Past Exam Questions 2013, 2012, 2011, and 2010 Note: Solutions are not available to tutors. Answers presented here are subject to error. The hypothesis of the expectations-augmented Phillips curve holds that: a) employment contracts fully accommodate the rate of price inflation b) job-seekers never make systematic errors c) wage settlements are partially determined by the expected rate of price inflation d) reservation wages are determined by minimum wage legislation 2010 Exam Q32 Which of the following statement is true? With the expectations-augmented interpretation of the Phillips curve, Milton Friedman assumes that a) monetary policy is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in unemployment b) trade union activity is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in unemployment c) unemployment is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in inflation d) monetary policy is the exogenous variable, used to counter variations in unemployment 2013 Exam Q33 Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve • Initially, unemployment and inflation are at point A. • Expansionist monetary policy would increase consumption, shifting to point B along the Phillips curve • Unemployment is reduced but there is a trade off; inflation. • After a short period, agents will associate expansionist policies with inflation and will push for higher wages. (Gerry: Price-wage spiral) • This will stop the consumption stimulus and also de-incentivise hiring. Agents will shift their expectations curves to point C. The natural rate of unemployment is the level of unemployment that is consistent with: a) b) c) d) a high rate of inflation low rate of inflation an absence of monetary disturbance an absence of involuntary unemployment 2010 Exam Q33 See Lecture 52 Natural rate of unemployment (NRU) NAIRU Theoretical starting point -Perfect competition -Imperfect competition Origins of deviation -solely in labour market rigidities -in labour market rigidities; -supply-side inflation Inflationist mechanism -monetary policies -monetary policies; -supply-side inflation Type of unemployment -voluntary (therefore NRU can be assimilated to level of full employment) -voluntary; -involuntary -unique -multiple equilibriums when considering open economies Uniqueness of equilibrium The hypothesis of rational expectations contends that individuals: a) b) c) d) do not make systematic errors anticipate future prices accurately adapt slowly to the rate of inflation only make rational errors 2010 Exam Q34 Rational Expectations: • Rational expectations is a hypothesis in economics which states that agents' predictions of the future value of economically relevant variables are not systematically wrong in that all errors are random. Identify the missing word(s): Goodhart’s Law states ‘that any ____I____ will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes.’ a) b) c) d) monetary target observed statistical regularity fiscal budgetary stance structured investment 2010 Exam Q35 Goodhart’s Law • Any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes. • (Goodhart's original 1975 formulation, reprinted on p. 116 in Goodhart 1981[2]) Suppose that national income (measured in 1990 prices) is £1000 billion. Suppose further that prices have doubled since 1990 and that the typical unit of money circulates around the economy 20 times per year. What is the money supply? a) b) c) d) £50 billion £100 billion £150 billion £200 billion 2010 Exam Q36 MV = QP We know that: V = 20 Q = 1000 P=2 So, solving for M: MV=PQ M = QP/V M = 1000*2/20 M = 100 If the LM curve is vertical, then: a) b) c) d) full crowding out occurs fiscal policy will be infinitely effective monetary policy will not work supply side policies will be unavailable 2010 Exam Q38 ‘Crowding out’ occurs if new public expenditure a) is insufficient to maintain social services b) creates excess demand and over-full employment c) attracts an influx of economic migrants d) diverts expenditure from existing productive activities 2013 Exam Q31 Vertical LM curve • If the demand for money is not related to the interest rate, as the vertical LM curve implies, then there is unique level of income at which the money market is in equilibrium. • Thus, with vertical LM curve, an increase in government spending (which shifts the IS curve) cannot change the equilibrium income and only raises the equilibrium interest rates. • If government spending is higher and the output is unchanged, there must be an offsetting reduction in private spending. • In this case, the increase in interest rates crowds out an amount of private spending equal to increase in government spending. • Thus, there is full crowding out if LM is vertical. As defined in Keynes’s General Theory, ‘involuntary unemployment’ relates to individuals whose employment prospects would be raised by: (a) a rise in the price of wage goods (i.e., a rise in the cost of living) (b) a fall in the price of wage goods (i.e., a fall in the cost of living) (c) greater trade union participation (d) a shift to capital-intensive production methods 2012 Exam Q33 As defined in Keynes’s General Theory, ‘involuntary unemployment’ relates to individuals whose employment prospects would be raised by a) a rise in the price of wage goods (i.e., a rise in the cost of living) b) a fall in the price of wage goods (i.e., a fall in the cost of living) c) greater trade union participation d) a shift to capital-intensive production methods 2013 Exam Q30 Keynes on involuntary unemployment • “Clearly we do not mean by ‘involuntary’ unemployment the mere existence of an unexhausted capacity to work. An eight-hour day does not constitute