econ 2301 ch 12 and 13
the Great Depression featured the limited predictability aspect how?
most people thought the strength of the economy would go far beyond 1929, and the the stock market crashed...it was so sudden
what was the unemployment rate during the Great Depression?
10%
is growth ever steady?
no
REAL GDP fell ______% during 1929?
26.3
unemployment rose ____% in 1929?
3
output gap
(GDP- trend Gap)/trend GAP
If the current value of GDP is $15.1815.18 trillion and the government is planning to increase spending by $700700 billion (all in one year), the percentage increase in GDP using the multiplier estimate of the first economist is nothing percent.
(Yr2-Yr1)/Yr1 x 100 (700
how long are the average recessions since 1929?
1 year
better technology in Real Business Cycle Theory lead to higher household income for 3 reasons
1. employment increases 2. wage rise 3. rising corporate earnings make the corporations' stockholders' wealthier
how long did the Great depression last?
18 months
since 1929, a recession has occurred once ever ____ years?
6
the US stock market crashed _____% below its peak
80
Economic variables are sometimes divided into "leading indicators" and "lagging indicators." Leading indicators are variables that start to change before an economic expansion or contraction. Lagging indicators change only when an expansion or contraction is well underway, or even about to reverse. Based on the graph, is unemployment a leading or lagging indicator of recessions? A. Lagging indicator. B. Leading indicator. C. Both a leading and lagging indicator.
A
correct, Review Question 1 Question Help Economic fluctuations are ____________. A. short-run changes in the growth of GDP. B. long-run changes in the growth of GDP. C. changes to the trend line of GDP growth. D. economic shocks characterized by downward wage rigidity and multipliers.
A
According to the Taylor rule, the Federal Reserve should lower the federal funds rate when the ____________. (Check all that apply.) A. inflation rate falls. B. output gap fallsfalls. C. Fed's long-run target for the federal funds rate fallsfalls. D. Fed's inflation rate target risesrises. E. exchange rate risesrises.
A,B,C,D
Which of the following characteristics of economic fluctuations does the Great Depression illustrate? (Check all that apply.) A. Co-movement in economic aggregates. B. Limited predictability. C. Stock market volatility. D. Bank volatility. E. Persistence.
A,B,E
Which of the following key factors can help explain the Great Recession of 2007dash-2009? (Check all that apply.) A. An increase in mortgage defaults, negatively impacting banks. B. A fall in the value of the stock market. C. A fall in housing prices. D. A reduction in consumer wealth, curtailing spending. E. An increase in inflation. F. Increased trade protectionism, decreasing net exports. G. A reduction in new home construction, leading to a decrease in labor demand.
A,C,D,G
Following the Fed's successful open market salesale, the process that ensues is given by ____________. A. Short-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Long-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Demand for goods and services decreasesdecreasesright arrow→Labor demand shifts leftleft. B. Long-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Short-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Demand for goods and services decreasesdecreasesright arrow→Labor demand shifts leftleft. C. Short-term interest rates fallfallright arrow→Long-term interest rates fallfallright arrow→Demand for goods and services increasesincreasesright arrow→Labor demand shifts rightright. D. Short-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Long-term interest rates fallfallright arrow→Demand for goods and services increasesincreasesright arrow→Labor demand shifts leftleft.
A. Short-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Long-term interest rates riseriseright arrow→Demand for goods and services decreasesdecreasesright arrow→Labor demand shifts leftleft.
Since government spending increases employment by shifting the labor demand curve to the right, is it always a good idea for the government to increase expenditure? Explain your answer. A. No, continual increases in labor demand may be inflationary if they outpace labor supply growth. B. No, continual increases in government expenditures will crowd out expenditures by households and firms, very likely leaving labor demand little changed.likely leaving labor demand little changed. C. No, government efforts aimed at shifting the labor demand curve to the right should only be used during recessions.recessions. D. All of the above. E. A and C only.
