ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015
ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015
ECON 311 - Intermediate Macroeconomics (Professor Gordon) Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015
(Professor Gordon)
Second Midterm Examination: Fall 2015
Part A. MC
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Answer sheet
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YOUR NAME: _______________________________________
Student ID:
_______________________________________
Michael - 3PM
Hugh - 3PM
Chris - 3PM
Michael - 4PM
Hugh - 4PM
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INSTRUCTIONS:
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1. The exam lasts 1 hour.
2. The exam is worth 60 points in total: 30 points for the multiple choice
questions (Part A) and 30 points for the four analytical problems (Part B).
3. Write your answers for part A (the multiple choice section) in the
blanks to the right. You wont get credit for circled answers in the multiple
choice section.
4. Place all of your answers for part B in the space provided.
5. You must show your work for part B questions. There is no need to explain
your answers for the multiple choice questions.
6. You must turn in both the answers and the multiple-choice
questions. DO NOT PULL THEM APART.
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Good luck!
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Answer multiple choice questions in the space provided to the right.
USE CAPITAL LETTERS.
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Q1 (5)
Q2 (10)
Q3 (15)
Time (2)
Total
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Actual deficit
Structural deficit
Cyclical deficit
-150-75=-225
(B) Draw a budget line diagram, and label the structural and actual deficits. (2 points)
(B.) We now turn to the supply side of the economy. Suppose that nominal wages are initially such that W=5
(reminder: natural output is YN = 58). Short run aggregate supply is described by:
SAS: Y = 100 2W (16/P)
Find the short-run and long-run aggregate supply curves. (1 Point)
Short-run
Long-run
Y = YN = 58
(C.) Find the short- and long-run equilibrium values of (Y,P) for this economy. (3 Points)
Short-run. Solve for the equilibrium condition.
Y(AD) = Y(SAS)
9/P + 40 = 90 16/P
P*(SR) =
And therefore:
Y*(AD) = 9/(0.5) + 40 = 18 + 40 = 58.
Y*(SAS) = 90 16/(0.5) = 90 32 = 58.
Long-Run. Solve Y(AD) = Y(LRS) => P*(LR) = . Get Y*(LR) = YN = 58
(D.) If the wage, W, were to decrease to 4 in which direction would the SAS curve shift? Will real GDP change more
(in percentage terms) than if W were to increase to 6? You do not need to recompute the equilibrium. Instead,
draw a picture and/or provide an explanation as to why the percentage change is greater/less/the same. (Hint:
Think about what the curvature of the AD curve implies about movements along it.) (1 Point)
When w increases the SAS curve will shift up/left. Real GDP will change more when w decreases. This is because
of the curvature of the AD curve: the marginal increase in the real money supply is greater at lesser than greater
price levels P . When the real money supply increases, so does aggregate demand.
Here it would also be okay to draw a graph like on p. 233 of the book (augmented with an SAS curve), which
shows the affects of curvature in the AD curve.
(E.) Go back to assuming that the economy is in the same situation as in part (C). Suppose that you are in charge of
the nominal money supply, MS, for a country. However, you are not independent. One day, the President of the
country approaches you and says thatdue to the upcoming electionhe needs you to increase real GDP by 3 (i.e. he
wants Y to increase by 3).
First, state whether you would need to increase or decrease MS to do this. Then, explain whether or not it is
technically possible to do this. Finally, (and regardless of your answers to the above) outline the short-run effects
of increasing Y with monetary policy on (i) real wages and (ii) firm profits. Would you recommend such a policy to
the President? (2 Points)
MS would need to increase. It is not possible to increase Y to 61 because we run into the zero lower bound at
Y=60. This can be seen by examining the IS curve in part A.
If Y were increased with monetary policy then we would be moving away from the natural output level. In the
short run, real wages fall because nominal wages do not change while the price level increases. Firm profits rise
because they are now paying workers less in real terms.
The recommendation part - the main idea should be: I would not recommend because we are moving away
from the natural rate of output.
k=1/(1-0.75+0.2*0.75+0.1)=2
Ap=90 - 0.75*40 + 45 + 70 - 5r + 80 - 5e = 260 - 5r - 5e = 240 5r
IS: Y = 2*(260-5r-5e)=520-10r-10e=480-10r
LM: 80 = 0.2Y - 2r -> Y = 400 + 10r
(B) Find the equilibrium income, interest rate and net exports. (3 points)
(C) Suppose autonomous planned consumption, Ca, goes down from 90 to 60.
(C1) Write down the new IS curve, after the shift in autonomous planned consumption.
(Hint: Express Y in terms of r and e.) (2 points)
(C2) Let domestic interest rates and world interest rates briefly diverge: capital investors have not reacted
yet, and neither has the government or central bank. Use the new IS curve and the LM curve to calculate the
new output and domestic interest rate. (2 points)
(D) The economy is a small open economy, so eventually capital investors, and possibly the government and
central bank, will react. What is the new output Y and interest rate r? What factors adjust to get the economy here?
(Hint: Recall that the economy has a fixed exchange rate, and perfect capital mobility.) (3 Points)
(E) From part A) to part D), which curves have shifted? Draw an IS-LM diagram, and label the points for your
solutions to problems B), C2), and D). (2 Points)
10) In a small open economy, when exports exceed imports, all of the following are true EXCEPT
A) net exports are positive.
B) net capital outflows are positive.
