Chapter 15 Study ECO Exam
1. factors that shift some component of the aggregate demand and supply model. 2. Of the factors identified above that shift the short-run aggregate supply curve, the only factor that possibly also shifts the long-run aggregate supply curve is
1. * Households and businesses come to expect an acceleration in inflation. * A negative price shock occurs in the form of higher oil prices. * Output remains persistently high relative to potential output (Y>YP). -------------------------------- 2. price shocks but only if this factor is permanent.
1. The inflation rate tends to increase, as expected inflation _________
1. Increases
2. The inflation rate tends to increase, as the unemployment gap ___________
2. Decreases
3. The inflation rate tends to increase as the actual unemployment rate ____________
3. Decreases
Classify the following situation as a supply or demand shock: Steel Workers go on strike for 4 weeks.
A Negative (temporary) supply shock
Which of the following factors would not cause an increase in aggregate demand?
A decrease in the price level.
Classify the following situation as a supply or demand shock: Household and firms become more optimistic about the economy.
A positive demand shock.
During the first half of 2010, Fed officials discussed the possibility of increasing interest rates as a way of fighting potential increases in expected inflation. If the public came to expect higher inflation rates in the future, what would be the effect on the short-run aggregate supply curve.
AS1----AS2 , Shifts Upward
If huge budget deficits cause the public to think that there will be higher inflation in the future but have no effect on business or consumer optimism, what will happen to the position of the aggregate demand curve?
Aggregate demand will not change.
Which of the following is an example of a "good" supply shock?
Changes in the healthcare industry in the late 1990's
"If prices and wages are perfectly flexible, then γ = 0 and changes in aggregate demand have a smaller effect on output." Is this statement true, false ?
False. As prices and wages become more flexible, γ becomes larger, and thus for a given aggregate demand shock, the effects on output are smaller.
Which of the following describes a reason why the long-run Phillips curve relationship differs from the short-run relationship?
In the long run, expected inflation is taken into account when making work and hiring decisions.
What trade-offs does this relationship seem to offer policymakers?
Policymakers can increase inflation to decrease unemployment.
If huge budget deficits cause the public to think that there will be higher inflation in the future, what will happen to the position of the short-run aggregate supply curve?
Short-run aggregate supply will shift leftward.
Internet sites that allow people to post their resumes reduce the cost of a job search. How do you think the Internet has affected the natural rate of unemployment?
The Internet has decreased the natural rate of unemployment
As the labor force becomes more productive over time, how does that affect the long-run aggregate supply curve?
The LRAS curve shifts to the right because the existing labor force, along with a given amount of capital and other resources, can produce more output.
What determines the unemployment rate when output is at potential?
The length of time between jobs when a worker is transition from one job to another.
"The depreciation of the dollar from December 2008 to December 2009 had a positive effect on aggregate demand in the U.S." Is this statement true, false, or uncertain? Explain your answer.
True, since a cheaper dollar increases net exports, a component of aggregate demand.
Why are central banks so concerned about inflation expectations?
When inflation expectations rise, the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts up, leading to higher actual inflation in the short run.
The financial crisis that began in August 2007 in the United States:
caused a collapse of China's exports and the Chinese government used a fiscal stimulus package to restore economic activity.
The short-run aggregate supply curve slopes upward because an increase in output relative to potential output:
creates tight labor and product markets that cause inflation to rise.
Even after the aggregate supply curve shifted rightward after July 2008, the severity of the negative demand shock hitting after the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy caused the U.K. economy to move ____________ potential output.
farther from
Chinese exports collapsed in late 2008 most likely because Western Europe and the U.S. are two very big markets for Chinese exports, and both of these economies had substantial income declines following the negative shock of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy.
incomes fell in its key export markets.
Suppose that the White House decides to sharply increase military spending without decreasing government spending in other areas. This measure would, all else constant, cause aggregate demand to
increase AD Shifts to the Right
The Federal Reserve pursued inherently recessionary policies in the early 1980s to:
lower the inflation rate, which had spun out of control.
Adaptive expectations are based on:
past values
In the absence of the negative demand shock (precipitated by the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy and the reversal of the oil price increase, the U.K. economy would likely have evolved back toward full employment via its :
self-correcting mechanism
The aggregate demand curve slopes downward because a rise in inflation leads:
the monetary policy authorities to raise real interest rates.
The stimulus package used by China after the financial crisis that began in August 2007 in the United States was:
three times larger than the U.S. fiscal stimulus package relative to GDP.
