Exam 21: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics438 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist620 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade527 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand700 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application598 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, Demand, and Government Policies648 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets547 Questions
Exam 8: Application: the Costs of Taxation514 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade496 Questions
Exam 10: Measuring a Nations Income522 Questions
Exam 11: Measuring the Cost of Living545 Questions
Exam 12: Production and Growth507 Questions
Exam 13: Saving, Investment, and the Financial System567 Questions
Exam 14: The Basic Tools of Finance513 Questions
Exam 15: Unemployment699 Questions
Exam 16: The Monetary System517 Questions
Exam 17: Money Growth and Inflation487 Questions
Exam 18: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts522 Questions
Exam 19: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy484 Questions
Exam 20: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply563 Questions
Exam 21: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand511 Questions
Exam 22: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment516 Questions
Exam 23: Six Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy372 Questions
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If the interest rate is below the Fed's target, the Fed should
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Assume the money market is initially in equilibrium. If the price level increases, then according to liquidity preference theory there is an excess
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If the Federal Reserve's goal is to stabilize aggregate demand, then it will the money supply in response to a stock market boom. This causes interest rates to .
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When the Fed sells government bonds, the reserves of the banking system
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An increase in the money supply shifts the aggregate-supply curve to the right.
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Which of the following statements is correct for the long run?
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Scenario 34-1. Take the following information as given for a small, imaginary economy:
• When income is $10,000, consumption spending is $6,500.
• When income is $11,000, consumption spending is $7,250.
-Refer to Scenario 34-1. For this economy, an initial increase of $200 in net exports translates into an)
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When the interest rate decreases, the opportunity cost of holding money
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If the MPC = 4/5, then the government purchases multiplier is
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The theory of liquidity preference assumes that the nominal supply of money is determined by the
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Figure 34-7
-Refer to Figure 34-7. The aggregate-demand curve could shift from AD1 to AD2 as a result of

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"Monetary policy can be described either in terms of the money supply or in terms of the interest rate." This statement amounts to the assertion that
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The wealth effect stems from the idea that a higher price level
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Suppose that the MPC is 0.7, there is no investment accelerator, and there are no crowding-out effects. If government expenditures increase by $30 billion, then aggregate demand
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The idea that expansionary fiscal policy has a positive affect on investment is known as
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