All of the above
Go to FRED, which shows the U.S. unemployment rate since 1948. Every recession during this period is shown by the gray bars on the graph. *Real-time data provided by Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis. Does the behavior of the unemployment rate illustrate the principle of co-movement discussed in the chapter? A. No, because the unemployment rate does not respond when there are booms. B. Yes, because when real GDP declines, unemployment increases. C. Yes, because when real GDP declines, unemployment decreases. D. No, because when real GDP declines, unemployment may increase or decrease.
B
To achieve its target for the federal funds rate, the Fed may ____________. (Check all that apply.) A. IncreaseIncrease corporate taxes. B. DecreaseDecrease lending from the discount window. C. IncreaseIncrease the reserve requirement. D. IncreaseIncrease the interest rate paid on reserves deposited at the Fed. E. SellSell Treasury bonds in the open market.
B. DecreaseDecrease lending from the discount window. C. IncreaseIncrease the reserve requirement. D. IncreaseIncrease the interest rate paid on reserves deposited at the Fed. E. SellSell Treasury bonds in the open market.
According to the Taylor rule, should the Fed raise or lower the federal funds rate when the output gap is negativenegative? A. It should raiseraise the federal funds rate. B. It should lowerlower the federal funds rate. C. Gaps are self-correcting, so it should do neither. D. It should do neither and instead let fiscal policy close the gap.
B. It should lowerlower the federal funds rate.
he Evidence-Based Economics in the chapter identifies three key factors that caused the recession of 2007dash-2009. How would Keynes's concept of animal spirits explain the creation of a housing bubble? A. Home builders reduced their level of construction and investment, which led to higher prices and profits due to decreased supply, and as inventory declined, prices continued to climb. B. People believed that a house was a worthwhile investment, which led to an increased demand for housing and thus pushed prices up. This confirmed to people that housing was a worthwhile investment, which led to more demand, resulting in an upward spiral driven by optimism. C. With an expanding economy, real wages were driven up, leading to higher demand for housing, which expanded the economy further and drove up wages again, resulting in an upward spiral driven by optimism. D. The increase in mortgage defaults led to reduced lending by banks, which in turn reduced demand for housing, leading to more defaults and higher prices for those who could buy as banks attempted to recoup losses.
B. People believed that a house was a worthwhile investment, which led to an increased demand for housing and thus pushed prices up. This confirmed to people that housing was a worthwhile investment, which led to more demand, resulting in an upward spiral driven by optimism.
Assuming flexible wages, in which case would the change in total employment be greater during a recession: Scenario 1: If workers do not increase their quantity of labor supplied very much in response to an increase in the wage. Scenario 2: Workers substantially increase their quantity of labor supplied in response to an increase in the wage. A. Scenario 1, because the labor supply curve in this case will be steeper. B. Scenario 2, because the labor supply curve in this case will be flatter. C. Scenario 2, because the labor supply curve in this case will be steeper. D. Scenario 1, because the labor supply curve in this case will be flatter.
B. Scenario 2, because the labor supply curve in this case will be flatter.
What are the automatic and discretionary components of fiscal policy? A. The automatic components are those fiscal actions that require accommodation from monetary policy, while the discretionary components do not. B. The automatic components do not require deliberate action on the part of the government, while the discretionary components do. C. The automatic components are limited to government expenditures, while the discretionary components entail changes in both taxes and expenditures. D. The automatic components stimulate the economy, while the discretionary components serve purposes unrelated to the health of the overall economy.
B. The automatic components do not require deliberate action on the part of the government, while the discretionary components do.
The recession of 2007-2009 affected the components of the national income identity by primarily affecting ____________. A. all components of the national income identity equally in terms of percentage changes. B. the C and I components through a reduction in consumer wealth and a drop in housing construction. C. the G component as the government attempted to offset the fall in demand through increased spending. D. the NX component due to an appreciation of the U.S. dollar and secondarily affecting the C and I components as consumers purchased fewer imports and businesses produced fewer goods for export.