Had the Chinese government elected to rely solely on the economy's self-correcting mechanism, how, aside from timing, would the long-run outcome have differed from that which the policy stimulus produced (which was the restoration of equilibrium at point 1 in Figure 18 panel (a)
(View External Graph Paper) Only inflation would be lower.
Once the U.K. economy sank to the short-run equilibrium at point 3 in Figure 17 panel (a) the restoration of equilibrium at full employment could come from the combined effects of aggressive expansionary macro policies and the economy's self-correcting mechanism. In terms of the AD-AS analysis, this restoration works itself out as
(View External Graph Paper) both AD and AS shifting rightward.
In the United Kingdom, the unemployment rate increased from 5.4% in 2006 to 7.8% in December 2009, while the inflation rate rose from 2.3% to 3.9% and then fell to 2.1% over this same time period. This can be explained by the following changes in aggregate demand and aggregate supply:
* Aggregate supply initially decreased. Subsequently, (-) * Aggregate supply increased, (+) * while aggregate demand decreased. (-)
aggregate demand curve shifts left when
* Consumer pessimism spreads as the media reports disappointing news about the economy * Foreign economies crash, producing a substantial drop in net exports. * The government allows previously enacted tax cuts to expire, resulting in much higher taxes for households.
Proposals have come before Congress that advocate the implementation of a national sales tax. Which of the following is true if such a tax is implemented? Which of the following best explains why aggregate supply would decrease in the short run due to the implementation of a national sales tax?
* It would cause a decrease in aggregate supply in the short run and no change in the long run. * The cost of goods sold would increase, making production more expensive.
Why did China fare much better than the United States and the United Kingdom during the 2007-2009 financial crisis?
* The Chinese economy is less closely tied to the functioning of financial markets than the economies of the United States and the United Kingdom. *China pursued an autonomous easing of monetary policy.
What factors led to a decrease in both the unemployment rate and the inflation rate in the 1990s?
* The computer revolution, which caused rapid increases in productivity * Improved demographic factors, such as an increase in the average age of the workforce.
According to the expectations-augmented Phillips curve, which of the following factors determines the rate of inflation?
* The degree of tightness in the labor market. * The difference between the unemployment rate and the natural rate of unemployment. *Expected inflation
does not affect the position of the aggregate demand curve
* The government adopts ill-advised regulations that diminish the economy's overall efficiency. * The prospect of worsening inflation induces the Federal Reserve to tighten monetary policy * Actual output falls below falls below potential output, eliminating"tightness" in resource markets.
aggregate demand curve shifts right when
* war breaks out, forcing the government to substantially enhance defense expenditures. * Optimism within the business community induces a surge in planned business expenditures. *The Federal Reserve autonomously loosens monetary policy.
When the unemployment rate is above the natural rate of unemployment, there is __________ in the labor market and output is ________ potential. This causes the short-run aggregate supply curve to ___________. Hence inflation _____________ and output ___________over time, until the economy reaches a ___________equilibrium.
*Slack *Below *Shift downward *Decreases *Increases *Long-Run
(Graph 22.6) Suppose the economy is starting from a situation of long-run equilibrium. In this case, we know that its equilibrium output (Y*) is _____________ suppose the economy experiences a PERMANENT | POSITIVE | supply shock. ***** POSITIVE PERMANENT = LRAS moves to the RIGHT past SRAS (view graph 22.6) Positive Supply Shock
1. Equal to it's potential output (Yp) (view graph 22.6) Negative Supply Shock 2. Higher Output , Lower inflation 3. Negative Output GAP (The GAP has decreased) 4. Down and to the Right (Starting from original location (1) the line will move from 1 to 2 , therefore , Down and to the Right. Negative output gap means the gap not existing) 5. * the output gap falls to zero. * the AS curve intersects AD1 and LRAS2 * a new long-run equilibrium is attained.
(Graph 22.6) Suppose the economy is starting from a situation of long-run equilibrium. In this case, we know that its equilibrium output (Y*) is _____________ suppose the economy experiences a PERMANENT | Negative | supply shock. ***** NEGATIVE PERMANENT = LRAS moves to the Left past SRAS Starting from its long-run equilibrium at point 1 in the figure to the right, suppose the economy experiences a permanent negative supply shock. (view graph 22.6) Negative Supply Shock 2. Compared to its original state, the economy in the short-run equilibrium at point 2 has output that is_________and inflation that is_______ 3. At the new short-run equilibrium, the output gap (Y*-Yp) is 4. The positive output gap means that the aggregate supply curve (AS2) will shift 5. The shifts in the short-run aggregate supply curve continue until:
1. Equal to it's potential output (Yp) (view graph 22.6) Negative Supply Shock 2. Lower Output , Higher inflation 3. Positive Output GAP (The GAP has increased) 4. up and to the left (Positive output gap means the gap is getting larger to the left) 5. * the output gap falls to zero. * the AS curve intersects AD1 and LRAS2 * a new long-run equilibrium is attained.
