Exam 21:Output, Inflation, and Monetary Policy
Exam 1: An Introduction to Money and the Financial System31 Questions
Exam 2: Money and the Payments System109 Questions
Exam 3: Financial Instruments, Financial Markets, and Financial Institutions119 Questions
Exam 4: Future Value, Present Value and Interest Rates118 Questions
Exam 5: Understanding Risk108 Questions
Exam 6: Bonds, Bond Prices, and the Determination of Interest Rates128 Questions
Exam 7: The Risk and Term Structure of Interest Rates130 Questions
Exam 8: Stocks, Stock Markets and Market Efficiency123 Questions
Exam 9: Derivatives: Futures, Options, and Swaps120 Questions
Exam 10: Foreign Exchange114 Questions
Exam 11: The Economics of Financial Intermediation113 Questions
Exam 12:Depository Institutions: Banks and Bank Management116 Questions
Exam 13:Financial Industry Structure125 Questions
Exam 14: Regulating the Financial System120 Questions
Exam 15: Central Banks in the World Today113 Questions
Exam 16: The Structure of Central Banks: The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank116 Questions
Exam 17: The Central Bank Balance Sheet and the Money Supply Process108 Questions
Exam 18:Monetary Policy: Stabilizing the Domestic Economy103 Questions
Exam 19:Exchange Rate Policy and the Central Bank120 Questions
Exam 20:Money Growth, Money Demand and Modern Monetary Policy108 Questions
Exam 21:Output, Inflation, and Monetary Policy104 Questions
Exam 22:Understanding Business Cycle Fluctuations103 Questions
Exam 23: Modern Monetary Policy and the Challenges Facing Central Bankers98 Questions
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Why would central bankers have to pay attention to forecasts regarding consumer sentiment and expectations of business owners and managers?
(Essay)
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Former Bank of England Governor Mervyn King, commenting on a speech given by then Fed Chairman Greenspan, said "any (coherent) monetary policy can be written as an inflation target plus a response to supply shocks." What do these comments mean and what insight do they provide us to the focus of central banks?
(Essay)
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The conditions for long-run equilibrium include each of the following, except:
(Multiple Choice)
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Is the actual amount of output that corresponds to the long-run aggregate supply curve fixed? Explain.
(Essay)
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Output and inflation movements can arise from either demand or supply shifts. How can we tell them apart?
(Essay)
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Which of the following would not be included in aggregate expenditures?
(Multiple Choice)
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If monetary policymakers fear a recession resulting from increased pessimism on the part of business people, and they want to avoid the recession, they would:
(Multiple Choice)
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If government purchases increase and as a result push current output above potential output, monetary policymakers are likely to:
(Multiple Choice)
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If policymakers are aggressive in keeping current inflation near the target inflation rate then the monetary policy reaction curve will:
(Multiple Choice)
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Use the equation of exchange to show that in the long run, inflation must equal money growth less the growth of potential output.
(Essay)
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Consumption can be sensitive to changes in the real interest rate because:
(Multiple Choice)
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Of all of the components of aggregate demand, the most interest sensitive is:
(Multiple Choice)
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In the long run the inflation rate equals the level implied by:
(Multiple Choice)
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The potential output of a country would increase as a result of each of the following, except:
(Multiple Choice)
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If a point lies on the monetary policy reaction curve, and at this point the inflation rate equals the target rate of inflation, we know that:
(Multiple Choice)
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For central bankers to alter the real interest rate by changing the nominal interest rate, which of the following must be true?
(Multiple Choice)
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