INTER MACRO: CH 6- AS & Phillips Curve
For many government decision makers, the original Phillips curve implied
A trade-off between lowering unemployment at the cost of higher inflation or lowering inflation at the cost of higher unemployment
Okun's law states that for a 1 percent increase in the unemployment rate above the natural rate of unemployment
GDP falls by about 2%
Suppose an increase in oil prices is accompanied by a decline in the level of potential output. Which of the following is the most likely long-run effect?
Real GDP will decrease but prices will increase
The inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment is called:
The Phillips curve
Restrictive monetary policy will eventually affect the upward-sloping AS curve since:
The resulting unemployment will cause downward pressure on nominal wages, so the cost of the production will decrease
The misery index is constructed by:
adding the inflation rate and the unemployment rate.
In the coordination approach to the Phillips curve, wages are considered to be sticky rather than flexible since:
firms are unsure about their competitors' behavior and only reluctantly change prices and wages following a change in AD
Assume the economy is at full employment. If the Fed accommodates an increase in oil prices by expansionary monetary policy, the most likely long-run effect will be that
****
In the AD-AS model with an upward-sloping AS-curve, what would happen if oil prices increased and the Fed responded by restricting money supply:
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The upward-sloping AS-curve will shift eventually to the left if
**** markup over labor cost falls