A) the reduction in the rate of increase in money supply.
B) the growth of aggregate supply.
C) the growth of aggregate demand.
D) the growth of real GDP.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) nominal wages become real wages.
B) real wages become nominal wages.
C) input prices start to change from being inflexible to fully flexible.
D) sufficient time has elapsed for real GDP to increase and unemployment to decrease.
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Multiple Choice
A) continuous leftward shifts of aggregate supply.
B) a rightward shift of an economy's long-run aggregate supply.
C) one time shift in aggregate supply.
D) no shift in aggregate supply.
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Multiple Choice
A) shift the aggregate supply curve from AS2 to AS3.
B) increase the real output from Q1 to Q2.
C) shift the aggregate supply curve from AS2 to AS1.
D) increase the real output from Qf to Q2.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) It is a reduction in the inflation rate from year to year.
B) It is used to describe instances when the inflation rate is negative.
C) It refers to misinformation about the real and nominal rates of inflation.
D) It refers to miscalculations about the inflation rates.
Correct Answer
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) decrease in per unit production costs that shift the short-run aggregate supply curve to the right.
B) increase in per unit production costs that shift the short-run aggregate supply curve to the left
C) increase in government spending.
D) decrease in government regulation.
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Multiple Choice
A) there is no empirically proven relationship between tax rates and incentives.
B) large reductions in personal and corporate income taxes will increase aggregate supply much more than aggregate demand.
C) the only way to eliminate stagflation is to increase taxes to induce a recession severe enough to eliminate inflationary expectations.
D) large cuts in personal and corporate income taxes will increase aggregate demand more than aggregate supply.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the Bank of Canada has taken no action to change the nation's money supply.
B) the Bank of Canada has increased the money supply much less than the increase in aggregate supply.
C) the increase in the money supply by Bank of Canada has matched the increase in aggregate supply.
D) the Bank of Canada usually engineers inflationary rightward shifts of the aggregate demand curve that are faster than the deflationary rightward shifts of the aggregate supply curve.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) is downward sloping.
B) is vertical.
C) is horizontal.
D) is upward sloping.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) shift this curve outward.
B) shift this curve inward.
C) move this economy southeast along the curve.
D) move this economy northwest along the curve.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) argue that a tax cut will increase aggregate demand by more than it increases real output.
B) contend that the relationship between tax rates and economic incentives is small and of uncertain direction.
C) believe that a decline in tax rates will give rise to budget deficits.
D) make all of the above points.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) economy is operating in the short run.
B) economy has entered the long run.
C) unemployment rate will increase.
D) inflation rate will decrease.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) a higher rate of unemployment is associated with each inflation rate.
B) a lower rate of unemployment is associated with each inflation rate.
C) the aggregate supply curve has shifted to the right.
D) the aggregate demand curve has shifted to the left.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) automatically shifts the aggregate demand curve rightward.
B) causes the Phillips Curve to shift leftward and downward.
C) can be caused by a boost in the rate of growth of productivity.
D) can cause stagflation.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) move the economy along the Phillips Curve toward less unemployment.
B) move the economy along the Phillips Curve toward less inflation.
C) shift the Phillips Curve to the left.
D) shift the Phillips Curve to the right.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) disinflation.
B) a recession.
C) a price level surprise.
D) inflation
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) adverse shocks to aggregate supply.
B) adverse shocks to aggregate demand.
C) an increase in the misery index.
D) the Vietnam War.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) real wages, but in the long run only nominal wages.
B) nominal wages, but in the long run only real wages.
C) real output and the price level, but in the long-run only real output.
D) real output and the price level, but in the long-run only the price level.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) lower tax rates on businesses will shift the aggregate supply curve rightward.
B) demand creates its own supply.
C) tariffs should be imposed on imports to shift the Canadian aggregate supply curve rightward.
D) the federal budget deficit should be eliminated through increases in taxes.
Correct Answer
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