B. the C and I components through a reduction in consumer wealth and a drop in housing construction.
The Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) is considered to be an example of a countercyclical policy that represents a mix of fiscal and monetary effects because it ____________. A. provided public monies to private, nonfinancial business enterprises. B. was a congressionally authorized expenditure by the U.S. Treasury that sought, in part, to provide financial resources to elements of the banking system. C. was formulated and undertaken jointly by Fed and Treasury officials. D. gave the government ownership rights in selected private banks.
B. was a congressionally authorized expenditure by the U.S. Treasury that sought, in part, to provide financial resources to elements of the banking system.
How can expansionary expenditure-based fiscal policy lead to crowding out in the economy? A. Expenditure-based fiscal policy increases the national debt, inducing forward-looking households and firms to reduce expenditures in anticipation of having to pay higher future taxes. B. Expenditure-based fiscal policy leads to more government borrowing, absorbing funds that would have otherwise been borrowed and expended by the private sector. C. Expenditure-based fiscal policy requires the collection of additional taxes, which reduce household incomes and expenditures. D. Expenditure-based fiscal policy raises inflation expectations and interest rates, causing private sector expenditures to fall.
B. Expenditure-based fiscal policy leads to more government borrowing, absorbing funds that would have otherwise been borrowed and expended by the private sector.
Why is the rise in housing prices between the late 1990s and 2006 characterized as a bubble by some economists? A. Speculators had purchased houses strictly to sell later at a higher price. B. The rate of home foreclosures increased over its long-run average. C. The large increase in the price of housing assets did not reflect the true long-run value of the assets. D. Houses became too expensive for ordinary people to buy.
C. The large increase in the price of housing assets did not reflect the true long-run value of the assets.
Some economists stress the role of monetary policy in the period leading up to the recession of 2007dash-2009. Between 2001 and 2003, the Federal Reserve lowered the target federal funds rate from 6.5% to 1%, and kept it there through much of 2004. This resulted in a substantial decline in real interest rates throughout the economy, including mortgage rates. Based on the chapter's discussion of monetary and financial factors, how could the Federal Reserve's policies have contributed to the economic "bubble" of the pre-recession years of 2000dash-2006? A. The rapid decrease in the federal funds rate led to increased consumption because of the low return on savings, which increased demand in the economy above the sustainable level. B. The low federal funds rate also lowered the rate at which businesses could borrow, driving an increase in demand for investment, which in turn drove up real wages. C. The low federal funds rate also lowered mortgage rates, driving an increase in demand for housing, which in turn drove up real estate prices. D. The Federal Reserve's policies increased the multipliers in the economy, increasing the impact of the boom and therefore the subsequent crash.
C. The low federal funds rate also lowered mortgage rates, driving an increase in demand for housing, which in turn drove up real estate prices.
Real business cycle theory ____________. A. explains how monetary factors drive business cycles. B. explains how initial economic shocks are amplified through the multiplier process. C. emphasizes the role of sentiments that create the self-fulfilling prophecies that drive economic fluctuations. D. emphasizes the role of changing productivity and technology in causing economic fluctuations.
D
What policies could the government and the central bank use to achieve the goal of slowing down the economic expansion? A. The government could impose wage and price controls, while the central bank could raise interest rates. B. The government could reduce the value of the dollar and the central bank could retire currency from circulation. C. The government could lower taxes and/or raise expenditures, while the central bank could lower interest rates. D. The government could raise taxes and/or reduce expenditures, while the central bank could raise interest rates.
D
When is the output gap, defined as the percent difference between GDP and potential GDP, negativenegative? A. When the economy experiences a recessiona recession. B. When actual real GDP falls belowfalls below potential GDP. C. When the economy's capacity to produce exceedsexceeds its actual production. D. All of the above. Your answer is correct.E. A and C only.
D
The national income identity shows that ___________. A. economic fluctuations are directly related to the movement of real variables. B. nominal variables are linked to real variables through inflation. C. the growth rate of real GDP is inversely related to the unemployment rate. D. output is a function of consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports.
