Exam 14: Exchange Rates I: the Monetary Approach in the Long Run
Exam 1: Trade in the Global Economy135 Questions
Exam 2: Trade and Technology: The Ricardian Model202 Questions
Exam 3: Gains and Losses From Trade in the Specific-Factors Model148 Questions
Exam 4: Trade and Resources: the Heckscher-Ohlin Model138 Questions
Exam 5: Movement of Labor and Capital Between Countries159 Questions
Exam 6: Increasing Returns to Scale and Monopolistic Competition149 Questions
Exam 7: Offshoring of Goods and Services128 Questions
Exam 8: Import Tariffs and Quotas Under Perfect Competition183 Questions
Exam 9: Import Tariffs and Quotas Under Imperfect Competition201 Questions
Exam 10: Export Subsidies in Agriculture and High-Technology Industries155 Questions
Exam 11: International Agreements: Trade, Labor, and the Environment173 Questions
Exam 12: The Global Macroeconomy100 Questions
Exam 13: Introduction to Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market160 Questions
Exam 14: Exchange Rates I: the Monetary Approach in the Long Run161 Questions
Exam 15: Exchange Rates II: the Asset Approach in the Short Run159 Questions
Exam 16: National and International Accounts: Income, Wealth, and the Balance of Payments156 Questions
Exam 17: Balance of Payments I: the Gains From Financial Globalization153 Questions
Exam 18: Balance of Payments II: Output, Exchange Rates, and Macroeconomic Policies in the Short Run153 Questions
Exam 19: Fixed Versus Floating: International Monetary Experience182 Questions
Exam 20: Exchange Rate Crises: How Pegs Work and How They Break148 Questions
Exam 21: The Euro148 Questions
Exam 22: Topics in International Macroeconomics148 Questions
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The entity in any nation that accurately controls directly or indirectly the supply of money is referred to as the:
(Multiple Choice)
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Give an intuitive explanation as to why faster money growth leads to a depreciating currency.
(Essay)
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Under the monetary approach to exchange rates, if there is a rise in a foreign market's income, ceteris paribus,, then the exchange rate should:
(Multiple Choice)
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If a pair of Nike shoes cost $45 in New York and $65 in Berlin, then we would expect the price to:
(Multiple Choice)
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What is the situation when a home currency purchases more goods and services at home than abroad when converted to a foreign currency?
(Multiple Choice)
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Short-run PPP may not hold for a variety of reasons. Which of the following is NOT cited in your textbook as one of those reasons?
(Multiple Choice)
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Purchasing power parity exists when: I. there are no arbitrage opportunities.
II) prices are the same when expressed in a common currency.
III) the goods in question are identical.
(Multiple Choice)
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Under the monetary approach to exchange rates, if there is a rise in a country's home money supply, ceteris paribus,, then the exchange rate should:
(Multiple Choice)
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Real interest parity indicates that, when PPP and UIP hold:
(Multiple Choice)
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If we can accurately predict monetary growth, and if the assumption that demand for real money balances is constant, then we may predict:
(Multiple Choice)
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If a basket of goods in the United States costs $1,000, and the same basket of goods in Japan costs ¥125,000, then for PPP to exist, $1 should trade for ____ Japanese yen.
(Multiple Choice)
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The long-run monetary model of exchange rates provides that real income changes result in a(n) _______ change in the price level and a(n) ________ change in the strength of the currency.
(Multiple Choice)
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When the relative price of a good in Germany versus the United States is 3, if the nominal exchange rate is E$/€ = 1.5 and the U.S. price is $10, what is the German price?
(Multiple Choice)
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When the Japanese inflation rate is less than the Australian inflation rate, Japanese prices are:
(Multiple Choice)
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If conditions hold for the long-run monetary exchange rate model, it can provide opportunities for nations to achieve less price-level volatility by:
(Multiple Choice)
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Which of the following statements is NOT a reason for explaining the deviations from PPP?
(Multiple Choice)
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