Exam 12: Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier
Exam 1: The Nature of Economics348 Questions
Exam 2: Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs411 Questions
Exam 3: Demand and Supply451 Questions
Exam 4: Extensions of Demand and Supply Analysis401 Questions
Exam 5: Public Spending and Public Choice362 Questions
Exam 6: Funding the Public Sector201 Questions
Exam 7: The Macroeconomy: Unemployment, Inflation, and Deflation413 Questions
Exam 8: Measuring the Economys Performance416 Questions
Exam 9: Global Economic Growth and Development290 Questions
Exam 10: Real GDP and the Price Level in the Long Run298 Questions
Exam 11: Classical and Keynesian Macro Analyses368 Questions
Exam 12: Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier452 Questions
Exam 13: Fiscal Policy274 Questions
Exam 14: Deficit Spending and the Public Debt146 Questions
Exam 15: Money, Banking, and Central Banking516 Questions
Exam 16: Domestic and International Dimensions of Monetary Policy357 Questions
Exam 17: Stabilization in an Integrated World Economy321 Questions
Exam 18: Policies and Prospects for Global Economic Growth228 Questions
Exam 19: Demand and Supply Elasticity412 Questions
Exam 20: Consumer Choice459 Questions
Exam 21: Rents, Profits, and the Financial Environment of Business445 Questions
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Exam 28: The Labor Market: Demand, Supply and Outsourcing376 Questions
Exam 29: Unions and Labor Market Monopoly Power319 Questions
Exam 30: Income, Poverty, and Health Care304 Questions
Exam 31: Environmental Economics299 Questions
Exam 32: Comparative Advantage and the Open Economy282 Questions
Exam 33: Exchange Rates and the Balance of Payments285 Questions
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Suppose that when disposable income increases by $1,000, consumption spending increases by $750. Given this information, we know that the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is
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Note: Amounts in billions.
-Refer to the above table. If real GDP is $12 billion, total planned expenditures and unplanned inventory changes are respectively

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In Keynesian analysis, if investment does NOT change when disposable income increases, the investment is called
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-Refer to the above figure. If real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is $6 trillion, then unplanned business inventories will

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Suppose the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is 0.8 and there is a $2,000 increase in planned investment. Given this information, real GDP will increase by
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When Monica spends more than her disposable income, Monica is
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The investment function would shift outward to the right if
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If the multiplier is 20 and income increases by $1000, then saving will increase by
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The consumption function shows the relationship between planned real consumption spending and
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-In the above figure, point E represents the level of real GDP at which planned saving equals planned investment. At point C

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Note: Amounts in billions.
-Refer to the above table. The equilibrium real GDP is

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In the above figure, saving will equal zero when real disposable income equals
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