LahoreSchool of Economics
Winter Term, 2010
BSc II – Sec B
Macroeconomics I
Practice MCQs for Final Term Exam
- Most economists prior to Keynes thought
- unemployment could be eliminated by an active fiscal policy
- full employment was the normal condition
- the economy would always adjust to a natural rate of inflation
- monetary policy could eliminate the business cycle
- government intervention was needed to avoid persistent unemployment
- In the Keynesian aggregate supply curve case,
- firms will always supply the amount of goods demanded at each price
- consumers will demand whatever is supplied by firms at each price
- the economy is always sat potential GDP
- unemployment is always at natural rate
- all of the above
- Which of the following is FALSE?
- the AS curve is horizontal in the Keynesian case
- the AS curve is vertical in the classical case
- the AS curve is upward sloping in the medium run
- the AS curve is more price elastic in the long run than in the short run
- none of the above
- A decrease in aggregate demand can be caused by
- a decrease in MPS
- a decrease in consumer confidence
- a decrease in money demand
- all of the above
- none of the above
- In the medium run, if the government purchases are decreased and nominal money supply is increased, then we can expect that
- AD decreases and AS increases
- AD, prices and interest rate will all increase
- AD and prices will decrease, while the interest rate increases
- interest rate decreases, while AD and prices may increase, decrease or remain the same
- none of the above
- In a normal AD-AS curve with an upward sloping AS curve, an increase in money supply will
- increase output and the price level but not affect the interest rate
- increase output, the price level and the interest rate
- increase output and the price level but decrease the interest rate
- unchanged output, increased price level but decreased interest rate
- the price level increases, but output and the interest rate remain unchanged
- According to the Phillips Curve relationship, if unemployment is at the natural rate, then
- the rate of inflation is zero
- nominal wages will always be equal to real wages
- the labor supply will be totally price elastic
- prices will always immediately adjust to changes in money supply
- none of the above
- The upward sloping AS curve will shift to the left if
- labor force productivity increases
- actual output is lower than the full employment level
- the mark up over the labor costs fall
- actual output is higher than the full employment level
- the level of potential output increases
- Which of the following is not a property of the upward sloping AS curve
- if actual inflation is above expected inflation, the AS curve shifts to the right
- the position of the AS curve depends on the past level of prices
- the AS curve becomes steeper as the impact of changes in output and employment on wages becomes larger
- if output is below the full-employment level, the AS curve will shift to the right
- if wages respond very little to changes in unemployment, the AS curve is very flat
- Assume the economy is at full employment and the SBP restricts money supply. What will be the effects on the level of output and prices?
- in the medium run output and prices will both decrease, but in the long run output will remain the same, while prices will decrease
- output will not be affected in the medium or long run, but prices will decrease in the long run
- output will decrease but only in the long run, while prices will decrease in the medium and long run
- in the medium run, output will remain the same, but in the long run output and prices will decline
- output and prices will decline in the medium and long run
- In the long run, real money balances
- are not affected by expansionary fiscal policy but increase if expansionary monetary policy is employed
- are not effected by expansionary monetary policy but increase if expansionary fiscal policy is employed
- are not affected by restrictive monetary policy, but increase if restrictive fiscal policy is employed
- are not effected by fiscal or monetary policy
- decrease if either restrictive fiscal or monetary policy is employed
- What sort of event could lead to a simultaneous decrease in inflation and unemployment rates?
- a decrease in money supply
- an increase in money supply
- an adverse supply shock
- a decrease in material prices
- restrictive monetary policy following an adverse supply shock
- If policy makers want to get the price level quickly back to its original level following a supply shock, they need to
- implement restrictive monetary policy
- decrease taxes
- increase government transfer payments
- combine a tax increase with an increase in government spending of equal magnitude
- levy a tariff on imported oil
- If the government stimulates aggregate demand in response to an adverse supply shock,
- the inflation rate will increase but frictional unemployment will decrease
- the unemployment rate will increase but the inflation rate will decline
- an increase in unemployment can be avoided but only at the cost of increased inflation
- high inflation can be avoided but the rate of unemployment will increase
- the inflation and unemployment rates will be reduced simultaneously
- Which of the following event(s) is most likely to leave the level of prices relatively unchanged while increasing the level of output?
- an increase in money supply combined with an income tax increase
- expansionary monetary policy in response to an adverse supply shock
- expansionary fiscal policy employed after a favorable supply shock
- restrictive monetary policy in response to an oil price decrease
- none of these
- If money supply were not fixed but instead were interest sensitive (upward sloping MS curve), then
- the LM curve will become flatter
- the LM curve will become steeper
- the LM curve would shift to the left
- monetary policy will be more effective
- both a. and d.
- The slope of the AD curve will become steeper if
- money demand becomes more income inelastic
- money demand becomes more interest elastic
- investment becomes more interest elastic
- the income tax rate is decreased
- none of the above
- Fiscal policy is weakest and monetary policy is strongest when
- we are in the liquidity trap
- money demand is very interest elastic
- investment is very interest inelastic
- we are in the classical case
- the IS curve is very steep and the LM curve is very flat
- According to the rational expectations equilibrium approach
- announced changes in money supply have no effect on nominal GDP
- announced changes in money supply have no effect on prices
- unannounced changes in money supply temporarily affect output and prices
- unannounced changes in fiscal policy have no effect on prices
- none of the above
- The rational expectations equilibrium approach have influenced the modern macroeconomic thinking since
- empirical studies have proven without a doubt that monetary policy is incapable of changing real output
- evidence has shown that recessions have never been policy induced but have instead been caused by misguided government policy
- most economists now admit that wages are completely flexible and that markets always clear immediately
- many modern economists agree that macroeconomic models need to be developed from basic microeconomic foundations
- none of the above
- The rational expectations equilibrium approach and the frictionless classical model
- both allow for transitory deviation from full employment
- both predict ‘policy irrelevance’
- both predict that there is a difference in short run output whether a policy is anticipated or not
- classicals assume people make no systematic errors while Lucas assumes they do
- all of the above
- According to traditional view of government debt, a tax cut will lead to all of the following in the short run except a(n):
- increase in consumption
- increase in private saving
- increase in investment
- decrease in public saving
- During the early 1980s, taxes were cut substantially, and national savings fell. This evidence would seem to support
- the traditional view of government debt
- the Ricardian view of government debt
- neither view of government debt
- the view that government debt is neutral