Exam 10: Introduction to Economic Fluctuations
Exam 1: The Science of Macroeconomics58 Questions
Exam 2: The Data of Microeconomics108 Questions
Exam 3: National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes159 Questions
Exam 4: The Monetary System: What It Is and How It Works99 Questions
Exam 5: Inflation: Its Causes, Effects, and Social Costs86 Questions
Exam 6: The Open Economy102 Questions
Exam 7: Unemployment and the Labour Market90 Questions
Exam 8: Economic Growth I: Capital Accumulation and Population Growth99 Questions
Exam 9: Economic Growth II: Technology, Empirics, and Policy83 Questions
Exam 10: Introduction to Economic Fluctuations94 Questions
Exam 11: Aggregate Demand I: Building the Islm Model87 Questions
Exam 12: Aggregate Demand Ii: Applying the Islm Model92 Questions
Exam 13: The Open Economy Revisited: the Mundellfleming Model and the Exchange-Rate Regime106 Questions
Exam 14: Aggregate Supply and the Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment88 Questions
Exam 15: A Dynamic Model of Economic Fluctuations83 Questions
Exam 16: Alternative Perspectives on Stabilization Policy78 Questions
Exam 17: Government Debt and Budget Deficits75 Questions
Exam 18: The Financial System: Opportunities and Dangers92 Questions
Exam 19: The Microfoundations of Consumption and Investment112 Questions
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The assumption of constant velocity in the quantity equation is the equivalent of the assumption of a constant:
(Multiple Choice)
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A difference between the economic long run and the short run is that:
(Multiple Choice)
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Starting from long-run equilibrium, without policy intervention, the long-run impact of a temporary adverse supply shock is that prices will:
(Multiple Choice)
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Measures of average workweeks and of new orders for durable goods are included in the index of leading indicators, because shorter workweeks tend to indicate _____ future economic activity, and more robust orders tend to indicate _____ future economic activity.
(Multiple Choice)
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Suppose that droughts in Ontario and floods in Manitoba substantially reduce food production in Canada. Use the aggregate demand-aggregate supply model to illustrate graphically the impact in the short run and the long run of this adverse supply shock. Be sure to label: i. the axes; ii. the curves; iii. the initial equilibrium values; iv. the direction the curves shift; v. the short-run equilibrium values; and vi. the long-run equilibrium values. State in words what happens to prices and output in the short run and the long run.
(Essay)
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Along an aggregate demand curve, which of the following are held constant?
(Multiple Choice)
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Over the business cycle, investment spending _____ consumption spending.
(Multiple Choice)
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Short-run fluctuations in output and employment are called:
(Multiple Choice)
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When an aggregate demand curve is drawn with real GDP (Y) along the horizontal axis and the price level (P) along the vertical axis, if the money supply is decreased, then the aggregate demand curve will shift:
(Multiple Choice)
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You are given information about the following leading indicators for the Canadian economy. For each indicator, explain whether the information suggests that a recession or expansion should be expected in the future.
a.Claims received for employment insurance rise.
b.New orders for durable goods increase.
c.The interest rate spread between the three-month Treasury bill and the prime lending rate narrows.
d.The Conference Board of Canada's Index of Consumer Confidence falls.
(Essay)
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