Econ chapter 8
You are the head of the central bank and you want to maintain 2 percent long-run inflation, using the quantity theory of money. If the real GDP growth is 4 percent and velocity is constant, you suggest a:
6 percent money supply growth.
Suppose you put $100 in the bank on January 1, 2017. If the annual nominal interest rate is 5 percent and the inflation rate is 5 percent, you will be able to buy ________ worth of inflation-adjusted goods on January 1, 2018.
$100
The nominal interest rate is:
the interest rate not adjusted for inflation. the "advertised" interest rate. a description of the return in units of currency.
Practically, in the long run the real interest rate is equal to:
the marginal product of capital
If long-run real GDP growth is determined by real changes in the economy, the quantity theory of money implies that changes in:
the money growth rate lead one-for-one to changes in the inflation rate in the long run.
If the inflation rate is larger than the nominal interest rate:
the real interest rate is negative
According to the classical dichotomy, in the long run there is:
complete separation of the nominal and real sides of the economy
According to the quantity theory of money, the price level is:
determined by the ratio of the effective quantity of money to the volume of goods.
The essence of the quantity theory of money is that:
in the long run, a key determinant of the price level is the money supply.
The data presented in Figure 8.1 confirm that the relationship between inflation and money growth is ________, as suggested by ________.
positive; the quantity theory of money
The real interest rate describes the:
rate of return adjusted for inflation.
In the quantity theory of money, the:
real GDP, velocity, and money supply are exogenous.
Compared to the nominal interest rate, the real interest rate is:
relatively stable
The monetary base consists of:
reserves and currency
The velocity of money is:
the average number of times a dollar is used in a transaction per year.
The quantity theory states that the nominal GDP is equal to:
the effective amount of money used in purchases.
If you withdraw $100 from your checking account and deposit it in your savings account:
M1 falls and M2 is unchanged