________. A. the productivity of labor devoted to research and development B. the logarithmic scale C. the amplification effect of improving technology D. the initial level of technology
the amplification effect of improving technology
When a temporary negative supply shock hits the economy ________. A. the divine coincidence holds in the short−run B. the divine coincidence does not hold in the long−run C. the divine coincidence does not always hold D. all of the above E. none of the above
the divine coincidence does not always hold
If an economy initially starts away from the steady state ________. A. consumption spending must rise. B. the economy will converge to the steady state in the long−run. C. output will gradually fall over time. D. consumption spending must be greater than investment spending.
the economy will converge to the steady state in the long−run.
According to Nobel Prize winner Douglass North, the most important factor in limiting economic growth in developing countries today is________. A. the inability to develop effective low−cost contract enforcement. B. the inadequate state of the health care system C. the relatively high rate of inflation. D. the relatively low level of saving.
the inability to develop effective low−cost contract enforcement.
For a U.S. economic agent, the expected return on U.S. dollars includes ________. A. the expected return on some other currency B. the expected value of the dollar relative to some other currency. C. the rate of exchange between the dollar and some other currency. D. the interest rate on dollar−denominated bank deposits.
the interest rate on dollar−denominated bank deposits.
The key endogenous variable in endogenous growth theory is ________. A. the level of per capita income B. the growth rate of output C. the level of technology D. the productivity of research and development
the level of technology
According to the Law of One Price, if two countries produce an identical good, assuming transportation costs and trade barriers are not an issue ________. A. the value of the currency in both countries should rise B. the value of the currency in both countries should fall C. the value of the currency in one country will rise by the same amount that the value of the currency in the other country falls .D. the price of the good should be the same in the two countries
the price of the good should be the same in the two countries
If the central bank did not follow the Taylor principle, an increase in inflation would lead to a decrease in ________. A. aggregate output B. the nominal interest C. the real interest rate D. all of the above E. none of the above
the real interest rate
In the very short run ________. A. the real interest rate will be affected by changes in the nominal rate B. the inflation rate is determined by the federal funds rate C. monetary policy has an immediate effect on inflation D. all of the above E. none of the above
the real interest rate will be affected by changes in the nominal rate
The MP curve indicates the relationship between ________ and the ________. A. the real interest rate; inflation rate .B. taxes; price level C. monetary policy; IS curve .D. all of the above E. none of the above
the real interest rate; inflation rate
What do we learn from the shape of the Cobbminus−Douglas production function? A. the marginal product of labor declines as the labor input falls B. its slope remains constant as labor input increases C. there are diminishing returns to labor D. all of the above E. none of the above
there are diminishing returns to labor
If consumers suddenly became more optimistic ________. A. they would spend more at any given inflation rate B. planned expenditures would decline C. the aggregate demand curve would shift to the left D. all of the above E. none of the above
they would spend more at any given inflation rate
What do you think would be the Cob−Douglas single best prescription for poor countries to catch up with the rich? A. to increase their stock of capital B. to increase their labor force C. to find more efficient ways to allocate and use capital and labor D. to ask help of the rich countries E. none of the above
to find more efficient ways to allocate and use capital and labor
Strong evidence of convergence exists for ________. A. both rich and poor nations. B. wealthy nations that belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. C. European and Caribbean economies. D. subminus−Saharan African economies and the economies of North America.
wealthy nations that belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Diminishing marginal product means that ________. A. the amount of output increases when we add more inputs B. when adding extra units of a single input, output increases become larger C. when adding extra units of a single input, output declines D. when adding extra units of a single input, output increases become smaller E. none of the above
when adding extra units of a single input, output increases become smaller
The idea behind the Phillips curve is that ________. A. when firms raise wages to attract new workers, prices decrease B. tightness in the labor market puts downward pressures on wages and prices C. when the unemployment rate is low wages will increase D. all of the above E. none of the above
when the unemployment rate is low wages will increase OR when firms raise wages to attract new workers, prices will also increase OR tight labor markets lead to inflationary pressures (possibly all the above if have both of these options)
Based on the data in this table, U p π per 1 6 1 4 per 2 8 0 2.2 per 3 8 2 2.4 if the inflation rate in period zero had been 3 percent, then the accelerationist Phillips curve is ________. A. Δπ = − 0.9 (U− 6) + ρ B. Δπ = − 1.1 (U− 6) + ρ C. Δπ = − 0.4 (U − 9) + ρ D. Δπ =− 1.8 (U− 7) + ρ E. none of the above
Δπ = − 0.9 (U− 6) + ρ
Based on the graph above, the short−run aggregate supply curve is ________. A. Y = 8two thirds+ two thirds(π) +ρ B. π = 2 + 1.5 (Y− 10) + ρ C. π = 2 + (Y− 11) + ρ D. π = 3.5 + 2 (Y− 10) + ρ E. none of the above
π = 2 + 1.5 (Y− 10) + ρ
Given the production function Y = AK^0.3 L^0.7, if an economy's capital per worker k is $27 thousand, and its total factor productivity A is 0.5, then output per worker is (approximately) ________. (When computing your answer, assume k is in thousands of dollars.) A. $5,000 B. $40,500 C. $1,343 D. $13,343 E. $3,000
$1,343
If output per worker in a steady state is $30,000, depreciation is 13%, the population growth rate is two percent, and the saving rate is 20%, what is the steady state capitalminus−labor ratio? A. $40,000 B. $10,500 C. $85,714 D. $22,500
$40,000
Suppose that a haircut in your hometown costs $20, while the price for the same haircut in Mumbai is 600 Indian rupees. At which nominal exchange rate is the dollar price lower for the Mumbai haircut? A. 0.029$/Rs. B. 0.04$/Rs. C. 25Rs./$ D. 20Rs./$
0.029$/Rs.
On the graph above, a movement from point ________ to point ________ might represent a positive supply shock. A. H: F B. F; G C. H: G D. F; I E. none of the above
H: G
Frictional unemployment is to ________ as structural unemployment is to ________. A. search; mismatch B. job training; output gap C. temperature; rigidity D. all of the above E. none of the above
search; mismatch