D. output is a function of consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports.
In 2005, $320 million of the federal government's budget was allocated toward building a "bridge to nowhere" in Alaska that connected two small towns. In 2006, $500,000 was allocated toward a teapot museum in North Carolina, $1 million toward a water-free urinal initiative in Michigan, and $4.5 million toward a museum and park at an abandoned mine in Maine. These projects were requested by specific legislators in order to boost their popularity in their constituencies. These types of expenditures are known as ___________. A. pork belly spending. B. over-the-barrel spending. C. sunk costs. D. pork barrel spending.
D. pork barrel spending.
In the United States, recessions are usually defined as ____________. A. any period of negative growth in real GDP. B. two consecutive months of negative growth in real GDP. C. two consecutive quarters of negative growth in nominal GDP. D. two consecutive quarters of negative growth in real GDP.
D. two consecutive quarters of negative growth in real GDP.
Central banks undertake quantitative easing programs to ____________. A. work around the problems when short-term nominal interest rates approach zero. B. give a boost to the prices of publicly traded equities. C. more forcefully and directly impact the interest rates relevant for investment decisions. D. all of the above. E. A and C only.
E
What could explain why a decrease in taxes could lead to a less-than-proportionate increase in output? A. As a result of diminishing returns to current consumption, consumers may choose to spread the extra spending over the long term rather than consuming the proceeds of a tax cut all at once. B. Consumers may choose to save much of the tax cut in anticipation of having to pay higher taxes in the future. C. A decrease in taxes will necessitate lower government outlays, thus largely offsetting the higher consumption expenditures of households. D. All of the above. E. A and B only.
E. A and B only.
what happens to GDP, employment, and unemployment during economic booms?
GDP rises, employment rises, and unemployment declines
financial markets reflected the same co-movement pattern as ______,_______, and _________.
GDP, investment, and consumption
what happens to GDP during recessions?
Gap falls
Federal funds rate
Long-run target + 1.5(Inflation rateminus−Inflation target) + 0.5(Output gap)
GDP deflator with Nominal, real, and potential real GDP equation
Nominal/real x 100
According to his theory of animal spirits and sentiment, changes in sentiment cause economic fluctuations through ____________. A. changes in household consumption and firm investment. Your answer is correct.B. changes in productivity. C. changes in government expenditure. D. decreases in offsetting movements in exports and imports.
a
The Internet boom of the 1990's has changed all of our lives and transformed the way business is conducted. During the late 1990's, the economy was described as the "best of all possible worlds" with quite high employment (and low unemployment). Which of the business cycle theories explained in the chapter would best explain how the Internet boom had such a positive effect? The business cycle theory that would best explain how the Internet boom had such a positive effect is A. real business cycle theory. B. Okun's theory. C. Keynesian theory. D. monetary theory.
a
The duration of an economic fluctuation ____________. A. has limited predictability. B. is completely unpredictable. C. is predictable but only in developed economies with good data. D. is completely predictable.
a
3 key factors that contributed to the 2008 recession?
a collapsing housing bubble, a fall in household wealth, and a financial crisis
What are the important mechanisms that reverse the effects of a recession in a modern economy? (Check all that apply.) A. Labor demand increases due to expansionary government policies. B. Labor demand increases due to market forces. C. The multipliers on wages and employment return to normal. D. Labor supply increases due to an increase in real wages.
a,b
What market forces might cause the labor demand curve to shift back to the right? (Check all that apply.) A. The banking system recuperates and businesses are again able to use credit to finance their activities. B. Technological advances encourage firms to expand their activities. C. Wage rigidity decreases. D. Excess inventory has been sold off.
a,b,d
An example of a multiplier is when ____________. (Check all that apply.) A. a drop in consumer confidence reduces household spending, causing firms to cut production and lay off employees, leading to a greater reduction in household spending. B. a reduction in business investment is offset by increases in consumption and net exports. C. an increase in business confidence causes firms to increase production and hire employees, leading to an increase in household spending, causing firms to further increase production and employment. D. a decrease in labor demand with rigid wages causes a larger increase in unemployment than the same decrease with flexible wages.
