ECON201 - Exam 2 - Review Flashcards
If the MPC in an economy is .75, a $1 billion increase in taxes will ultimately reduce consumption by:
$3 billion.
When the required reserve ratio is increased, the excess reserves of member banks are:
Reduced and the multiple by which the commercial banking system can lend is reduced.
If you are estimating your total expenses for school next semester, you are using money
primarily as:
A unit of account.
The total demand for money curve will shift to the right as a result of:
An increase in nominal GDP.
If the MPC is .70 and gross investment increases by $3 billion, the equilibrium GDP will:
Increase by $10 billion.
Money functions as:
ALL OF THE ABOVE: a store of value, a unit of account, and a medium of exchange.
In the late 1990s the U. S. stock market boomed, causing U.S. consumption to rise. Economists refer to this outcome as the:
Wealth effect.
The consumption schedule shows:
The amounts households plan or intend to consume at various possible levels of aggregate income.
If the MPC in an economy is .8, government could shift the aggregate demand curve
rightward by $100 billion by:
Decreasing taxes by $25 billion.
The MPC can be defined as that fraction of a:
Change in income that is spent.
The asset demand for money:
Varies inversely with the rate of interest.
Refer to the above graph. A shift of the consumption schedule from C2 to C1 might be
caused by a(an):
Reverse wealth effect, caused by a decrease in stock market prices.
If the Fed were to increase the legal reserve ratio, we would expect:
Higher interest rates, a contracted GDP, and appreciation of the dollar.
Given the expected rate of return on all possible investment opportunities in the economy:
An increase in the real rate of interest will reduce the level of investment.
The determinants of aggregate supply:
Include input prices and resource productivity.
In the United States, the money supply (M1) is comprised of:
Coins, paper currency, and checkable deposits.
Refer to the above data. After a deposit of $10 billion of new currency into a checking account
in the banking system, excess reserves will increase by:
$9 billion.
Which of the following represents the most expansionary fiscal policy?
A $10 billion increase in government spending
Open-market operations refer to:
The purchase or sale of government securities by the Fed.
A commercial bank can add to its actual reserves by:
Borrowing from a Federal Reserve Bank.
Suppose a commercial bank has checkable deposits of $100,000 and the legal reserve ratio is 10 percent. If the bank’s required and excess reserves are equal, then its actual reserves:
Are $20,000.
Overnight loans from one bank to another for reserve purposes entail an interest rate
called the:
Federal funds rate.
The consumption schedule shows:
A direct relationship between aggregate consumption and aggregate income.
The purchasing power of the dollar:
Is the reciprocal of the price level.
In which of the following sets of circumstances can we confidently expect inflation?
aggregate supply decreases and aggregate demand increases
Expansionary fiscal policy is so named because it:
Is designed to expand real GDP.
The three main tools of monetary policy are:
The discount rate, the reserve ratio, and open-market operations.
A bond having no expiration date: bond price = $1000; bond fixed annual interest payment = $100; bond annual interest rate = 10 percent.
Refer to the above information. If the price of this bond falls by $200, the interest rate will:
Rise by 2.5 percentage points.
The discount rate is the interest:
Rate at which the Federal Reserve Banks lend to commercial banks.
The multiplier effect means that:
A small increase in investment can cause GDP to change by a larger amount.
When current government expenditures exceed current tax revenues and the economy is achieving full employment:
The full-employment budget has a deficit.
The Fed can change the money supply by:
Doing all of the above.
If the dollar appreciates relative to foreign currencies, we would expect:
A country’s net exports to rise.
In the United States monetary policy is the responsibility of the:
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.