Deck 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment
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Deck 35: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment
1
Proponents of rational expectations theory argue that when government policies change, people adjust their expectations accordingly, and that failure to include that fact once led to estimates of the sacrifice ratio that were unreliable guides to policy.
True
2
Phillips's discovery in the UK was supported by a similar negative correlation between inflation and unemployment in data for the United States.
True
3
The natural rate of unemployment is often called the non-acceleration inflation rate of unemployment.
True
4
A. W. Phillips was a New Zealand economist.
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5
According to rational expectations theory, a credible commitment to low inflation increases the cost of disinflation, because people are rational.
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6
When the money supply changes, the aggregate-demand curve shifts and the economy moves along a given short-run aggregate-supply curve, causing unexpected changes in output, prices, unemployment and inflation. These changes cause people to adjust their expectations of inflation, leading to shifts in the short-run aggregate-supply curve.
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7
The sacrifice ratio is the number of percentage points of annual output that are lost in the process of reducing unemployment by one percentage point.
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8
Phillips said that a central bank cannot use its control over nominal quantities to peg a real quantity - the real rate of interest, the rate of unemployment, the level of real national income, the real quantity of money, the rate of growth of real national income, or the rate of growth of the real quantity of money.
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9
A typical estimate of the sacrifice ratio is five. According to Sargent, the sacrifice ratio could be much smaller than suggested by previous estimates.
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10
The natural rate of unemployment depends upon:
A) the rate of growth of the money supply
B) the interest rate
C) the inflation rate
D) none of the above
A) the rate of growth of the money supply
B) the interest rate
C) the inflation rate
D) none of the above
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11
According to the textbook, the sacrifice ratio should be ignored when attempting to reduce inflation beyond acceptable targets as continued inflation has dire consequences.
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12
If decreases in money supply or cuts in government contract aggregate demand, they can lower inflation in the short run, but only at the expense of higher unemployment.
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13
The Phillips Curve is a short-run positive relationship between inflation and unemployment.
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14
Samuelson and Solow reasoned that the trade-off between inflation and unemployment arose because low unemployment was associated with high aggregate demand, and because high demand puts upward pressure on wages and prices throughout the economy.
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15
If macroeconomic policy expands aggregate demand, unemployment and inflation will both decline in the short run.
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16
The Phillips curve is the short-run relationship between inflation and unemployment.
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17
The natural rate hypothesis states that if policymakers choose higher inflation in order to reduce unemployment below the natural rate, they will succeed at reducing unemployment permanently.
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18
Rational expectations theory is based on the assumption that people optimally allocate their incomes - that is, they decide how much they consume and how much they save.
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19
Contractionary monetary policy contracts aggregate demand, reduces employment and inflation, and eventually reduces expected inflation, causing the short-run Phillips curve to shift downwards.
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20
In the long run, the actual inflation rate depends primarily on:
A) the expected inflation rate
B) the Phillips curve trade-off
C) the rate of growth of the quantity of money
D) the unemployment rate
A) the expected inflation rate
B) the Phillips curve trade-off
C) the rate of growth of the quantity of money
D) the unemployment rate
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21
The increase in oil prices in the 2000s was caused primarily by:
A) an increase in demand for oil
B) an increase in supply of oil
C) a decrease in supply of oil
D) a decrease in demand for oil
A) an increase in demand for oil
B) an increase in supply of oil
C) a decrease in supply of oil
D) a decrease in demand for oil
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22
The Phillips curve implies that the economy faces a:
A) long-run trade-off between price inflation and the level of real wages
B) long-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
C) short-run trade-off between the actual unemployment rate and the natural rate of unemployment
D) short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
A) long-run trade-off between price inflation and the level of real wages
B) long-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
C) short-run trade-off between the actual unemployment rate and the natural rate of unemployment
D) short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
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23
A.W. Phillips developed the Phillips curve concept by looking at the relationship between:
A) wage inflation and unemployment
B) price inflation and unemployment
C) wage inflation and price inflation
D) price inflation and output
A) wage inflation and unemployment
B) price inflation and unemployment
C) wage inflation and price inflation
D) price inflation and output
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24
If the long-run Phillips curve shifts to the left, the economy will experience a(n) ____ short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment.
A) more favourable
B) less favourable
C) indeterminate
D) constant
A) more favourable
B) less favourable
C) indeterminate
D) constant
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25
An increase in expected inflation:
A) shifts the short-run Phillips curve to the left
B) increases the unemployment rate along the Phillips curve
C) decreases the unemployment rate along the Phillips curve
D) shifts the short-run Phillips curve to the right
A) shifts the short-run Phillips curve to the left
B) increases the unemployment rate along the Phillips curve
C) decreases the unemployment rate along the Phillips curve
D) shifts the short-run Phillips curve to the right
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26
Friedman and Phelps argued:
A) that there is never a trade-off between inflation and unemployment
B) that there is always a trade-off between inflation and unemployment in the long run
C) that the long-run Phillips curve is vertical
D) all of the above
A) that there is never a trade-off between inflation and unemployment
B) that there is always a trade-off between inflation and unemployment in the long run
C) that the long-run Phillips curve is vertical
D) all of the above
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27
If the sacrifice ratio is 5 per cent, reducing the inflation rate from 10 per cent to 5 per cent would require sacrificing _____ per cent of annual output.