a,c
How does real business cycle theory best explain the economic boom? A. The internet allowed the creation of new businesses, which increased labour demand. B. Technological innovation leads to increases in productivity, which in turn increases the marginal product of labor and therefore labour demand. C. Technological innovation leads to decreases in productivity (because of distractions such as Facebook), which means that firms must hire more workers to produce their output, which in turn increases labour demand. D. Consumer and business demand for new technology products drove businesses to increase their output, which in turn increased labour demand
b
Contractionary monetary policy can lead to an economy-wide recession through ____________. (Check all that apply.) A. a reduction in the real interest rate, leading to a decrease in production costs and therefore lower demand for labor. B. a reduction in the price level, leading to a reduction in employment because of downward wage rigidity. C. an increase in the price level, leading to a reduction in employment because of downward wage rigidity. D. an increase in the real interest rate, leading to an increase in production costs and therefore lower demand for labor.
b,d
limited predictibility
because of the variability of lengths of recessions and expansions, we consider economic fluctuations "limited predictability" since it is hard to predict
technology has a hard time telling why there are regressions
because technical regressions are unlikely the cause of recessions
An old saying goes: "Nothing succeeds like success." How could this saying relate to Keynes's animal spirits view of economic fluctuations? A. Success leads to additional success because successful people are more productive, which leads to increases in the marginal product of labor, allowing businesses to raise their level of investment in the economy. B. When people succeed, they become overconfident and overly optimistic, which can lead to actions that stimulate reckless behavior and ultimately lead to a downward spiral. C. When people succeed, they become confident and optimistic, which can lead to actions that stimulate further success. D. The saying doesn't relate to Keynes's view because individual success does not drive economic fluctuations.
c
The concept of multipliers was one of the key elements of John Maynard Keynes's theory of fluctuations. A multiplier is ____________. A. a factor that causes a change in the money supply to generate activity larger than the change in the money supply. B. a change in productivity that leads to increases in aggregate economic activity. C. an economic mechanism that causes an initial shock to be amplified by follow-on effects. D. a change in expectations about future economic activity.
c
What does it mean to say that an economic fluctuation involves the co-movement of many aggregate macroeconomic variables? A. Real variables move in the same direction as the economic fluctuation, whereas nominal variables move opposite. B. Economic fluctuations in one period lead to movement of these variables in the next period. C. These variables grow or contract together during booms and recessions. D. These variables grow during booms and contract during recessions.
c
____________ used the concepts of animal spirits and sentiment to explain economic fluctuations. A. Arthur Cecil Pigou. B. Irving Fisher. C. John Maynard Keynes. D. Milton Friedman.
c
3 key economic fluctuations?
co-movement, limited predictability, and persistance
co-movement focuses on what 2 variables?
consumption and investment both adjusted for inflation (or real investment and real consumption)
Recessions are periods in which the economy ▼ is stagnant expands contracts , while economic expansions are defined as the periods ▼ of peak GDP growth between booms of negative GDP growth between recessions . An economic expansion begins ____________. A. at the midpoint between the trough and peak of GDP growth. B. after the peak of GDP growth. C. in the middle of a recession. D. at the end of a recession.
contracts; between recessions; D. at the end of a recession ;
How do expansionary policies differ from contractionary policies? A. Expansionary policies seek to increase economic growth and increase employment, while contractionary policies seek to reduce the risk of excessive price inflation. B. Expansionary policies seek to shift the labor demand curve to the right, while contractionary policies seek to shift it to the left. C. Expansionary policies seek to reduce the severity of recessions, while contractionary policies seek to slow down the economy when it grows too fast. D. All of the above. E. Only A and C are correct.
d
In 1973, the major oil-producing nations of the world declared an oil embargo. The price of oil, a key source of energy, increased. This led to widespread inflation as costs of production increased steeply. The resulting fall in GDP and employment led the United States into a recession. Which of the business cycle theories explained in the chapter would best fit this explanation of the 1970s recession? A. Keynesian theory. B. Monetary theory. C. Okun's theory. D. Real business cycle theory.
d
Quantitative easing is ____________. A. an attempt by the central bank to more directly impact long-term interest rates. B. a variation on the central bank's traditional manner of conducting open market operations. C. the central bank's purchase of long-term bonds in the open market. D. all of the above. E. B and C only.
