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QUIZ 5: Macro – Winter 2010 Name: ______________________ Section Registered: Campus Evening For each of the following questions (1-8), circle the answers that make the statements true. Consider the standard model we have build in class. When answering these questions, assume all other exogenous variables (including TFP) are held constant. Also, assume all changes in exogenous are unexpected, unless told otherwise. Lastly, throughout, assume that the capital stock is fixed. (16 points total – 2 points each). 1. A permanent increase in TFP will shift the labor supply curve _________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve This is because of the income effect on labor supply. Labor supply will always shift left as TFP increases. The question is how far it shifts left (this is dependent on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect). 2. A permanent increase in labor income taxes will shift the long run aggregate supply curve __________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve The long run aggregate supply curve is Y*. Y* increases because of changes in A, K and N*. A and K are fixed. Whether Y* increases or decreases, therefore, depends on whether N* increases or decreases. This depends on the strength of the income and substitution effects from the tax changes 3. A permanent increase government spending will shift the long run aggregate supply curve _________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve The long run aggregate supply curve is Y*. Y* increases because of changes in A, K and N*. A and K are fixed. Changes in G have no effect on N* (it does not affect labor demand nor does it affect labor supply). So, Y* does not change as G changes! 4. A permanent fall in household wealth will shift the long run aggregate supply curve _________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve As wealth falls, PVLR falls. This will shift the labor supply curve right increasing N* (we did this on the midterm AND last week’s quiz). As a result of N* increasing, Y* will increase (given that A and K are held fixed). 5. A permanent increase in TFP will shift the IS curve ________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve An increase in TFP will increase both C - because PVLR will increase - and the autonomous portion of I (I(.)) – because of the complementarity between TFP and capital through the cobb-douglas production function. 6. A permanent increase in labor income taxes will shift the IS curve _________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve A permanent increase in labor income taxes will reduce after tax wages (unambiguously) which will reduce after tax PVLR. This means consumption will fall (C(.)) which will shift the IS curve to the right. 7. A permanent increase government spending will shift the IS curve ________. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve This was easy. The IS curve is the graphical representation of Y = C + I + G in {Y,r} space. An increase in G will increase Y (for all levels or r). This is represented by a rightward shift of the IS curve. 8. A permanent fall in household consumer confidence will shift the IS curve _______. a. definitely to the right b. definitely to the left c. either to the right or to the left depending on the strength of the income effect relative to the substitution effect d. it will not shift the curve A fall in consumer confidence is represented as a decline in C(.) which shifts the IS curve to the right. Reading Question: (4 points total) In the Economist article “The Lessons of 1937” (6/20/2009), Christy Romer (chair of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors) recounted the story the recession of 1937. According to Christy (and many other academics), what caused the recession of 1937? Your answer should not exceed 5-7 words. My ideal answer is only 5 words. We will give credit for lots of related answers. Contractionary monetary and fiscal policy. Monetary policy is the use of interest rates to stabilize the economy. In 1937, the Fed raised the reserve ratio (limiting bank lending). We will talk about this mechanism in class this week. Reducing bank lending reduces output in the short run (as we will see in class soon). Fiscal policy is the use of government spending and taxes to stabilize the economy. In 1937, tax revenues increased (they collected social security taxes) and they limited spending. Both pressures contributed to an economic downturn. After the great depression, the economy was week. It was being sustained by policy makers (both monetary and fiscal policy). Once they took those policies away, the economy collapsed. The question we will ask is whether a collapse today or lower growth tomorrow (to pay back the deficits) is the more prudent policy option.