A) 5
B) 10
C) 20
D) 25
A) 5
B) 10
C) 20
D) 25
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28
Samuelson and Solow believed that the Phillips curve:
A) would shift to the right if the central bank used expansionary monetary policy to reduce unemployment
B) implied that low unemployment was associated with low inflation
C) offered policymakers a menu of possible economic outcomes from which to choose
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
A) would shift to the right if the central bank used expansionary monetary policy to reduce unemployment
B) implied that low unemployment was associated with low inflation
C) offered policymakers a menu of possible economic outcomes from which to choose
D) all of the above
E) none of the above
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29
The sacrifice ratio is:
A) the sum of the inflation and unemployment rates
B) the percentage by which actual output falls below full employment output for every one percentage point that actual unemployment is above the natural rate of unemployment
C) the inflation rate divided by the unemployment rate
D) the number of percentage points of annual output that are lost in the process of reducing inflation by one percentage point
A) the sum of the inflation and unemployment rates
B) the percentage by which actual output falls below full employment output for every one percentage point that actual unemployment is above the natural rate of unemployment
C) the inflation rate divided by the unemployment rate
D) the number of percentage points of annual output that are lost in the process of reducing inflation by one percentage point
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30
According to the theory of rational expectations, an announced policy of reducing the rate of growth of the money supply will result in people:
A) not changing their forecasts of inflation
B) increasing their forecasts of expected inflation
C) reducing their forecasts of expected inflation
D) doing none of the above
A) not changing their forecasts of inflation
B) increasing their forecasts of expected inflation
C) reducing their forecasts of expected inflation
D) doing none of the above
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31
According to Friedman and Phelps, policymakers _____.
A) do face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but only a temporary one
B) do face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but only in the long run
C) do not face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but often act as if they do
D) do not face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but should act as if they do
A) do face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but only a temporary one
B) do face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but only in the long run
C) do not face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but often act as if they do
D) do not face a trade-off between inflation and unemployment, but should act as if they do
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32
Faced with an adverse supply shock, the economy experiences an aggregate-supply curve shift to the:
A) left, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the left
B) left, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the right
C) right, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the right
D) right, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the left
A) left, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the left
B) left, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the right
C) right, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the right
D) right, and this shift is associated with a shift in the short-run Phillips curve to the left
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33
At points along the long-run Phillips curve:
A) the economy is at full employment
B) the economy is below full employment
C) expected inflation equals actual inflation
D) both A and C
A) the economy is at full employment
B) the economy is below full employment
C) expected inflation equals actual inflation
D) both A and C
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34
If the long-run Phillips curve shifts to the right, the economy will have _____ for any given rate of money growth and inflation.
A) lower unemployment and lower output
B) lower unemployment and higher output
C) higher unemployment and lower output
D) higher unemployment and higher output
A) lower unemployment and lower output
B) lower unemployment and higher output
C) higher unemployment and lower output
D) higher unemployment and higher output
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35
Disinflation is defined as:
A) a zero rate of inflation
B) a constant rate of inflation
C) a reduction in the rate of inflation
D) deflation
A) a zero rate of inflation
B) a constant rate of inflation
C) a reduction in the rate of inflation
D) deflation
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36
A vertical long-run Phillips curve:
A) is based on the classical theory of invisible hands
B) is consistent with money non-neutrality
C) implies that inflation and unemployment are independent of each other in the long run
D) none of the above
E) all of the above
A) is based on the classical theory of invisible hands
B) is consistent with money non-neutrality
C) implies that inflation and unemployment are independent of each other in the long run
D) none of the above
E) all of the above
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37
The natural rate of unemployment is:
A) the socially desirable unemployment rate
B) beyond the influence of monetary policy
C) constant over time
D) all of the above
A) the socially desirable unemployment rate
B) beyond the influence of monetary policy
C) constant over time
D) all of the above
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38
See the graph below. In the short run, a decrease in the rate of growth of the money supply will move the economy from point K to point ____.
A) G
B) M
C) H
D) L

A) G
B) M
C) H
D) L
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39
If the sacrifice ratio is 5 per cent, then reducing the inflation rate from 12 per cent to 4 per cent would require sacrificing _____ per cent of annual output.