unemployment because it is not beyond human capacity to work ten hours. Nor should we regard as ‘involuntary’ unemployment the withdrawal of their labour by a body of workers because they do not choose to work for less than a certain real reward. Furthermore, it will be convenient to exclude ‘frictional’ unemployment from our definition of ‘involuntary’ unemployment. My definition is, therefore, as follows: Men are involuntarily unemployed if, in the event of a small rise in the price of wage-goods [i.e., consumer goods] relatively to the money-wage [i.e., nominal wage], both the aggregate supply of labour willing to work for the current money-wage and the aggregate demand for it at that wage would be greater than the existing volume of employment.” If a UK resident citizen buys a BMW car from Germany and the car exporter uses the payment to buy UK government bonds, which of the following statements would be true? (a) UK net exports fall and net capital exports fall (b) UK net exports rise and net capital exports rise (c) UK net exports fall and net capital exports rise (d) UK net exports rise and net capital exports fall 2012 Exam Q34 Net Exports • If a UK resident citizen buys a BMW car from Germany • This is a German export and UK import of a tangible good • The car exporter uses the payment to buy UK government bonds • This is a German import and UK export of a capital good The original Phillips curve identified a robust correlation between: (a) unemployment and the rate of change of real wage rates (b) unemployment and the rate of change of money wage rates (c) wage levels and unemployment (d) wage levels and inflation 2012 Exam Q35 Indicate which one of the following statements is true. With the original interpretation of the Phillips curve, A.W. Phillips assumes that a) wage bargaining is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in money wages b) the business cycle (as reflected in the unemployment rate) is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in increases in money wages c) the real wage is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in inflation d) inflation is the exogenous variable, that causes variations in unemployment 2013 Exam Q32 Phillips Curve • Inflation is a change in money wages According to Friedman’s re-interpretation of the Phillips Curve, if inflationary expectations rise, the Phillips curve: a) shifts down b) shifts up c) becomes flatter d) becomes steeper 2011 Exam Q32 Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve • Initially, unemployment and inflation are at point A. • Expansionist monetary policy would increase consumption, shifting to point B along the Phillips curve • Unemployment is reduced but there is a trade off; inflation. • After a short period, agents will associate expansionist policies with inflation and will push for higher wages. • This will stop the consumption stimulus and also de-incentivise hiring. Agents will shift their expectations curves to point C. If job seekers under-estimate the rate of inflation, the duration of the job-search: (a) shortens, so that unemployment tends to rise (b) lengthens, so that unemployment tends to fall (c) shortens, so that unemployment tends to fall (d) lengthens, so that unemployment tends to rise 2012 Exam Q36 If job seekers under-estimate the rate of inflation • Then they will over-estimate the value of an offered wage contract • And will accept a lower real wage • And thus will have a shorter period of unemployment Fiscal monetarists argue that inflation is a consequence of excessive growth in: (a) revenue from taxation (b) national debt (c) the money supply (d) national output 2012 Exam Q37 Fiscal monetarists argue that inflation is a consequence of excessive growth in a) revenue from taxation b) sovereign debt c) the money supply d) national output 2013 Exam Q36 The Taylor Rule is a representation of monetary policy whereby the short-term nominal interest rate is varied systematically with respect to: (a) the trade deficit and the value of sterling (b) employment and the cost of living (c) inflation and the ‘output gap’ (d) tax revenues and the level of government borrowing 2012 Exam Q38 Taylor rule The Taylor rule equation is written as: rt = r* + π* + w(πt – π*) + (1 – w)(yt – y*)/y* where: rt is the central bank discount rate πt is the inflation rate π* is the inflation rate target y is the GDP y* is the potential GDP w is the policy parameter Define r as the real rate of interest and let r* be the rate consistent with long run equilibrium in the economy. Further, define π as the rate of inflation and π* as the target rate of inflation. Then r = r* + α(π – π*) is: a) b) c) d) an LM curve a Taylor rule a DSGE model incomprehensible 2010 Exam Q39 By the ‘Lucas critique’, economic forecasts are: (a) always unreliable (b) most reliable when economic policy is stable (c) most unreliable when a change in economic policy is implemented (d) most unreliable when inflation is accelerating 2012 Exam Q39 According to the ‘Lucas critique’, economic forecasts are a) always unreliable b) most reliable when economic policy is stable c) most unreliable when a change in economic policy is implemented d) most unreliable when inflation is accelerating 2013 Exam Q38 Theory of Economic Policy (Lecture 57 Slide 42) Policy instruments and objectives New Classical Economics – the Lucas critique Economic forecasts are most unreliable when they are most needed; i.e., when a change in economic policy is to be implemented Even if individuals’ expectations could be forecast in the context of current policy structures, that ‘success’ is undermined when that policy structure changes