Exam 11: A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment
Exam 1: Introduction61 Questions
Exam 2: Measurement73 Questions
Exam 3: Business Cycle Measurement59 Questions
Exam 4: Consumer and Firm Behaviour: The Work–Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization74 Questions
Exam 5: A Closed-Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model62 Questions
Exam 6: Search and Unemployment52 Questions
Exam 7: Economic Growth: Malthus and Solow66 Questions
Exam 8: Income Disparity among Countries and Endogenous Growth62 Questions
Exam 9: A Two-Period Model: The Consumption–Savings Decision and Credit Markets69 Questions
Exam 10: Credit Market Imperfections: Credit Frictions, Financial Crises, and Social Security35 Questions
Exam 11: A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment71 Questions
Exam 12: A Monetary Intertemporal Model: Money, Banking, Prices, and Monetary Policy63 Questions
Exam 13: Business Cycle Models with Flexible Prices and Wages50 Questions
Exam 14: New Keynesian Economics: Sticky Prices61 Questions
Exam 15: Inflation: Phillips Curves and Neo-Fisherism43 Questions
Exam 16: International Trade in Goods and Assets65 Questions
Exam 17: Money in the Open Economy65 Questions
Exam 18: Money, Inflation, and Banking: A Deeper Look61 Questions
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The marginal benefit from investment for a firm is equal to
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In response to a temporary increase in government spending, the representative consumer consumes
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When future total factor productivity is expected to increase,
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A decrease in credit market risk does not cause the following to happen.
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The marginal rate of substitution of future leisure for future consumption must be equal to
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The intertemporal substitution of leisure effect is used to justify the assumption that current labour supply increases when the
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When there is a temporary increase in total factor productivity,
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The condition MRS1,C = w describes the representative consumer's
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The assumption that current-period consumption demand is negatively related to the real interest rate is justified as long as the
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The condition MRS1'C' = w' describes the representative consumer's
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The assumption that current-period labour supply is positively related to the current-period real wage is justified as long as the
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The output supply curve is the relationship between output and
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The decrease in lifetime wealth affects consumption demand by
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