Class 5. The IS-LM model and Aggregate Demand

Similar documents
Exam #2 Review Answers ECNS 303

Part2 Multiple Choice Practice Qs

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I

Lecture 4: 16/07/2012

GDP accounting. GDP: market value of all newly produced goods and services produced in a given location in a specific time period

OVERVIEW. 1. This chapter presents a graphical approach to the determination of income. Two different graphical approaches are provided.

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I CHAPTER 10 0

macro macroeconomics Aggregate Demand I N. Gregory Mankiw CHAPTER TEN PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich fifth edition

Midterm 2 - Economics 101 (Fall 2009) You will have 45 minutes to complete this exam. There are 5 pages and 63 points. Version A.

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2004

Chapter 11 Aggregate Demand I: Building the IS -LM Model

Chapter 9 Chapter 10

1 Figure 1 (A) shows what the IS LM model looks like for the case in which the Fed holds the

MACROECONOMICS. Aggregate Demand I: Building the IS-LM Model. N. Gregory Mankiw. PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich

Aggregate Demand I: Building the IS -LM Model (continued)

Gehrke: Macroeconomics Winter term 2012/13. Exercises

CHAPTERS 1-5 (Blanchard)

9. CHAPTER: Aggregate Demand I

SAMPLE EXAM QUESTIONS FOR FALL 2018 ECON3310 MIDTERM 2

EQ: What are the Assumptions of Keynesian Economic Theory?

Fiscal and Monetary Policy in the Growth Model. Introduction

Economics 102 Discussion Handout Week 14 Spring Aggregate Supply and Demand: Summary

Notes for Econ FALL 2010 Midterm 1 Exam

Homework Assignment #6. Due Tuesday, 11/28/06. Multiple Choice Questions:

EC202 Macroeconomics

Problem Set #2. Intermediate Macroeconomics 101 Due 20/8/12

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set # 2, Answers

Economics 102 Discussion Handout Week 14 Spring Aggregate Supply and Demand: Summary

= C + I + G + NX = Y 80r

Homework Assignment #3 ECO 3203, Fall Consider a closed economy with demand for goods as follows:

Keynesian Theory (IS-LM Model): how GDP and interest rates are determined in Short Run with Sticky Prices.

Chapter 23. The Keynesian Framework. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives (Cont.)

6. The Aggregate Demand and Supply Model

1. What was the unemployment rate in December 2001?

Macroeconomics - Licence 1 Economie Gestion

Chapter 22. Adding Government and Trade to the Simple Macro Model. In this chapter you will learn to. Introducing Government. Government Purchases

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Faculty of Arts and Science. April Examination 2016 ECO 209Y. Duration: 2 hours

Exercise 2 Short Run Output and Interest Rate Determination in an IS-LM Model

ECON 3312 Macroeconomics Exam 2 Spring 2017 Prof. Crowder

Chapter 23. Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand in the Short Run. In this chapter you will learn to. The Demand Side of the Economy

Cosumnes River College Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 6 Due April 3, 2017

VII. Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

ECON 3312 Macroeconomics Exam 1 Fall 2016

FINAL EXAM: Macro Winter 2017

Economics Macroeconomic Theory. Spring Final Exam, Tuesday 6 May 2003

Business Fluctuations. Notes 05. Preface. IS Relation. LM Relation. The IS and the LM Together. Does the IS-LM Model Fit the Facts?

Principles of Macroeconomics December 17th, 2005 name: Final Exam (100 points)

Monetary Macroeconomics Lecture 3. Mark Hayes

ECO 209Y MACROECONOMIC THEORY AND POLICY LECTURE 3: AGGREGATE EXPENDITURE AND EQUILIBRIUM INCOME

ECO 2013: Macroeconomics Valencia Community College

Test Review. Question 1. Answer 1. Question 2. Answer 2. Question 3. Econ 719 Test Review Test 1 Chapters 1,2,8,3,4,7,9. Nominal GDP.

ECNS Fall 2009 Practice Examination Opportunity

Keynesian Matters Source:

Exercise 1 Output Determination, Aggregate Demand and Fiscal Policy

9. ISLM model. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations CHAPTER 9. slide 0

Econ 3 Practice Final Exam

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory / Macroeconomic Analysis (ECON 3560/5040) Midterm Exam (Answers)

Principle of Macroeconomics, Summer B Practice Exam

ECON 3560/5040 Week 8-9

KOÇ UNIVERSITY ECON 202 Macroeconomics Fall Problem Set VI C = (Y T) I = 380 G = 400 T = 0.20Y Y = C + I + G.

ECO 209Y L0101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #2

ECON 3312 Macroeconomics Exam 1 Spring Name

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 9 Introduction to Economic Fluctuations

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Quiz # 1, Questions

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, October 2016

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Fall 2006 Solutions to Problem Set 4 (35 points)

SOLUTION ECO 202Y - L5101 MACROECONOMIC THEORY. Term Test #1 LAST NAME FIRST NAME STUDENT NUMBER. University of Toronto June 18, 2002 INSTRUCTIONS:

Principles of Macroeconomics December 15th, 2005 name: Final Exam (100 points)

ECON 330: Money and Banking HW 14 Solution

Chapter 11 1/19/2018. Basic Keynesian Model Expenditure and Tax Multipliers

a. Fill in the following table (you will need to expand it from the truncated form provided here). Round all your answers to the nearest hundredth.