A) 5
B) 8
C) 13
D) 40
A) 5
B) 8
C) 13
D) 40
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40
According to the theory of rational expectations, people:
A) use only past inflation rates when following expectations of future inflation rates
B) always forecast inflation correctly
C) optimally use all information they have when forecasting future inflation rates
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
A) use only past inflation rates when following expectations of future inflation rates
B) always forecast inflation correctly
C) optimally use all information they have when forecasting future inflation rates
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
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41
What is the lesser of two evils - high unemployment or high inflation? Do policy makers have to make this choice all the time? If so, what is the correct choice, according to this chapter?
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42
TThe increase in the price of oil in 2010 could be attributed to:
A) speculation over the levels of global reserves
B) reduction in supply of oil
C) increase in the costs of drilling
D) all of the above
A) speculation over the levels of global reserves
B) reduction in supply of oil
C) increase in the costs of drilling
D) all of the above
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43
Suppose a country is experiencing a hyperinflation. Even a small sacrifice ratio would suggest that it would be incredibly costly for such a country to eliminate inflation. For example, suppose the sacrifice ratio is one, but inflation is running at 5000 per cent per year. Then the sacrifice ratio suggests that it would cost 50 years worth of output to get inflation to zero! This is obviously not right. Why does the sacrifice ratio not provide a good way of measuring the cost of ending a hyperinflation?
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44
The Phillips curve is:
A) a negative association between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate
B) a negative association between the interest rate and the unemployment rate
C) a positive association between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate
D) a positive association between the growth rate and the unemployment rate
A) a negative association between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate
B) a negative association between the interest rate and the unemployment rate
C) a positive association between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate
D) a positive association between the growth rate and the unemployment rate
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45
Friedman and Phelps concluded that policymakers face a _____ trade-off between inflation and unemployment.
A) Temporary
B) Permanent
C) A and B
D) None of the above
A) Temporary
B) Permanent
C) A and B
D) None of the above
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46
Using the theory of rational expectations of inflation, identify how statements made by the government and RBA, could affect the rate of inflation.
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47
If a hurricane hit an oil refinery and drove up the oil price, what would be the effect on the short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment?
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48
The natural rate of unemployment is:The natural rate of unemployment is:
A) the non-acceleration inflation rate of unemployment
B) where the unemployment rate tends towards its normal level
C) beyond the influence of monetary policy
D) all of the above
A) the non-acceleration inflation rate of unemployment
B) where the unemployment rate tends towards its normal level
C) beyond the influence of monetary policy
D) all of the above
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49
When the RBA contracts monetary policy, what is the effect on the Phillips curve in the short-run?
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50
Most economists believe that:
Most economists believe that:
A) there is no short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
B) there is a temporary trade-off between inflation and unemployment
C) there is no long-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
Most economists believe that:
A) there is no short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
B) there is a temporary trade-off between inflation and unemployment
C) there is no long-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment
D) both A and B
E) both B and C
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51
Explain how policymakers could use monetary and fiscal policies to move the economy along the Phillips curve in the direction of higher inflation and lower unemployment.
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52
A group of economists offer the theory that the economy will reduce inflation without the cost of _____ if people are rational.
A) high unemployment and low output
B) low unemployment and high output
C) high unemployment and high output
D) low unemployment and low output
A) high unemployment and low output
B) low unemployment and high output
C) high unemployment and high output
D) low unemployment and low output
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53
Economists have various theories of how expectations may be formed. The textbook discusses the theory of rational expectations. Another possibility is that people have adaptive expectations, which means they form their expectations based on recent history. (For example, people might guess that the inflation rate next year will be the same as it was this year.) Would it be easier to eliminate inflation when people have rational expectations or when they have adaptive expectations?
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54
Proponents of rational expectations theory argue that the sacrifice ratio could be as small as:
A) 4 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 2 per cent
D) 1 per cent
E) 0 per cent
A) 4 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 2 per cent
D) 1 per cent
E) 0 per cent
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55
The equation by Friedman and Phelps of a relationship between the unemployment rate and its natural rate can be summarised as:
A) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment /(Actual inflation - Expected inflation)
B) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - a(Actual inflation - Expected inflation)
C) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - Actual inflation
D) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - Expected inflation
A) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment /(Actual inflation - Expected inflation)
B) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - a(Actual inflation - Expected inflation)
C) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - Actual inflation
D) Unemployment rate = Natural rate of unemployment - Expected inflation
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56
If the sacrifice ratio is 6 per cent, then reducing the inflation rate from 10 per cent to 4 per cent would require sacrificing _____ per cent of annual output.
A) 6
B) 36
C) 13
D) 40
A) 6
B) 36
C) 13
D) 40
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57
Suppose that the RBA increases the money supply. What will happen to unemployment in the short run? What will happen to unemployment in the long run?
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58
Most macroeconomic variables - for example, GDP or inflation or unemployment - can be easily measured. Expectations, however, are difficult - perhaps impossible - to measure accurately. Why do macroeconomists give such prominence in their theory to such an elusive variable?
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