A) expansionary monetary policy which was pursued.
B) Reagan tax cuts, the passage of the Economic Recovery Act in 1981.
C) increases in consumer and business firm optimism concerning future business conditions.
D) A and B are both correct.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) changing the money supply affects the economy with a lag.
B) changes in private spending must be offset by policy debate.
C) Both A and B are correct.
D) None of the above is correct.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) short and variable, policy changes affect AD quickly and are predictable.
B) zero, policy changes have an immediate effect on expenditures.
C) long and variable, policy changes affect AD slowly over time and are unpredictable.
D) long, but predictable.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the short-run level of unemployment and the effectiveness of monetary policy.
B) the long-run consequences of policies.
C) the effectiveness of monetary policy and the short-run inflation rate.
D) the short-run rate of inflation and level of unemployment.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) harming, losing
B) harming, gaining
C) investing in, losing
D) investing in, gaining
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) war
B) increased price of energy paid to foreigners
C) price of export commodities increase
D) diminished ability to collect taxes
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the time required for flexible prices to bring the economy back to the natural rate of unemployment is relatively short.
B) the IS curve is relatively flat because of the broad range of assets whose demand is very sensitive to changes in the interest rate.
C) the time required for flexible prices to return the economy to the natural level of real GDP is intolerably long.
D) the severity of the Great Depression was primarily related to the large decline in the supply of money.
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Multiple Choice
A) forced the Fed to follow restrictive monetary policy and caused a negative output ratio.
B) forced the Fed to follow restrictive monetary policy and caused a positive output ratio.
C) allowed the Fed to follow accommodative monetary policy and caused a negative output ratio.
D) allowed the Fed to follow accommodative monetary policy and push the output ratio toward zero.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) accelerate inflation during expansions.
B) increase unemployment during recessions.
C) accelerate inflation and increased unemployment.
D) dampen inflation and decrease unemployment.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) one-quarter
B) one-half
C) three-quarters
D) all
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) active policy intervention is ineffective.
B) active policy intervention is undesirable and perverse.
C) active policy intervention's benefits exceed its costs.
D) active policy intervention's benefits are less than its costs.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) uncertainty about the magnitude of the dynamic multiplier.
B) uncertainty about the length and variability of policy lags.
C) uncertainty about the costs of various policies.
D) All of the above are correct.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) opposed by most politicians.
B) favored by most economists.
C) likely to improve the use of monetary policy to deal with contractionary shocks which strike only one or two countries in Europe.
D) all of the above.
E) none of the above.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a central bank independent of political pressure may thereby not be serving the public's politically-revealed preferences.
B) a central bank bowing to political pressure cannot get the inflation rate below the unemployment rate.
C) a constant-growth-rate-of-money rule cannot stabilize inflation if unemployment is allowed to vary substantially.
D) a constant-growth-rate-of-high-powered-money rule allows too much variation in the growth of the actual money supply to hold down inflation.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) data lag, the time required to collect and analyze data.
B) effectiveness lag, the time required for the change in money supply to affect real output.
C) legislative lag, the time required for policymaking body to make decisions.
D) transmission lag, the time between the change in policy and the change in policy instruments.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the government has been a stabilizing force in the economy.
B) much of the existing unemployment voluntary.
C) the velocity of money is unstable.
D) policymakers are able to accurately forecast the future effect of current policy actions.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) Fed cares more about avoiding recessions and high unemployment than about avoiding inflation.
B) Fed cares more about avoiding inflation than about avoiding recessions and high unemployment.
C) Fed cares more about avoiding recessions than about avoiding high unemployment.
D) Fed cares more about avoiding high unemployment than about avoiding recessions.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) more, lengthened
B) more, shortened
C) less, lengthened
D) less, shortened
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) beneficial supply shocks which pushed down the inflation rate.
B) the Fed's efforts to help end the Asian financial crisis
C) the Fed's uncertainty about the concepts of the natural level of output and natural rate of unemployment.
D) All of the above.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) structural change in the economy
B) changes in multipliers
C) a longer estimated lag for monetary policy
D) none of the above
Correct Answer
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