Exam 15: Inflation: Phillips Curves and Neo-Fisherism
Exam 1: Introduction63 Questions
Exam 2: Measurement80 Questions
Exam 3: Business Cycle Measurement60 Questions
Exam 4: Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work–Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization74 Questions
Exam 5: A Closed-Economy One-Period Macroeconomic Model62 Questions
Exam 6: Search and Unemployment53 Questions
Exam 7: Economic Growth: Malthus and Solow66 Questions
Exam 8: Income Disparity Among Countries and Endogenous Growth62 Questions
Exam 9: A Two-Period Model: The Consumption–Savings Decision and Credit Markets69 Questions
Exam 10: Credit Market Imperfections: Credit Frictions, Financial Crises, and Social Security28 Questions
Exam 11: A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment71 Questions
Exam 12: Money, Banking, Prices, and Monetary Policy67 Questions
Exam 13: Business Cycle Models with Flexible Prices and Wages55 Questions
Exam 14: New Keynesian Economics: Sticky Prices59 Questions
Exam 15: Inflation: Phillips Curves and Neo-Fisherism61 Questions
Exam 16: International Trade in Goods and Assets61 Questions
Exam 17: Money in the Open Economy62 Questions
Exam 18: Money, Inflation, and Banking: A Deeper Look51 Questions
Select questions type
In an open,two-good economy in a two-good world,the relative price of one good in terms of the other is called the
Free
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(32)
Correct Answer:
C
Lack of evidence of a pattern of international consumption smoothing is best explained by
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(24)
In a two-good,one-period model,when the terms of trade move in your favour,the
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(32)
In a two-good,one-period model,the representative consumer will always be better off
(Multiple Choice)
5.0/5
(31)
The net effect on welfare from eliminating trade barriers is
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(41)
Ricardian equivalence suggests that government budget deficits generated by decreases in current taxes
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(27)
In a two-good economy,the production possibilities frontier (PPF)is
(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(40)
In a two-good,one-period model,when the terms of trade move in your favour,
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(35)
Theory predicts that current account surpluses should be ________; the Canadian experience since 1961 suggests that current account surpluses have been ________.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(32)
In a two-good,two-period model,holding everything else constant,an increase in current-period income
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(35)
In a two-good,two-period model,holding everything else constant,an increase in current taxes
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(34)
Showing 1 - 20 of 61
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)