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Economics 2 Spring 2017
Unit 3 Study Guide
Chapters 10, 11, 16, 13, and 12
All page numbers and section headings are for the PDF download version of the textbook.
Italicized sections are independent reading sections and are not covered in the lecture, but will
be on the test.
What I expect you to know for the test:
Chapter 10
- What are Financial Markets?: Slide 3 and Introduction, page 237.
- The Bond/Credit Market: Slides 4-11 and Sections 1.0,1.1, pages 238-240.
- The Bond Market and Aggregate Demand: Slides 12-15 and Section 1.1, pages 238-240.
- The Demand for Money: Slides 16-25 and Sections 2.0,2.1, pages 244-248.
- The Supply of Money: Slide 26 and Section 2.2, pages 248-249.
- Equilibrium in the Money Market: Slides 27-33 and Section 2.3, page 249.
- Changes in the Money Market: Slides 37-40 and Section 2.4, pages 249-251.
Chapter 11 – Introduction, page 259.
- Goals of Monetary Policy: Slide 42 and Sections 1.0,1.1, pages 260-262.
- Monetary Policy and Economic Variables: Slides 43-52 and Section 1.2, pages 262-264.
- Lags: Slides 53-65 and Sections 2.0,2.1, pages 267-268.
- Choosing Targets: Slides 69-76 and Section 2.2, pages 268-269.
- Political Pressures: Section 2.3, pages 269-270.
- The Degree of Impact on the Economy: Slides 77-86 and Section 2.4, pages 270-271.
- Rational Expectations: Section 2.5, pages 271-272, explained in the next chapter.
- The Equation of Exchange: Slides 88-93 and Sections 3.0,3.1, pages 274-275.
- Money, Nominal GDP, and Price Level Changes: Slides 97-103 and Section 3.2, pages 275277.
- Why the quantity theory is less useful in analyzing the short run: Slides 104-117 and Section
3.3, pages 277-278.
- The latest new thing in macroeconomics: Market Monetarism: Slides 118-147… and not in the
book.
Chapter 16 – Introduction, pages 391-392.
- What the Phillips Curve is: Slides 148-150 and Sections 1.0,1.1, pages 392-393
- How the Phillips Curve relates back to the AS/AD diagram: Slide 151 and Sections 2.0,2.1,
pages 397-399.
- The slope of the Phillip’s curve and SRAS based on if resources are unused or not: Slides 152154 and not in book.
- How the Phillips Curve shifts in response to changes in inflation expectations: Slides 155-163
and Section 2.2,2.3, pages 399-400.
- The inflation rate in the long-run: Sections 3.0, 3.1 and pages 403-406.
- How there are two Phillips Curves, the short-run and the long-run PC’s: Slide 164 and Section
3.2, pages 406-409.
- How the Phillips curve can be used to trace out the economic history of the United States over
the last 45 years: Slide 165 and Sections 1.2,1.3,2.4, pages 393-395 and 400-401.
- What Rational Expectations are: Slides 169-170 and Chapter 11, Section 2.5, pages 271-272.
- How Rational Expectations fold the short-run into the long-run and make government
expansionary and contractionary fiscal and monetary policy ineffective in changing output:
Slides 171-180 and Chapter 11, Section 2.5, pages 271-272.
- Winners and losers from inflation: Slides 181-198 and not in book.
- What the real rate of interest is: Slides 186-187 and not in book.
- The relationship between increases (and decreases) in the money supply and the interest rate:
Slides 202-211 and not in book.
- Politics, the Fed, Other Economies and Monetary Policy: Slides 212-217 and not in book.
Chapter 13 – Introduction, page 313.
- Meaning of Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC): Slides 219-221 and Sections 1.0,1.1,
pages 313-317.
- How and why the Keynesian multiplier can cause originally small changes in investment,
government, or consumer spending to result in big shifts in the aggregate demand curve (and
the related importance of confidence levels in the economy): Slides 222-231 and Sections
2.0,2.1, pages 320-329.
- How to construct a table showing the round by round and ultimate total change in I, C, and
GDP started by a change in I: Slides 222-231 and Sections 2.0,2.1, pages 320-329.
- What the numerical value of the Keynesian multiplier is: Slide 230 and Sections 2.0,2.1,
pages 320-329.
- How to translate the table into the AS/AD diagram: Slides 235-236 and Sections 3.0,3.1,3.2,
pages 335-337.
Chapter 12 – Introduction, pages 277-278.
- What Fiscal Policy is and how the government can use it to counteract problems of recessions
and inflations: Slides 237-246 and Sections 2.0,2.1,2.2,2.3,2.4,2.5,2.6, pages 297-301.
- What are expansionary policies, i.e. increasing G and cutting T; and what are contractionary
fiscal policies, i.e. cutting G and increasing T: Slides 237-246 and Sections
2.0,2.1,2.2,2.3,2.4,2.5,2.6, pages 297-301.
- The 2 main practical problems of using fiscal policy: political problems and lag problems:
Slides 247-249 and Section 3.0,3.1, page 303.
- What Crowding Out is, and how crowding out destroys the usefulness of fiscal policy when it
occurs: Slides 250-266 and Section 3.2, pages 303-305.
Sections not covered and not on the test.
Chapter 10: 1.2.
Chapter 11: None.
Chapter 16: None.
Chapter 13: 1.2,1.3,2.2,
Chapter 12: 1.0,1.1,1.2,1.3,1.4,1.5,3.3
“Greetings, my friend. We are all interested in the future, for that is where you and I are going to
spend the rest of our lives. And remember my friend, future events such as these will affect you
in the future.” – Criswell, opening lines in Plan 9 From Outer Space.