New policy implies a new context in which decisions are taken: so individuals’ reactions are affected Behavioural adjustments to changes in policy structures emasculate macroeconomic forecasting and (with it) aggregate demand management Robert Lucas (1937 - ) Nobel Prize 1995 … ‘for having developed and applied the hypothesis of rational expectations, and thereby having transformed macroeconomic analysis and deepened our understanding of economic policy’ Quantitative easing is a process whereby a central bank: a) sells long-term government bonds b) purchases long-term government bonds c) sells short-term government bonds d) purchases short-term government bonds 2011 Exam Q35 Lecture 56: Question 5 What is quantitative easing? • Expansionary monetary policy usually involves the central bank buying short-term government bonds in order to lower short-term market interest rates. • However, when short-term interest rates are either at, or close to, zero, normal monetary policy can no longer lower interest rates. • That’s where quantitative easing comes in. • Quantitative easing involves purchasing long-term bonds (gilts) in an attempt to lower the long-term interest rate and increase money supply Which of the following is not a function of the Bank of England? a) b) c) d) lender of last resort supplier of money acting as a store of value determining the official interest rate 2010 Exam Q40 For UK international payments, the ‘balance for official financing’ is the value of: a) net exports including ‘invisibles’ b) foreign exchange reserves c) net UK borrowing from foreign central banks d) foreign exchange bought/sold to maintain the exchange value of sterling 2011 Exam Q38 The balance of international payments is a) a corollary of the government’s overseas borrowing b) a measure of an economy’s indebtedness c) the overseas aid budget of a nation state d) an accountancy identity 2013 Exam Q34 In the context of the balance of international payments, a residual for ‘official financing’ indicates the extent to which the monetary authority a) sells domestic currency to increase holdings of foreign exchange reserves b) sells foreign exchange reserves to support the value of the domestic currency c) allows the international value of its currency to be determined by market forces d) is taking advantage of a trade surplus to build its foreign exchange reserves 2013 Exam Q39 Balance of International Payments Accounts (Lecture 61 Slide 35) The general structure: BoP ≡ X - M + IOU (loan/credit) ≡0 BoP ≡ current account + capital account ≡ 0 BoP ≡ X - M + ‘invisibles’ BoP ≡ { balance for official financing } + Dforex + DLT + DST + Dforex ≡0 ≡0 (exports of gold and/or forex to support £) balance for official financing: the amount taken from (or absorbed by) official forex reserves in order to stabilise the international value of domestic currency With the Keynesian (liquidity preference) theory the interest rate is determined by: a) the asset demand to hold money b) the speculative demand to hold money c) expectations relating to future bond prices d) all of the above 2011 Exam Q37 A nation with a fixed exchange rate cannot insulate itself from world inflation because, if initially its domestic inflation rate is lower than elsewhere: a) economic recession forces domestic prices up b) domestic goods become less competitive and cost-push inflation raises domestic prices c) domestic goods become more competitive which tends to increase money in domestic circulation d) none of the above 2011 Exam Q39 Under a fixed exchange rate • Low domestic inflation will cause the price of goods to rise more slowly than in other countries • So other countries will seek to buy goods from the low inflation country • This will increase the amount of capital in the low inflation country • This will put upward pressure on the low inflation country’s currency Don’t forget to bring: • Student ID number • Extra Pencil • Calculator Good luck! Next week: We’ll review some past essay exam questions. ‘Ricardo equivalence’: borrowing by the state is equivalent to ... I ... (whether currently or else deferred by borrowing). Robert Barro set Ricardo equivalence within the context of Keynesian macroeconomics, where the implication is that ... II ... government expenditure gives no boost to aggregate demand, since it is offset by ... III ... to meet ... IV .... In order: missing words are: I a) raising taxation b) reducing taxation c) raising taxation II tax-financed IMF-financed High III spending depreciation default d) raising taxation bond-financed saving IV living costs borrowing costs an exchange rate target future tax demands 2031 Exam Q35 The ‘Bank Rate’ (the key short-term rate set by the Bank of England) is the repo rate. A repo is a repurchase agreement whereby a) a commercial bank sells the central bank a security, with an agreement to repurchase that security, on a given date, at a higher price. b) a commercial bank sells the central bank a security, with an agreement to repurchase that security, on a given date, at a lower price. c) the central bank sells a commercial bank a security, with an agreement to repurchase that security, on a given date, at a higher price. d) the central bank sells a commercial bank a security, with an agreement to repurchase that security, on a given date, at a lower price. 2013 Exam Q37 A structural fiscal deficit exists when sovereign net borrowing is a) negative even as an economy is producing at full capacity b) positive even as an economy is producing at full capacity c) rising even when austerity measures are in place d) negative even as an economy is producing at full employment 2013 Exam Q40