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Solutions to Problems Chapter 25 1. Given for the Zap economy : mpc 0.9 I $50b G $40b T $40b 1a. Equilibrium expenditure decreases by $100 billion. Zap has no induced taxes or imports, so the government expenditures multiplier is; 1 1 mpc 1 1 0 .9 10 multiplier The multiplier tells us that when government expenditures decrease by $10 billion, equilibrium expenditure decreases by 10 times as much or $100 billion. Y G Y G multiplier multiplier $10b 10 $100b 1b. Government expenditures multiplier is 10. 1c. Equilibrium expenditure increases by $90 billion. The autonomous tax multiplier is; mpc 1 mpc 0 .9 1 0 .9 9 multiplier When autonomous taxes are cut by $10 billion, equilibrium expenditure changes by 9 times the change in autonomous taxes. A cut in autonomous taxes of $10 billion will increase equilibrium expenditure by $90 billion. Y T Y T (9) multiplier ($10b) (9) 1d. $90b Autonomous tax multiplier is 9. 1e. Equilibrium expenditure decreases by $10 billion. The decrease in government expenditures decreases equilibrium expenditure by $100 billion and the cut in taxes increases equilibrium expenditure by $90 billion. So together, equilibrium expenditure decreases by $10 billion. 3a. The quantity of real GDP demanded increases by $100 billion at constant prices. When government expenditures increase by $10 billion, at the price level 100, equilibrium expenditure increases by 10 times as much, or $100 billion. 3b. The aggregate demand curve shifts rightward by $100 billion at each price level. The AE curve shifts upward by $10 billion from AE to AE/, equilibrium expenditure at constant prices increases by $100 billion, and the AD curve shifts rightward by $100 billion from AD to AD/ (see figure 1). 3c. In the short run, real GDP increases by less than the $100 billion increase in the quantity of real GDP demanded. In the short run, short-run aggregate supply and aggregate demand determine real GDP. Because the short-run aggregate supply curve slopes upward, the price level rises and real GDP increases but by less than $100 billion. The Zap economy moves from a to c in figure 1. 3d. In the long run, the increase in real GDP will be zero. Real GDP will return to potential GDP. In the short run, real GDP exceeds potential GDP and wage rates will start to rise. The short-run aggregate supply will begin to decrease and the price level will rise. The short-run aggregate supply will continue to decrease and the price level will continue to rise until real GDP equals potential GDP. The Zap economy moves from c to a / in figure 1. 3e. The price level rises. In the short run, aggregate demand and short-run aggregate supply determine the price level. Because the short-run aggregate supply curve slopes upward and because aggregate demand increases, the price level rises (see figure 1). 3f. The price level rises. In the long run, aggregate demand and long-run aggregate supply determine the price level. The short-run aggregate supply curve shifts leftward because the money wage rate rises. Because the long-run aggregate supply curve is vertical and because aggregate demand increases, the price level rises. And it rises by more in the long run than it does in the short run (see figure 1). Zip – Problem 4 AE/(p=100) AE//(p=102) AE (p=100) b • E1 c E2 • a • E0 Expenditure Expenditure Zap – Problem 3 • G=-$5B LAS SAS/ SAS a/ • a • •c Y1 Y2 Y0 real GDP Price level Price level • b E0 Y0 Y2 Y1 104 102 100 • c E2 G=$10b AE (p=100) AE//(p=98) AE/(p=100) a E1 LAS SAS SAS/ •b AD/ 100 98 96 •b •c •a • a/ Y0 Y2 Y1 real GDP Given : b 0 .9 t 0.333 m 0 .1 C $29b I $100b G $160b T $10b therefore : T 0.3Y 10 and : C 0.9YD 29 0.9[Y T ] 29 0.9[Y (0.3Y 10)] 29 0.9Y 0.3Y 9 29 0.6Y 20 and : M 0.1Y 60 AD AD/ AD 5. real GDP Y1 Y2 Y0 real GDP 5a. Equilibrium real GDP is $600 billion. Equilibrium expenditure occurs when aggregate planned expenditure equals real GDP. At equilibrium : Y AE C I G X M 0.6Y 20 100 160 80 (0.1Y 60) 0.5Y 300 0.5Y 300 300 0 .5 $600b Y 5b. The government has a surplus of $50 billion. When a government’s revenues exceed its outlays the government has a budget surplus. government budget balance T G (tY T ) G 13 600 10 160 200 10 160 $50b 5c. The country has a balance of trade deficit of $40 billion. When the value of a country’s imports is greater than the value of its exports the country has a current account deficit. balanceof trade X M 80 ( mY M ) 80 0.1 600 60 80 60 60 $40b 7. Given the marginal rate of tax is reduced to 25 percent for the country in question 5. 7a. Equilibrium real GDP increases by $106b The lower marginal rate of tax increases the size of the multiplier and the equilibrium level of real GDP given the levels of autonomous expenditures. At equilibrium : Y AE 1 1 b(1 t ) m 1 (29 9 100 160 80 60) 1 0.9(1 0.25) 0.1 1 300 0.425 $706b (C bT I G X M ) 7b. The government surplus falls by $23.5 billion. The new lower level of taxation revenue with the new marginal rate of taxation is $26.5 billion. This is a fall in the budget surplus of $23.5 billion. government budget balance T G (tY T ) G 0.25 706 10 160 186.5 160 $26.5b 7c. The country’s trade balance deficit increases by $10.6 billion. The marginal propensity to import is 0.1. Imports will increase by 10% of any increase in real GDP. M 0.1 Y 0.1 106 $10.6b 9, Given: At potential real GDP the unemployment rate is 5.5% and the government budget is balanced at 20 per cent of potential real GDP. A 1percentage point increase (decrease) in unemployment decreases (increases) the budget balance by 2 percentage points. G = 0.2Y + 0.01Y)xUcyclic T = 0.2Y - 0.01YxUcyclic 9a. The budget balance as a percentage of GDP is shown in table 1. A negative value is a budget deficit. The budget balance column was calculated using the formula: Government Budget Balance = T G = [0.2Y - 0.01YxUcyclic] [0.2Y + 0.01YxUcyclic] = 0.02YxUcyclic Table 1 Problem 9 Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 UnemploymentUnemploymentUnemployment (actual rate) (natural rate) (cyclical rate) 5 5.5 -0.5 6 5.5 0.5 7 5.5 1.5 6 5.5 0.5 5 5.5 -0.5 4 5.5 -1.5 5 5.5 -0.5 9b. The deficit increases as the unemployment rate increases and the level of real GDP decreases. The relationship between the unemployment rate and the budget balance is shown in figure 3. Budget balance (%GDP) 1 -1 -3 -1 1 3 1 Unemployment & Budget balance Automatic stabilizers – problem 9 8 4 Budget balance (%GDP) 2 0 -2 -4 Figure 3 Unemployment rate 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Year