d
Using sophisticated statistical techniques, economists can usually predict ____________. A. the co-movement of macroeconomic variables. B. the end of an expansion. C. the beginning of a recession. D. the end of a recession.
d
Suppose that the mythical country Moricana has a very high minimum wage. Labor market laws are trade union-friendly and allow unions a high degree of bargaining power. Moricana is in a recessionlong dash—capacity utilization in the economy is at an all-time low, surveys show that firms do not expect economic conditions to improve in the coming year. Firms in the country are cutting back on capital spending and investment. In Moricana, wages are likely to be ____________. A. flexible. B. high. C. low. D. rigid.
d. rigid
Economic shocks are amplified by what 2 things?
downward wage rigidity and multipliers
The former chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, used the term "irrational exuberance" in 1996 to describe the high levels of optimism among stock market investors at the time. Stock market indexes such as the S&P Composite Price Index were at an all-time high. Some commentators believed that the Fed should intervene to slow the expansion of the economy. Why would central banks want to clamp down when the economy is growing? A. To block the formation of unsustainable speculative asset bubbles. B. To curtail excessive profits in the banking system. C. To prevent inflationary forces from gathering momentum. D. All of the above. E. A and C only.
e. a and c
what is persistence of growth rate?
even though recession's beginning and ending may be unpredictable, economic growth is not random
unemployment rises when GDP ______?
falls
According to your completed figure, a recession impacts employment lessless severely when wages exhibit downward __________ .
flexibility
How did the fall in housing prices cause the entire financial system in the United States to freeze up? The fall in housing prices resulted in ▼ increased unemployment increased defaults a decrease in the money supply , leading to enormous ▼ government unemployment costs bank losses bank account closures , disrupting the banks' ability and willingness to make loans to ▼ the government the central bank consumers and firms .
increased defaults; bank losses; consumers and firms
Suppose the Fed conducts an open market salesale. Such an action would be called for if the economy faced the possibility of (recession/inflation_ .
inflation
proponents of real business cycle theory tent to also emphasize the important of changing _______ and increasing technology
input prices
ow do wage flexibility and downward wage rigidity affect the extent of unemployment in the economy when the demand for labor falls? When the demand for labor falls, the fall in employment is ▼ contractual limited amplified when real wages are flexible and ▼ amplified limited aggregated when wages are downwardly rigid.
limited; amplified
techonoligcal progress occurs in the ______run
long
modern market economics are able to sustain long-run or short run growth?
long-run
limited predictability is important to acknowledge why?
many early theories of business cycles assumed that economic fluctuations had a pendulum-like structure with systematic swings in economic growth- which is far from the truth
is the goal to be fluctuation free?
no, it is not feasable
economic expansions
periods between recessions. Accordingly, an economic expansion begins at the end of a recession and continues until the state of the next recession
3 sources of labor demand fluctuations
real business cycle theory: emphasizes changing productivity and technology 2. keynesian theory: emphasizes changing expectation about the future 3. financial and monetary theories: emphasizes changes in prices and interest rates
percent that real GDP is below real potential GDP equation
real-potential / potential x 100
great depression
refers to the severe contraction that started in 1929, reaching a low point for real GDP in 1933. The period of below-trend real GDP did not end until the buildup of WW2 in the late 1930s
nominal interest rate - expected inflation rate
see if it is zero lower bound
government policies can only reduce __________, and not the existence, of fluctuations?
severity
economic fluctuations or business cycles
short-run changes in the growth of GDP
The Fed's open market salesale impacts the federal funds market shown on the right by shifting the ▼ supply of demand for reserves.
supply
when the economy is growing, what will it probably keep growing like?
the following quarter
co movement shows that GDP, consumption, and investment following ________ pattern?
the same
depression
typically used to describe a prolonged recession with an unemployment rate of 20% or more
downward rigid wages cause
unemployment
oakun's law
year to yea change in the rate of unemployment is equal to -1/2 x (g-3%), where g represents the annual growth rate of real GDP, in percentage points