Exam 15: Macroeconomic Viewpoints: New Keynesian, Monetarist, and New Classical
Exam 1: Economics: the World Around You90 Questions
Exam 2: Choice, Opportunity Costs, and Specialization98 Questions
Exam 3: Markets, Demand and Supply, and the Price System99 Questions
Exam 4: The Market System and the Private and Public Sector100 Questions
Exam 5: National Income Accounting104 Questions
Exam 6: An Introduction to the Foreign Exchange Market and the Balance of Payments90 Questions
Exam 7: Unemployment and Inflation130 Questions
Exam 8: Macroeconomic Equilibrium: Aggregate Demand and Supply123 Questions
Exam 9: Aggregate Expenditures120 Questions
Exam 10: Income and Expenditures Equilibrium135 Questions
Exam 11: Fiscal Policy94 Questions
Exam 12: Money and Banking125 Questions
Exam 13: Monetary Policy138 Questions
Exam 14: Macroeconomic Policy: Tradeoffs, Expectations, Credibility, and Sources of Business Cycles117 Questions
Exam 15: Macroeconomic Viewpoints: New Keynesian, Monetarist, and New Classical103 Questions
Exam 16: Economic Growth99 Questions
Exam 17: Development Economics105 Questions
Exam 18: Globalization85 Questions
Exam 19: World Trade Equilibrium112 Questions
Exam 20: International Trade Restrictions109 Questions
Exam 21: Exchange Rates and Financial Links Between Countries132 Questions
Select questions type
_____ believe that a government that takes an active role in the economy may do more harm than good because economic policy operates with a long and variable lag.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(35)
Milton Friedman in his book on consumption function, discussed the importance of _____, rather than _____, to understand consumer spending.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(32)
The figure given below represents the new classical long run and short run Phillips curve measuring inflation rate on vertical axis and unemployment rate on horizontal axis.
Figure 15.2
-Refer to the Figure 15.2. Assume the economy is currently at point C. According to the new classical school, an expected increase in government spending:

(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(29)
A by-product of the acceptance of the Keynesian school was the wide approval and practice of activist fiscal policy around the world.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(46)
Monetarists argue that the long-run Phillips curve is negatively sloped.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(43)
Traditional Keynesian economics assumes that prices are relatively flexible in response to changes in aggregate expenditures.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(38)
The school of thought that assumes that real GDP is determined by aggregate supply, whereas the equilibrium price level is determined by aggregate demand is known as _____.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(47)
According to new classical economics, fiscal policy can change equilibrium real GDP only if it changes the price level or one of the determinants of aggregate supply, and people expect this change.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(28)
The _____ aggregate supply curve assumed by classical economists means that the equilibrium level of _____ is determined only by the aggregate supply curve.
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(37)
The new Keynesians believe that the economy is not always in equilibrium because:
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(32)
New classical economists advocate less government intervention than the new Keynesian school of thought.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(32)
_____ school of thought would most likely be associated with the statement: "When wages are rigid, changes in output result in small changes in goods market prices and a relatively flat aggregate supply curve."
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(32)
According to the Keynesian school of thought, the economy is not self-regulating. That is, to achieve a satisfactory level of real GDP, the government often has to intervene by managing aggregate demand.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(32)
New classical economists contend that both the short-run and long-run aggregate supply curves are vertical.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(43)
Keynesian economists today favor a model in which the aggregate supply curve is relatively flat at low levels of real GDP and slopes downward as real GDP approaches its potential level.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(31)
An economist from which school of thought would be most likely to say the following- "An increase in government expenditure will only increase inflation, because the aggregate supply curve is vertical."
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(38)
Showing 21 - 40 of 103
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)