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Chapter 14 Practice Quiz Tutorial Aggregate Demand and Supply

Chapter 14 Practice Quiz Tutorial Aggregate Demand and Supply. ©2004 South-Western. 1. The aggregate demand curve is defined as a. the net national product. b. the sum of wages, rent, interest, and profits. c. the real GDP purchased at different possible price levels.

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Chapter 14 Practice Quiz Tutorial Aggregate Demand and Supply

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  1. Chapter 14Practice Quiz TutorialAggregate Demand and Supply ©2004 South-Western

  2. 1. The aggregate demand curve is defined as a. the net national product. b. the sum of wages, rent, interest, and profits. c. the real GDP purchased at different possible price levels. d. the total dollar value of household expectations. C. Answers a, b, and c are not real GDP purchases at different possible price levels during a time period.

  3. 2. When the supply of credit is fixed, an increase in the price level stimulates the demand for credit, which, in turn, reduces consumption and investment spending. This argument is called the a. real balance effect. b. interest-rate effect. c. net exports effect. d. substitution effect. B. At a high price level, the demand for borrowed money increases and results in higher cost of borrowing (interest rates). High interest rates result in lower consumption and investment spending.

  4. 3. The real balance effect occurs because a higher price level will reduce the real value of people’s a. financial assets. b. wages. c. unpaid debt. d. physical investments. A. As the price levels increases, the dollars people receive in their paychecks and wealth are worth less. As a result, real GDP demand decreases.

  5. 4. The net exports effect is the inverse relationship between net exports and the _______of an economy. a. real GDP. b. GDP deflator. c. price level. d. consumption spending. C. A higher domestic price level makes U.S. goods more expensive relative to foreign goods and vice versa.

  6. 5. Which of the following will shift the aggregate demand curve to the left? a. An increase in exports. b. An increase in investment. c. An increase in government spending. d. A decrease in government spending. D. Answers a, b, c shift the aggregate demand curve to the right.

  7. 6. Which of the following will not shift the aggregate demand curve to the left? a. Consumers become more optimistic about the future. b. Government spending decreases. c. Business optimism decreases. d. Consumers become pessimistic about the future. A. Answers b, c and d shift the aggregate demand curve leftward.

  8. 7. The popular theory prior to the Great Depression that the economy will automatically adjust to achieve full employment is a. supply-side economics. b. Keynesian economics. c. classical economics. d. mercantilism. C. Supply-side economic concerns shifts in aggregate supply. Keynesians do not believe the economy automatically adjusts to full employment. Mercantilism is the idea that gold or silver is the source of a nation’s wealth.

  9. 8. Classical economists believed that the a. price system was stable. b. goal of full employment was impossible. c. price system automatically adjusts the economy to full employment in the long run. d. government should attempt to restore full employment. C. This is a key assumption for the vertical shape of the classical aggregate supply curve.

  10. 9. Which of the following is not a range on the eclectic or general view of the aggregate supply curve? a. Classical range. b. Keynesian range. c. Intermediate range. d. Monetary range. D. Answers a, b, and c are the three different ranges of the aggregate supply at a level of real GDP below full employment.

  11. Three Ranges of the Aggregate Supply Curve AS Classical Range Full Employment Intermediate Range Price Level Keynesian Range Real GDP YK YF

  12. 10. Macroeconomic equilibrium occurs when a. aggregate supply exceeds aggregate demand. b. the economy is at full employment. c. aggregate demand equals aggregate supply. d. aggregate demand equals the average price level. C. Note that aggregate demand can equal aggregate supply at a level of real GDP below full employment.

  13. 11. Along the classical or vertical range of the aggregate supply curve, a decrease in the aggregate demand curve will decrease a. both the price level and real GDP. b. only real GDP. c. only the price level. d. neither real GDP or the price level. C. Along the vertical range of the aggregate supply curve, the economy is at full employment and only the price level changes.

  14. 12. Other factors held constant, a decrease in resource prices will shift the aggregate a. demand curve leftward. b. demand curve rightward. c. supply curve leftward. d. supply curve rightward. D. Changes in production costs do not affect the aggregate demand curve.

  15. 13. Assuming a fixed aggregate demand curve, a leftward shift in the aggregate supply curve causes a (an) a. increase in the price level and a decrease in real GDP. b. increase in the price level and an increase in real GDP. c. decrease in the price level and a decrease in real GDP. d. decrease in the price level and an increase in real GDP. A.

  16. Cost Push Inflation AS2 AS1 200 Price Level E2 150 Full employment 100 E1 AD 50 Real GDP 12 14 16 17 6 2 4 8 10

  17. 14. An increase in the price level caused by a rightward shift of the aggregate demand curve is called a. cost-push inflation. b. supply shock inflation. c. demand shock inflation. d. demand-pull inflation. D.

  18. Demand Pull Inflation AS 200 Price Level Full employment 150 E2 AD2 100 E1 50 AD1 Real GDP 12 14 16 17 6 2 4 8 10

  19. 15. Suppose workers become pessimistic about their future employment, which causes them to save more and spend less. If the economy is on the intermediate range of the aggregate supply curve, then a. both real GDP and the price level will fall. b. real GDP will fall and the price level will rise. c. real GDP will rise and the price level will fall. d. both real GDP and the price level will rise. A. A leftward movement of the aggregate demand curve along a downward sloping aggregate supply curve will result in lower prices and less employment.

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