Macroeconomics Chapter 16 Homework
If the government purchases multiplier equals 2, and real GDP is $14 trillion with potential real GDP $14.5 trillion, then government purchases would need to increase by ________ to restore the economy to potential real GDP.
$250 billion
Which of the following would be considered a fiscal policy action?
A tax cut is designed to stimulate spending during a recession.
Reducing the marginal tax rate on income will
All of the above are correct. (raise the return to entrepreneurship and encourage the opening of new businesses. reduce the tax wedge faced by workers and increase labor supplied. increase the after−tax return on saving, and encourage saving.)
Refer to the figure. Suppose the economy is in short-run equilibrium above potential GDP and wages and prices are rising. If contractionary policy is used to move the economy back to long-run equilibrium, this would be depicted as a movement from _______ using the basic AD-AS model in the figure.
C to B
Refer to the figure. Suppose the economy is in short-run equilibrium above potential GDP and no policy is pursued. Using the basic AD-AS model in the figure, this would be depicted as a movement from
C to D.
In the long run, most economists agree that a permanent increase in government spending leads to
a decrease in private spending by the same amount that government spending increased.
Which of the following would increase the size of the government purchases multiplier?
a decrease in the amount saved by households from an increase in income
A change in consumption spending caused by income changes is __________ change in spending, and a change in government spending that occurs to improve roads and bridges is __________ change in spending.
an induced; an autonomous
The increase in the amount the government collects in taxes when the economy expands and the decrease in the amount the government collects in taxes when the economy goes into a recession is an example of
automatic stabilizers.
If the tax multiplier is -1.5 and a $200 billion tax increase is implemented, what is the change in GDP, holding all else constant? (Assume the price level stays constant.)
a $300 billion decrease in GDP
The aggregate demand curve will shift to the right ________ the initial increase in government purchases.
by more than
Expansionary fiscal policy
can be effective in the short run.
Refer to the figure. In the dynamic model of AD-AS in the figure, if the economy is at point A in year 1 and is expected to go to point B in year 2, Congress and the president would most likely pursue
contractionary fiscal policy.
From an initial long-run equilibrium, if aggregate demand grows more slowly than long-run and short-run aggregate supply, then Congress and the president would most likely
decrease taxes.
An economic expansion tends to cause the federal budget deficit to ________ because tax revenues ________ and government spending on transfer payments ________.
decrease; rise; fall
If the economy is falling below potential real GDP, which of the following would be an appropriate fiscal policy to bring the economy back to long-run aggregate supply? An increase in
government purchases.
A tax rebate, which is expected to be offered in this and all future years, will
have a significant positive effect on consumption and aggregate demand, with aggregate demand growing by a multiple of the tax rebate.
During 1970−1997, the U.S. federal government was
in deficit every year.
Consider a tax cut which affects not only consumer disposable income, but also after−tax earnings from labor supplied to labor markets and from financial assets acquired through saving. In the long run we would expect this tax cut to
increase both the price level and the level of real GDP.
In the graph to the right, suppose the economy in Year 1 is at point A and is expected in Year 2 to be at point B. Which of the following policies could Congress and the president use to move the economy to point C?
increase government purchases
Given that the economy has moved from A to B in the graph to the right, which of the following would be the appropriate fiscal policy to achieve potential GDP?
increase government spending
In the graph to the right, if the economy is at point A, an appropriate fiscal policy by Congress and the president would be to
increase government transfer payments.
Refer to the figure. In the dynamic model of AD-AS in the figure, if the economy is at point A in year 1 and is expected to go to point B in year 2, Congress and the president would most likely
increase taxes.
Suppose the government wants to maintain a balanced budget. To achieve this goal, when the economy falls into recession government would need to ________ taxes, which would cause aggregate demand to ________.
increase; decrease
Tax reduction and simplification should ________ long−run aggregate supply and ________ aggregate demand.
increase; increase
A tax rebate, like the one issued in 2008, is likely to ________ consumption spending ________ than would a permanent tax cut.
increase; less
Which of the following would not be considered an automatic stabilizer?
legislation increasing funding for job retraining passed during a recession
Suppose real GDP is $12.6 trillion and potential GDP is $12.4 trillion. To move the economy back to potential GDP, Congress should
lower government purchases by an amount less than $200 billion.
Expansionary fiscal policy to prevent real GDP from falling below potential real GDP would cause the inflation rate to be ________ and real GDP to be ________.
higher; higher
Compared to the averages for post World War II recessions, the recession of 2007−2009 was ________ in duration and the decline in real GDP was ________.
longer; greater
Which of the following is a reason why we should consider the federal national debt a problem?
If the debt drives up interest rates, crowding out will occur.
________ and ________ are the largest sources of revenue collected by the federal government.
Individual income taxes; social insurance taxes
Which of the following is a government expenditure, but is not a government purchase?
The federal government pays out an unemployment insurance claim.
If tax reduction and simplification are effective, then
economic efficiency will increase.
An increase in government purchases will increase aggregate demand because
government expenditures are a component of aggregate demand.
The three categories of federal government expenditures, in addition to government purchases, are
interest on the national debt, grants to state and local governments, and transfer payments.
Economists who believe the supply side effects of tax cuts are small essentially believe that
tax cuts mainly affect aggregate demand.
When President Obama took office in January 2009, he pledged to pursue an expansionary fiscal policy to try to pull the economy out of the recession. The next month, Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, a $840 billion package of spending increases and tax cuts that was
the largest fiscal policy action in U.S. history.
The federal government debt equals
the total value of U.S. Treasury bonds outstanding.
Refer to the figure. In the dynamic model of AD-AS in the figure, if the economy is at point A in year 1 and is expected to go to point B in year 2, and no fiscal or monetary policy is pursued, then at point B
the unemployment rate is very low.