Exam 12: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
Exam 1: First Principles183 Questions
Exam 2: Economic Models: Trade-Offs and Trade341 Questions
Exam 3: Supply and Demand230 Questions
Exam 4: Price Controls and Quotas: Meddling With Markets187 Questions
Exam 5: International Trade224 Questions
Exam 6: Macroeconomics: the Big Picture128 Questions
Exam 7: GDP and the CPI: Tracking the Macroeconomy213 Questions
Exam 8: Unemployment and Inflation300 Questions
Exam 9: Long-Run Economic Growth268 Questions
Exam 10: Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial Syst355 Questions
Exam 11: Income and Expenditure114 Questions
Exam 12: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply308 Questions
Exam 13: Fiscal Policy120 Questions
Exam 14: Money, Banking, and the Federal Reserve System135 Questions
Exam 15: Monetary Policy316 Questions
Exam 16: Inflation, Disinflation, and Deflation194 Questions
Exam 17: Macroeconomics: Events and Ideas283 Questions
Exam 18: International Macroeconomics411 Questions
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Inflationary and recessionary gaps are closed by self-correcting adjustments that shift:
(Multiple Choice)
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An increase in investment spending leads to _____ in the price level and _____ in real GDP in the short run.
(Multiple Choice)
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If actual GDP is less than potential output, then the economy is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose that the aggregate output level is lower than potential output. Which statement is FALSE?
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the following to answer questions:
Figure: Inflationary and Recessionary Gaps
-(Figure: Inflationary and Recessionary Gaps) Refer to Figure: Inflationary and Recessionary Gaps. The intersection of SRAS with AD in panel (a) indicates an economy:

(Multiple Choice)
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The short-run aggregate supply curve is positively sloped because:
(Multiple Choice)
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When the price level increases and people want to hold more money, interest rates decrease.
(True/False)
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A shift to the right of the short-run aggregate supply curve may be caused by a(n):
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the following to answer questions:
Figure: Policy Alternatives
-(Figure: Policy Alternatives) Refer to Figure: Policy Alternatives. If the economy is in equilibrium at Y1 in panel (b), it is in:

(Multiple Choice)
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Use the following to answer questions:
Figure: Aggregate Supply
-(Figure: Aggregate Supply) Refer to Figure: Aggregate Supply. If the economy is at point E, nominal wages will _____, and the short-run aggregate supply curve will shift _____ until actual potential is _____ potential output.

(Multiple Choice)
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A negative supply shock raises production costs and increases the quantity producers are willing to supply at any given price level.
(True/False)
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An increase in health care insurance premiums would likely cause a decrease in short-run aggregate supply and shift the short-run aggregate supply curve to the left.
(True/False)
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Use the following to answer questions:
Figure: An Increase in Aggregate Demand
-(Figure: An Increase in Aggregate Demand) Refer to Figure: An Increase in Aggregate Demand. At the Y2 level of real GDP:

(Multiple Choice)
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An improvement in the business outlook of firms is a type of positive _____ shock and therefore shifts the _____ curve to the _____.
(Multiple Choice)
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The purchasing power of money increased during the oil crisis of 1979 because the aggregate price level increased but the growth rate of the money supply was faster than the increase in the price level.
(True/False)
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An inflationary gap caused by a demand shock can be addressed by _____ to _____.
(Multiple Choice)
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