FACULTY OF COMMERCE SPRING SESSION SECOND MID-TERM 2005 ECO120 MACROECONOMICS LECTURERS: Rod Duncan DAY & DATE: 1th November 2005 TIME: 1:00pm - 2:00 pm WRITING TIME: 50 Minutes READING TIME: 10 Minutes MATERIALS SUPPLIED BY UNIVERSITY: General Purpose Answer Sheet MATERIALS PERMITTED IN EXAMINATION: 2B Pencil/Eraser Battery/Solar Powered Calculator (no printer, non-programmable) NUMBER OF QUESTIONS: Part A: 20; Part B: 2 INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES: 1. Enter your name and student number and sign in the space provided at the bottom of this page. 2. This is a closed book examination; therefore no written material, reference books or notes will be permitted into the examination room. 3. Circle your answers for Part A on the General Purpose Answer Sheet. For Part B, write your answer in the space provided on this exam. Part A (multiple choice): Answer all questions (60 marks) Part B (short answer): Answer both of the questions (40 marks) 4. At the end of the exam, turn in both your exam paper and your answer sheet. STUDENT NAME: ............................................ STUDENT NO.: ........................ STUDENT SIGNATURE: ......................................................................................... ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 1 of 7 PART A Multiple Choice Questions (60 marks – 3 marks each) Answer all twenty (20) questions. 1. An increase in personal income taxes will lead to what outcome according to the AD-AS model? A) B) C) D) Prices rise, and output rises. Prices rise, and output falls. Prices fall, and output rises. Prices fall, and output falls. 2. An increase in government spending will lead to what outcome according to the AD-AS model? A) B) C) D) Prices rise, and output rises. Prices rise, and output falls. Prices fall, and output rises. Prices fall, and output falls. 3. If the Reserve Bank of Australia wishes to pursue a contractionary monetary policy, it could: A) B) C) D) Increase the supply of ESAs and raise the cash rate. Increase the supply of ESAs and lower the cash rate. Reduce the supply of ESAs and raise the cash rate. Reduce the supply of ESAs and lower the cash rate. 4. Bank loan rates: A) B) C) D) Stay the same when the cash rate rises. Fall when the cash rate rises. Rise when the cash rate rises. Have nothing to do with the cash rate. 5. If a bank has $2m in deposits, $100,000 in reserves and if the reserve ratio is 5%, then the bank has excess reserves of: A) B) C) D) -$50,000 $0 $50,000 $100,000 ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 2 of 7 6. If the banking systems reserve ratio is 5%, the simple money multiplier is: A) B) C) D) 1 5 20 25 7. Which of the following is true along the investment demand curve? A) When interest rates rise, it becomes more expensive to borrow and more investment is made. B) When interest rates rise, it becomes more expensive to borrow and less investment is made C) When interest rates fall, it becomes more expensive to borrow and more investment is made. D) When interest rates fall, it becomes more expensive to borrow and less investment is made 8. If the Reserve Bank of Australia increases the reserve ratio, the simple money multiplier: A) B) C) D) Is not affected. Falls. Rises. Stays the same. 9. When we state all prices in terms of the Australian dollar, we are using the Australian dollar as: A) B) C) D) A medium of exchange. A store of value. A unit of account. None of the above. 10. In the Quantity Theory of Money, if all else stays the same but the velocity of money rises: A) B) C) D) We should see a fall in prices. We should see a rise in prices. Real output should rise. Real output should fall. 11. In the Quantity Theory of Money, if velocity is constant, real output is rising at 3% per year and the money supply is rising at 5% per year: A) B) C) D) Then we will have 0% inflation. Then we will have 2% inflation. Then we will have 5% inflation. Then we will have 8% inflation. ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 3 of 7 12. Assume the economy is in a recession, what actions by the Reserve Bank of Australia would be the best way of moving the economy back to its natural rate? A) B) C) D) Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve left. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve left. 13. A rise in producer costs causes cost-push inflation, so if producer costs rise, we should see: A) B) C) D) High inflation and low unemployment. High inflation and high unemployment. Low inflation and low unemployment. Low inflation and high unemployment. 14. An increase in aggregate demand causes demand-pull inflation, so if we have a large increase in aggregate demand, we should see: A) B) C) D) High inflation and low unemployment. High inflation and high unemployment. Low inflation and low unemployment. Low inflation and high unemployment. 15. The economy is hit by a rise in oil prices, how should the Reserve Bank of Australia react if the Reserve Bank wants to avoid inflation? A) B) C) D) Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve left. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve left. 16. If the Reserve Bank of Australia is worried about low demand and deflation (falling prices) in the future, what might the RBA do now? A) B) C) D) Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Cut interest rates and shift the AD curve left. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve right. Raise interest rates and shift the AD curve left. 17. The economy suffers a recession because of a drop in investment demand. What process will lead to a return to the natural rate of output in the long-run if the government does not act? A) B) C) D) A drop in wages and a shift right of the AS curve. A rise in wages and a shift right of the AS curve A drop in wages and a shift left of the AS curve A rise in wages and a shift left of the AS curve. ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 4 of 7 18. The economy enters a boom because of a sharp increase in demand for Australian exports. What process will lead to a return to the natural rate of output in the long-run if the government does not act? A) B) C) D) A drop in wages and a shift right of the AS curve. A rise in wages and a shift right of the AS curve A drop in wages and a shift left of the AS curve A rise in wages and a shift left of the AS curve. 19. There are two different types of inflation in an AD-AS model. What reaction by the Federal government would be appropriate if the government is interested in keeping the economy at the natural rate of output? A) Cut spending with demand-pull inflation and cut spending with cost-push inflation. B) Cut spending with demand-pull inflation and raise spending with cost-push inflation. C) Raise spending with demand-pull inflation and raise spending with cost-push inflation. D) Raise spending with demand-pull inflation and cut spending with cost-push inflation. 20. The Phillips Curve shows the relationship between: A) B) C) D) The price level and unemployment. Unemployment and output. Output and inflation. Inflation and unemployment. ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 5 of 7 PART B (40 marks – 20 marks each) Answer both questions in the space provided on this sheet. QUESTION: B.1 Often the government uses monetary and fiscal policy together. When policies are working together, they are called “complementary”. The government cuts personal income taxes. (a) What impact will the cut in personal income taxes have on the economy? Show in an AD-AS diagram and explain in words. Remember to show both the initial equilibrium and the equilibrium after the tax cuts. (b) If the RBA is concerned about the consequences of the income tax cuts on inflation in Australia, what policy should the RBA pursue? Show the consequences of this monetary policy on an AD-AS diagram and explain in words. ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 6 of 7 QUESTION: B.2 Assume we start at an equilibrium with GDP equal to the natural rate of output. The short-run AS curve shifts up by 10% as inflation expectations are 10% in the economy, so all wages rise by 10%. [Hint: Set initial prices at 100.] (a) Draw the initial equilibrium and show the shift up in the AS curve. Draw the Phillips Curve for inflation expectations of 10%. (b) What happens if the AD curve does not shift? Show what point this is on the ADAS and the Phillips Curve for 10% inflation expectations? (c) What happens if the AD curve shifts up by 10%? Show what point this is on the AD-AS and the Phillips Curve for 10% inflation expectations. ECO120 Macroeconomics Page 7 of 7