The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand
change in fiscal policy that stimulate demand when economy goes into recessions (tax system such as tax cuts; government spending such as income support)
automatic stabilizer
interest rate adjusts to bring money supply and demand into balance
liquidity preference theory
assets liquidated for easier use in economy
money holdings
Fed receive money and bank reserves fall
open-market sales
aggregate demand to the left
A decrease in government spending initially and primarily shifts:
an increase in personal consumption
A reduction in personal income taxes increases Aggregate Demand through
liquidity trap.
A situation in which the Fed's target interest rate has fallen as far as it can fall is sometimes described as a:
classical theory, but not liquidity preference theory
A surplus or shortage in the money market is eliminated by adjustments in the price level according to
the MPC is large and if the tax cut is permanent
A tax cut shifts the aggregate demand curve the farthest if
unemployment benefits
An example of an automatic stabilizer is
increases the multiplier, so that changes in government expenditures have a larger effect on aggregate demand.
An increase in the MPC:
infinity
As the MPC gets close to 1, the value of the multiplier approaches
open-market purchase
Fed spend money that is deposited into bank and raises bank reserves
small part of household wealth, and so the wealth effect is small.
For the U.S. economy, money holdings are a:
decreases and aggregate demand shifts left.
If the Fed conducts open-market sales, the money supply
marginal propensity to consume - fraction of extra income that is consumed rather than saved
MPC
crowding-out effect
reduction in aggregate demand when interest rates increase
multiplier effect
shift in demand when expansionary fiscal policy increases income and consumer spending