4. The inflation rate tends to increase as the natural rate of unemployment __________
4. Increases
(Graph 22.6) Suppose the economy is starting from a situation of long-run equilibrium. In this case, we know that its equilibrium output (Y*) is _____________ suppose the economy experiences a Temporary| Positive | supply shock. (view graph 22.6) Positive Supply shock Starting from its long-run equilibrium at point 1 in the figure to the right, suppose the economy experiences a permanent Positive supply shock. Temporary| Positive = Tightness Temporary| Negative = Slack (Both correspond to firms raising their prices) Any Temporary Short runs return back to 1, 2--->1 , Shift up and left, Shift down and right. Both Temporary Output Gaps Narrow and are Unchanged.
Equal to it's potential output (Yp) Short-run equilibrium at point 2 has output that is (HIGHER) and inflation that is (LOWER) In this short-run equilibrium at point 2, labor markets would likely see increasing tightness (BECAUSE) : Increasing (TIGHTNESS) occurs since the unemployment rate is less than the natural rate, owning to the fact that the output gap (Y*-Yp) is positive. Due to the tightness, strong wages and cost that force firms to raise their (PRICES) at a more rapid rate. Graphically, this chain reaction from wages to costs to prices produces shifts in the short-run aggregate supply curve (AS2) that are (UP AND TO THE LEFT) These shifts in the short-run aggregate supply curve result in output gaps that are (NARROWING) and the economy is evolving toward an eventual new long-run equilibrium at which inflation and output are, compared to their original values (UNCHANGED)
* What happens to inflation and output in the short run and the long run when government spending increases?
If government spending increases, the [aggregate demand] curve shifts [rightward] *In the SHORT RUN, [inflation increases] and [output increases] This leads to tightness in the labor market, which [raises inflation] expectations and shifts the [short-run aggregate supply curve up] When this occurs, the economy moves to a new [long-run] equilibrium, [output falls back to potential], and [inflation increases]
Suppose the inflation rate remains relatively constant, and output decreases and the unemployment rate increases. This is possible if: View Graph 22.4 (Normal inflation but Output decrease/ Unemployment Decrease)
In order for the unemployment rate to rise and inflation to remain constant, both the aggregate supply and demand curves would have to shift to the left. If they shift horizontally to the left by the same amount, the result is inflation remaining the same, but output falling and unemployment rising in the short run
Steel Workers go on strike for 4 weeks. Determine the effects on inflation and output in the short run and the long run using AD/AS graph analysis.
In the short run, output [decreases] and inflation [increases]. In the long run, output [rises] to potential and inflation [decreases to its original level] Graph D View Graph Render 22.6 Workers go on strike.
Household and firms become more optimistic about the economy. Determine the effects on inflation and output in the short run and the long run using AD/AS graph analysis.
In the short run, output [increases] and inflation [increases]. In the long run, output [falls] to potential and inflation [rises] Graph B View Graph Render 22.6 Households.
Given the relative size of the Chinese fiscal stimulus and its acknowledged success in restoring strong growth to the Chinese economy, one might cautiously conclude, with the U.S. economy still languishing well into 2010, that the comparable U.S. effort was ____________
Inadequate
Which of the following justifies the assumption of adaptive expectations in Phillips curve analysis?
Inflation expectations are sticky
What basic relationship does the short-run Phillips curve describe?
It describes the negative relationship between unemployment and inflation.
What basic relationship does the long-run Phillips curve describe?
It indicates unemployment will move toward its natural rate regardless of the inflation rate.
In what ways is the Volcker disinflation considered a success? What are the negative aspects of it?
The Volcker disinflation was successful in bringing inflation down with contractionary policies; however, these policies resulted in two recessions and a significant increase in unemployment.
Suppose that the public believes that a newly announced anti-inflation program will work and so lowers its expectations of future inflation. What will happen to aggregate output and the inflation rate in the short run?
The inflation rate will fall and aggregate output will rise
When aggregate output is below the natural rate, what will happen to the inflation rate over time if the aggregate demand curve remains unchanged?
The inflation rate will fall because the slackness of the labor market will eventually cause wages to fall.