Exam 22: How Does the Open Macroeconomy Work
Exam 1: International Economics Is Different60 Questions
Exam 2: The Basic Theory Using Demand and Supply60 Questions
Exam 3: Why Everybody Trades: Comparative Advantage59 Questions
Exam 4: Trade: Factor Availability and Factor Proportions Are Key48 Questions
Exam 5: Who Gains and Who Loses From Trade60 Questions
Exam 6: Scale Economies, Imperfect Competition, and Trade59 Questions
Exam 7: Growth and Trade Part II: Trade Policy60 Questions
Exam 8: Analysis of a Tariff60 Questions
Exam 9: Nontariff Barriers to Imports60 Questions
Exam 10: Arguments for and Against Protection60 Questions
Exam 11: Pushing Exports52 Questions
Exam 12: Trade Blocs and Trade Blocks60 Questions
Exam 13: Trade and the Environment60 Questions
Exam 14: Trade Policies for Developing Countries60 Questions
Exam 15: Multinationals and Migration: International Factor Movements60 Questions
Exam 16: Payments Among Nations60 Questions
Exam 17: The Foreign Exchange Market56 Questions
Exam 18: Forward Exchange and International Financial Investment60 Questions
Exam 19: What Determines Exchange Rates44 Questions
Exam 20: Government Policies Toward the Foreign Exchange Market56 Questions
Exam 21: International Lending and Financial Crises60 Questions
Exam 22: How Does the Open Macroeconomy Work59 Questions
Exam 23: Internal and External Balance With Fixed Exchange Rates59 Questions
Exam 24: Floating Exchange Rates and Internal Balance60 Questions
Exam 25: National and Global Choices: Floating Rates and the Alternatives60 Questions
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The amount of price inflation that the economy experiences eventually depends on the size of the spending multiplier.
Free
(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
The greater the degree of international capital mobility:
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
The official settlements balance _____ if the IS-LM intersection is _____ the FE curve.
(Multiple Choice)
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When taking into account foreign-income repercussions, the spending multiplier is:
(Multiple Choice)
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The LM curve illustrates all combinations of domestic output levels and interest rates for which:
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose the United States' imports substantially affect foreign incomes, and the foreign countries import from the United States. The United States' spending multiplier will exceed the spending multiplier for a comparable small open economy.
(True/False)
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The European Union has relatively large production and income effects on Africa.
(True/False)
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If C represents aggregate consumption, Id represents domestic investments, G represents government expenditures, E represents national expenditures on goods and services, X represents foreign demands for exports, and M represents domestic demand for imports, then aggregate demand in an economy equals:
(Multiple Choice)
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Expansionary fiscal policy will cause the IS curve to shift to the right.
(True/False)
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Equilibrium GDP in the short-run is determined at the point where:
(Multiple Choice)
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The volume of imports is positively related to real national production and income. What are two reasons for this relationship?
(Essay)
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If the marginal propensity to save is 0.3 and the marginal propensity to import is 0.2, then value of the simple spending multiplier is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following is likely to have the most effect on a country's demand for imports?
(Multiple Choice)
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In your opinion do government policies to stabilize real domestic production have a larger role to play in the IS-LM-FE model or in the monetary approach to the balance of payments? Why? (Note: This question is an extension of the analysis. It is not covered explicitly in the book.)
(Essay)
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