Exam 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics439 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist617 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade527 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand697 Questions
Exam 5: Elasticity and Its Application594 Questions
Exam 6: Supply, Demand, and Government Policies645 Questions
Exam 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets549 Questions
Exam 8: Application: the Costs of Taxation513 Questions
Exam 9: Application: International Trade492 Questions
Exam 10: Externalities524 Questions
Exam 11: Public Goods and Common Resources433 Questions
Exam 12: The Design of the Tax System549 Questions
Exam 13: The Costs of Production420 Questions
Exam 14: Firms in Competitive Markets543 Questions
Exam 15: Monopoly637 Questions
Exam 16: Monopolistic Competition580 Questions
Exam 17: Oligopoly488 Questions
Exam 18: The Markets for the Factors of Production564 Questions
Exam 19: Earnings and Discrimination490 Questions
Exam 20: Income Inequality and Poverty455 Questions
Exam 21: The Theory of Consumer Choice431 Questions
Exam 22: Frontiers of Microeconomics440 Questions
Exam 23: Measuring a Nations Income520 Questions
Exam 24: Measuring the Cost of Living529 Questions
Exam 25: Production and Growth505 Questions
Exam 26: Saving, Investment, and the Financial System564 Questions
Exam 27: The Basic Tools of Finance500 Questions
Exam 28: Unemployment678 Questions
Exam 29: The Monetary System515 Questions
Exam 30: Money Growth and Inflation481 Questions
Exam 31: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts522 Questions
Exam 32: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy475 Questions
Exam 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply562 Questions
Exam 34: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand508 Questions
Exam 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment491 Questions
Exam 36: Six Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy372 Questions
Select questions type
Just as the aggregate-supply curve slopes upward only in the short run, the trade-off between inflation and unemployment holds only in the short run.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(43)
In response to the financial crisis of 2007-2008, policymakers used
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(30)
Samuelson and Solow believed that the Phillips curve offered policymakers a menu of possible economic outcomes.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(40)
Figure 35-1. The left-hand graph shows a short-run aggregate-supply (SRAS) curve and two aggregate-demand (AD) curves. On the right-hand diagram, U represents the unemployment rate.
-Refer to Figure 35-1. Suppose points F and G on the right-hand graph represent two possible outcomes for an imaginary economy in the year 2012, and those two points correspond to points B and C, respectively, on the left- hand graph. Also suppose we know that the price index equaled 120 in 2011. Then the numbers 115 and 130 on the vertical axis of the left-hand graph would have to be replaced by


(Multiple Choice)
4.7/5
(33)
According to the Phillips curve, policymakers would reduce inflation but raise unemployment if they
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(43)
In the long run what primarily determines the natural rate of unemployment? In the long run what primarily determines the inflation rate? How does this relate to the classical dichotomy?
(Essay)
4.8/5
(39)
Some countries have had relatively high inflation and relatively high unemployment for long periods of time. Is this consistent with the Phillips curve? Defend your answer.
(Essay)
4.9/5
(36)
During the financial crisis Congress and President Obama authorized tax cuts and increases in government spending. According to the Phillips curve, in the short run these policies should have
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(30)
The economy is in long-run equilibrium when Senator Soldout argues that the Fed should do more to fight unemployment. He argues that if the Fed increased the money supply faster, more workers would find jobs. The Senator's argument
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(44)
Assume the analysis of Friedman and Phelps is correct, so that the following equation is valid: Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - a × (Αctual inflation - x).In this equation,
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(36)
Suppose that an economy is currently experiencing 10 percent unemployment and 15 percent inflation. If in the process of bringing inflation down by 2 percentage points, real GDP falls by 6 percent for a year, the sacrifice ratio is
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(42)
U.S. net exports fall due to recessions in foreign countries.
A. According to the aggregate demand and supply model, what happens to the price level and output in the short run?
B. According to the short-run Phillips curve what happens to inflation and unemployment in the short run?
C. If the Fed wanted to reverse the effects of this shock on output, what should it do?
(Essay)
4.9/5
(33)
A policy change that changes the natural rate of unemployment changes
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(40)
The sacrifice ratio is the percentage point increase in the unemployment rate created in the process of reducing inflation by one percentage point.
(True/False)
4.7/5
(30)
If the Fed were to increase the money supply, inflation would increase and unemployment would decrease in the short run.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(31)
The position of the long-run Phillips curve and the long-run aggregate supply curve both depend on
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(35)
Showing 41 - 60 of 491
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)