C) domestic output exceeds spending.
D) domestic investment exceeds domestic saving.
11) The natural employment surplus is
A) Y - tYN.
B) G + T.
C) tYN - G.
D) YN + G + tYN.
12) A deliberate change in the government's deficit
A) constitutes discretionary fiscal policy.
B) acts as a drag on the economy.
C) leads to automatic stabilization.
D) is implemented by the Fed.
13) Shadow banks differ from regular banks by having
A) different assets
B) different liabilities
C) no equity
D) no mortgages
14) A major side-effect of a stimulative fiscal policy is that it will
A) permanently raise the rate of inflation.
B) discriminate in favor of housing.
C) crowd out private expenditures.
D) increase the natural rate of unemployment.
15) The foreign exchange rate refers to
A) the rate of change in a nation's international investment position.
B) the rate at which foreign exports are flowing into a nation's output market.
C) the amount of one nation's money that can be obtained in exchange for a unit of another nation's currency.
D) the rate of change in a nation's exports and imports.
16) The lectures nickname NINJA refers to
A) shadow banks
B) housing bubble
C) stock-market bubble
D) sub-prime mortgages
17) The "official reserve transactions balance" will be positive when
A) the current account is in surplus.
B) U.S. official holdings of foreign exchange are falling.
C) exports exceed imports.
D) the current account and capital account taken together are in surplus.
18) The three policies which cannot be maintained simultaneously by a nation (sometimes referred to as the "trilemma") do NOT
include
A) independent control of the money supply.
B) independent control of fiscal policy.
C) free flow of capital.
D) fixed exchange rates.
19) If the Federal Reserve intervenes in the foreign-exchange markets by selling foreign currencies
A) the U.S. money supply rises and foreign currencies appreciate.
B) the U.S. money supply falls and foreign currencies appreciate.
C) the U.S. money supply rises and foreign currencies depreciate.
D) the U.S. money supply falls and foreign currencies depreciate.
20) The lecture emphasized the role of the following institutions in the financial crisis of 2008: Which institution had an outcome
different from the others:
A) Bear Stearns
B) Fannie Mae
C) Lehman Brothers
D) AIG
21) The purchasing power parity theory predicts that
A) a nation's exchange rate will differ from another nation's exchange rate by an amount depending upon the difference
between the domestic and foreign rates of inflation.
B) a nation's exchange rate will decline at a rate equal to the difference between the domestic and the foreign rates of
inflation.
C) a nation's exchange rate is determined by the extent of speculation in the foreign-exchange market.
D) a nation's exchange rate will decline when there is a balance-of-payments deficit.
22) Monetary policy is more powerful than fiscal policy under ________ exchange rates due to the amplifying effect from changes in
interest rates to exchange rates to ________.
A) flexible, monetary accommodation
B) fixed, net exports
C) fixed, monetary accommodation
D) flexible, net exports
23) Let the government increase lump-sum taxes. The aggregate demand curve will
A) remain unaffected but the IS curve will shift leftward.
B) shift rightward and the IS curve will shift rightward.
C) shift leftward and the IS curve will shift leftward.
D) become positively sloped but the IS curve will remain negatively sloped.
24) An increase in the price level will
A) change the slope of the aggregate demand curve at each income level.
B) decrease the real money supply and shift the aggregate demand curve.
C) increase the real money supply and shift the aggregate demand curve.
D) None of the above is correct.
25) If labor unions negotiate an increase in the nominal wage rate the SAS curve will shift
A) downward to the left and output will decrease.
B) upward to the right and output will increase.
C) downward to the right and output will increase.
D) upward to the left and output will decrease.
26) The lecture singled out Texas as having a minimal housing bubble and subsequent collapse. Which elements contributed to the
success of Texas?
A) Low mortgage leverage
B) No cash-out refinancing
C) No shadow banks
D) A) and B)
E) B) and C)
27) Which most accurately describes the U. S. balance of payments in the second quarter of 2015?
A) Current account surplus, capital account deficit, balance of payments surplus
B) Current account deficit, capital account surplus, balance of payments surplus
C) Current account deficit, capital account surplus, balance of payments deficit
D) Current account surplus, capital account deficit, balance of payments deficit
Figure 7-5
28) In Figure 7-5 above, from point A sudden increases in the price of crude oil would move us to point
A) D.
B) C.
C) B.
D) F.
E) E.
29) In Figure 7-5 above, from initial point A, suppose AD0 shifts to AD1. Under the assumptions of classical macroeconomics, we
would
A) almost immediately move to and then stay at point C.
B) almost immediately move to and then stay at point E.
C) stay at point A.
D) almost immediately move to and then stay at point B.
30) As pointed out in the lecture comparison, when 2015 is compared with 2011,
A) the Euro has depreciated and Big Macs are now cheaper in dollars than in the US
B) the Euro has appreciated and Big Macs are now more expensive in dollars than in the US
C) the Euro has depreciated and Big Macs are now more expensive in dollars than in the US
D) the Euro has appreciated and Big Macs are now cheaper in dollars than in the US
1) C
2) C
3) B
4) C
5) C
6) A
7) C
8) C
9) C
10) D
11) C
12) A
13) B
14) C
15) C
16) D
17) D
18) B
19) D
20) C
21) B
22) D
23) C
24) D
25) D
26) D
27) C
28) D
29) B
30) A