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Unit 3/Macroeconomics ACTIVITY 21 ANSWER KEY (Keynesian) Full Employment in a Capitalist Economy 1. Do business-cycle fluctuations occur as a result of external or internal factors? Explain. Both external and internal. Level of output depends on level of AE, which is affected by internal and external factors. 2. Are periods of economic instability temporary, or can they be of long duration? They vary and can be of long duration. Unemployment can be sustained for an indefinite period of time. 3. Identify and explain the main determinant of the level of output and employment in the economy. The level of AD or AE. If income increases, consumers will buy more, and producers will produce more. If income declines, however, consumers will fail to purchase the output produced, and producers will cut back. 4. If people save their income instead of spending it, what will be the effect on the level of output and employment? Will interest rates automatically equate the leakage of saving with an injection of investment spending by business firms? Explain why or why not. Some output will not be purchased, and producers will cut back. Interest rates will not automatically adjust. Because savers and investors are different people. 5. Are wages and prices downwardly flexible in the event of decreases in aggregate demand? Explain why or why not. Wages and prices are not downwardly flexible. Because of collective bargaining agreements between unions and management, which have some monopoly power. 6. Does a capitalist economy contain inherent self-adjusting mechanisms that assist it in achieving and sustaining full-employment levels of output? No because interest rates, wages, and prices are inflexible. 7. What should be the proper role of government in the capitalist economy? Explain why. Because the capitalist economy cannot adjust itself automatically, government must have demand-management policies to maintain a full-employment level of output. 8. Describe the shape of the aggregate supply curve. Illustrate how the shape of the AS curve explains, in the event of changing aggregate demand, the conclusion drawn in question 6. Horizontal. The AS curve is horizontal which means changes in AD affect output but do not affect the price level. -AS AD2 Real national output (GDP) 409 Unit 3/Macroeconomics ACTIVITY 22 ANSWER KEY (Classical) Full Employment in a Capitalist Economy 1. Do business cycle fluctuations occur as a result of external or internal factors? Explain. External. Caused by temporary abnormalities such as wars and natural disasters. The capitalist economy will automatically readjust after one of these events. 2. Are periods of economic instability temporary, or can they be of long duration? They are temporary. In the long run, the economy will self-adjust. 3. Identify and explain the main determinant of the level of output and employment in the economy. "Supply creates its own demand." If AD declines, the economy must only produce output to maintain employment; the act of producing output generates the exact amount of income necessary to purchase the output. 4. If people save their income instead of spending it, what will be the effect on the level of output and employment? Will interest rates automatically equate the leakage of saving with an injection of investment spending by business firms? Explain why or why not. Output will not decline. Yes. The mechanism of interest rates maintains an equilibrium between savings and investment. If consumers save more, interest rates will fall and businesses will invest more. If saving declines, interest rates will rise and business investment will decline. 5. Are wages and prices downwardly flexible in the event of decreases in aggregate demand? Explain why or why not. Yes. If AD falls, wages fall. If wages fall, price falls. Lower prices will be an incentive for consumers to buy more which will increase AD. 6. Does a capitalist economy contain inherent self-adjusting mechanisms that assist it in achieving and sustaining full-employment levels of output? Yes because interest rates, wages, and prices are flexible. 7. What should be the proper role of government in the capitalist economy? Explain why. There is no need for government intervention in the economy because of the economy's self-regulating mechanisms. Government involvement in the economy may, in fact, interfere with the self-regulating mechanisms and thereby cause instability. 8. Describe the shape of the aggregate supply curve. Illustrate how the shape of the AS curve explains, in the event of changing aggregate demand, the conclusion drawn in question 6. Vertical. The AS curve is vertical which means changes in AD affect the price level and not output. The economy automatically adjusts to full employment. Real national output (GDP) 410 4 Unit 3/Macroeconomics ACTIVITY 23 ANSWER KEY Classical and Keynesian Views of the Economy Part A. The Classical View 1. According to the classical theory, equilibrium is always at full employment. Flexible wages, prices, and interest rates always bring the economy back to full employment. 2. The price level will increase, but real national output will not change. According to the classical theory, increases in AD increase the price level only. 3. The price level will decrease, but output will stay the same. LRAS will determine the full-employment level of real national output while AD will establish the price level. 4. At full employment, output cannot increase regardless of changes in AD because the full amount of resources is already provided. However, LRAS can increase with sound growth policies. Part B. The Keynesian View 1. Because resources are unemployed, increases in AD will result in a higher real national output without an increase in the price level. 2. The simple Keynesian model assumes the price level is fixed. This is not realistic because at least some inflation occurred every year with the exception of the Great Depression years. 3. Output will increase, but the price level will be unchanged. Output will increase as more resources are employed. Because unemployed resources are used, there will not be any upward pressure on prices. 4. Output will decrease, and the price level will be unchanged. With insufficient AD, resources become unemployed. Because prices and wages are downwardly rigid or inflexible, there will be no automatic adjustment back to full employment. 5. It is more likely to be horizontal during periods of unemployment because increases in AD will cause unemployed resources to be used instead of putting upward pressure on prices. 6. There are unemployed resources (land, labor, capital). Part C. Answers will vary. 411