Name: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II, Fall 2008 Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko Problem Set 2 (53 points). Due Friday, November 14

Economics 102 Discussion Handout Week 13 Fall Introduction to Keynesian Model: Income and Expenditure. The Consumption Function

Final Term Papers. Fall 2009 (Session 03) ECO401. (Group is not responsible for any solved content) Subscribe to VU SMS Alert Service

The Core of Macroeconomic Theory

Problem Set #2. Intermediate Macroeconomics 101 Due 20/8/12

The Short-Run: IS/LM

This paper is not to be removed from the Examination Halls UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

Homework Assignment #6. Due Tuesday, 11/28/06. Multiple Choice Questions:

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics. Chapter 3 National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

ECON 202 MACROECONOMIC THEORY 18 April 2011 Dr. Yetkiner. Midterm Exam

Deviations from full employment in a closed economy Short-run equilibrium Monetary and fiscal policy

Government Expenditure

International Monetary Policy

PAPER No. 2: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS MODULE No.29 : AGGREGATE DEMAND FUNCTION

CHAPTER 23 OUTPUT AND PRICES IN THE SHORT RUN

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER ASSIGNMENT 2 INTERMEDIATE MACRO ECONOMICS IMA612S

Part I (45 points; Mark your answers in a SCANTRON)

Practice Test 1: Multiple Choice

EC2105, Professor Laury EXAM 3, FORM A (4/10/02)

Final Exam - Economics 101 (Fall 2009) You will have 120 minutes to complete this exam. There are 105 points and 7 pages

MACROECONOMICS II - IS-LM (Part 1)

Answers to Questions: Chapter 8

Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Self-Correcting Economy

ophillips Curve Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 9 Saving, Investment, and Interest Rates

3 Macroeconomics SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Transcription:

Class 5. The IS-LM model and Aggregate Demand 1. Use the Keynesian cross to predict the impact of: a) An increase in government purchases. b) An increase in taxes. c) An equal increase in government purchases and taxes. 2. In the Keynesian cross, assume that the consumption function is given by C=200+0.75(Y-T) Planned investment is 100 ; government purchases and taxes are both 100. a) Graph planned expenditure as a function of income. b) What is the equilibrium level of income? c) If government purchases increase to 125, what is the new equilibrium income? d) What level of government purchases is needed to achieve an income of 1,600? 3. Suppose the tax system is T = T + ty where T is a fixed level of taxation and t is the marginal tax rate. a) How does this tax system change the way consumption responds to changes in GDP? 1

b) In the Keynesian cross, how does this tax system alter the government-purchases multiplier? c) In the IS-LM model, how does this tax system alter the slope of the IS curve? 4. Consider the impact of an increase in thriftiness in the Keynesian cross. Suppose the consumption function is C = C+ c( Y T) where C is autonomous consumption and c is the marginal propensity to consume. a) What happens to equilibrium income when the society becomes more thrifty, as represented by a decline in C? b) What happens to equilibrium saving? c) Why do you suppose this result is called the paradox of thrift? d) Does this paradox arise in the classical model? Why or why not? 5. Suppose the money demand function is d ( M P) = 1,000 100r where r is the interest rate in percent. The money supply is 1,000 and the price level is 2. a) Graph the supply and demand for real money balances. b) What is the equilibrium interest rate? 2

c) Assume that the price level is fixed. What happens to the equilibrium interest rate if the supply of money is raised from 1,000 to 1,200? d) If the Fed wishes to raise the interest rate to 7 percent, what money supply should it set? 6. Use the IS-LM model to predict the effects of each of the following shocks on income, the interest rate, consumption and investment. In each case, explain what the Central Bank should do to keep income at its initial level. a) After the invention of a new high-speed computer chip, many firms decide to upgrade their computers systems. b) A wave of credit card fraud increases the frequency with which people make transactions in cash. c) A best seller titled Retire Rich convinces the public to increase the percentage of their income devoted to saving. 3

4 7. Consider the following economy: C = 200 + 0.75( Y T) I = 200 25r ( ) d M P = Y 100r s M = 1,000 P = 2 G = T = 100 a) Graph the IS curve for r ranging from 0 to 8. b) Graph the LM curve, also for r ranging from 0 to 8. c) Find the equilibrium interest rate and the equilibrium level of income Y. d) Suppose the government purchases are increased from 100 to 150. How much does the IS curve shift? What are the new equilibrium r and Y? e) Suppose instead that the money supply is raised from 1,000 to 1,200. How much does the LM curve shift? What are the new equilibrium r and Y? f) With the initial values for monetary and fiscal policy, suppose that the price level rises from 2 to 4. What happens? What are the new equilibrium r and Y?

g) Derive and graph an equation for the aggregate demand curve. What happens to this aggregate demand curve if fiscal or monetary policy changes as in questions d) and e)? 8. Explain why each of the following statements is true. Discuss the impact of monetary and fiscal policy in each of these special cases and state how the shape of the aggregate demand curve is affected. a) If investment does not depend on the interest rate, the IS curve is vertical. b) If money demand does not depend on the interest rate, the LM curve is vertical. c) If money demand does not depend on income, the LM curve is horizontal. d) If money demand is extremely sensitive to the interest rate, the LM curve is horizontal. 5 9. Suppose the government wants to raise investment but keep output constant. In the IS-LM model, what mix of monetary and fiscal policy will achieve this goal? In the early 1980s the US government cut taxes and run a budget deficit while the Fed (the US Central Bank) pursued a tight

monetary policy. What effect should this policy mix have? 10. The Central Bank is considering two alternative monetary policies: either holding the money supply constant and letting the interest rate adjust; or adjusting the money supply to hold the interest rate constant. In the IS-LM model, which policy will better stabilize output under the following conditions? a) All shocks to the economy arise from exogenous changes in the demand for goods and services. b) All shocks to the economy arise from exogenous changes in the demand for money. 11. Suppose that the demand for real money balances depends on disposable income; that is, d ( M P) = L[ r,( Y t) ] Using the IS-LM model, discuss whether this change in the money demand function alters the following: a) The analysis of changes in government purchases. b) The analysis of changes in taxes. 6