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Transcript
Chapter 18
Practice Quiz
The Keynesian Model
1. The French classical economist Jean Baptiste Say transformed the equality of
production and spending into a law that can be expressed as follows:
a. The invisible hand creates its own supply.
b. Wages always fall to the subsistence level.
c. Supply creates its own demand.
d. Aggregate output does not always equal consumption.
ANS:
c. Says law was developed in the early 1800s and is the cornerstone of classical
economics.
2. Autonomous consumption is
a. positively related to the level of consumption.
b. negatively related to the level of consumption.
c. positively related to the level of disposable income.
d. independent of the level of disposable income.
ANS:
d. Autonomous consumption is the amount of spending from savings or borrowing that
occurs even when disposable income is zero.
3. The consumption function represents the relationship between consumer expenditures
and
a. interest rates.
b. saving.
c. the price level.
d. disposable income.
ANS:
d. Keynes argued the most important determinant of aggregate spending for consumer
goods is personal income after taxes.
.
4. John Maynard Keynes’s proposition that a dollar increase in disposable income will
increase consumption, but by less than the increase in disposable income, implies a
marginal propensity to consume that is
a. greater than or equal to one.
b. equal to one.
c. less than one, but greater than zero.
d. negative.
ANS
c. Each dollar change in disposable income is divided between changes in consumption
and saving.
5. Above the break-even disposable income for the consumption function, which of the
following occurs?
a. Dissaving
b. Saving
c. Neither (a) nor (b)
d. Both (a) and (b)
ANS:
b. As shown in Exhibit 2 in the text, dissaving occurs below the break-even point on the
consumption function.
6. Which of the following changes produces an upward shift in the consumption
function?
a. An increase in consumer wealth
b. A decrease in consumer wealth
c. A decrease in autonomous consumption
d. Both (b) and (c)
ANS:
a. An increase in wealth makes consumers feel more financially secure and they spend
more at each level of disposable income. In terms of the consumption function, an
increase in wealth causes the consumption function to shift upward.
7. An upward shift in the consumption schedule, other things being equal, could be
caused by households
a. becoming optimistic about the state of the economy.
b. becoming pessimistic about the state of the economy.
c. expecting future income and wealth to decline.
d. doing none of the above.
ANS:
a. If consumers expect good economic ties ahead, they increase spending at each level of
disposable income in the current time period.
8. The investment demand curve represents the relationship between business spending
for investment goods and
a. GDP.
b. interest rates.
c. disposable income.
d. saving.
ANS:
b. As shown Exhibit 9 in text, as the interest rate declines, more business investment
projects become profitable and investment spending increases.
9. Which of the following changes produces a leftward shift in the investment demand
curve?
a. A wave of optimism about future profitability
b. Technological change
c. High plant capacity utilization
d. An increase in business taxes
ANS:
d. Technological change and high plant capacity increase the investment curve. An
increase in business taxes decreases after-tax profits on investment projects and
businesses invest less at various possible interest rates. See Exhibit 9 in the text.
10. The aggregate expenditures function (AE) represents which of the following?
a. The consumption function only.
b. Autonomous consumption only.
c. The investment demand curve only.
d. All three of the above combined.
e. A combination of (a) and (c).
ANS:
d. As shown in Exhibit 11 in this practice quiz, the construction of the aggregate
expenditures function (AE) includes a. b. and c.
Exhibit 11 Aggregate Expenditures Function
9
AE
8
C
7
E
Real
6
consumption
and investment 5
expenditures 4
C+
I
(trillions of
dollars per year) 3
2
1
O
45
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11
Real Disposable Income
(trillions of dollars per year)
12
11. In Exhibit 11, what is the households’ marginal propensity to consume (MPC)?
a. 0.50
b. 0.67
c. 0.75
d. 0.80
ANS:
a. MPC is the change in consumption divided by the change in disposable income. In this
case, the change in consumption to disposable income is three to six, or 0.50. (hint: start
at autonomous consumption of $2 trillion)
12. In Exhibit 11, aggregate disposable income will equal consumption plus investment
(aggregate expenditures) and the economy will be in equilibrium when real disposable
income is
a. $2.33 trillion.
b. $3 trillion.
c. $6 trillion.
d. $10 billion.
ANS:
c. The AE curve crosses the 45 degree line at $6 trillion.
Exhibit 12 Aggregate Expenditures Function
•
•
•
8
7
•
•
6
•
•
Real
consumption 5
and
investment 4
expenditures 3
(trillions of
dollars per 2
year)
1
C+I
C
450
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Real disposable income
(trillions of dollars per year)
9
15
13. As shown in Exhibit 12, autonomous consumption is
a. 0.
b. $1 trillion.
c. $2 trillion.
d. $3 trillion.
e. $6 trillion.
ANS:
c. Autonomous consumption is given on the vertical axis where the consumption function
C intersects it at a real disposable income of zero.
14. As shown in Exhibit 12, saving occurs
a. at 0.
b. between 0 and $4 trillion.
c. where disposable income is greater than $4 trillion.
d. at $2 trillion.
ANS:
c. Above a disposable income of $4 trillion, the consumption function C is below the 45°
line; consequently, income exceeds total expenditures (consumption and investment) and
savings occurs.
15. As shown in Exhibit 12, the marginal propensity to save (MPS) is
a. 0.33.
b. 0.50.
c. 0.67.
d. 0.75.
ANS:
b. The MPC is the slope of the C line, which is interpreted from the graph as 0.50. Since
MPS = (1 – MPC), or (1 – 0.50) =0.50.