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INTRODUCTION OF

MACROECONOMICS MODULE

TEACHING ASSISTANTS OF MICROECONOMICS AND

MACROECONOMICS

ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT STUDIES

FACULTY OF ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS

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In the name of Allah, The Most Gracious, The Most Merciful

Alhamdulillah, all praises to Allah SWT, The Almighty, for giving belief, health, confidence and blessing for the writers to accomplish this Module of Introduction to Macroeconomics. Shalawat and Salam be upon our Prophet Muhammad SAW, who has brought us from the darkness into the brightness and guided us into the right way of life.

In this opportunity, we also like to express our deep thanks to Head Department of Economics, Coordinator of Undergraduate Program of Department of Economics, lecturers, and those who contributed and helped in the process of making this module. All of your kindness and help means a lot to us. Thank you very much

We realise that the contents in this module is not that perfect. Therefore, we are willing to receive and consider feedback, suggestions and constructive criticisms, and eager to implement improvements.

Hopefully this module can be the short guide for the students in order to deepen their understanding and analysis of Macroeconmics theory. Thank you.

List of the Module Writers: 1. Azka Nasir Nugraha 120210130110 2. Fierera Devi Febiosa 120210120012

3. Gita Permatasari 120210120092

4. Harumi Nimas 120210120148

5. Meinari Claudia M 120210110032

6. Ridha Subagja 120210110049

7. Silvia Adhiarahmawati 120210110058

Acknowledge and Agree, Coordinator of Undergraduate Program of Department of Economics

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CHAPTER 6

MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION

Classical Theory

 Relationship between the price level and the value of money is negative. When a price level is high so the value money is low.

 The goal of monetary injection is to stimulate the production by increased the money supply. Money injection which is not balanced with an increase in output causes the price level rises and the value of money falls.

Classical dichotomy is the separation of the determinants of real and nominal variables.

Monetary neutrality is the idea the change in money supply will not affect real variable.

Velocity of money tells us the number of times a dollar bill changes hands in a given period of time. According to the quantity theory, the formula is: 𝑉 = (𝑃𝑥𝑌)

𝑀 .

Hyperinflation is defined as inflation that exceeds 50 percent per month, which is just over 1 percent a day.

The fisher equation expresses the relationship between nominal and real interest rate. With formula

𝑖 = 𝑟 + 𝜋, where I si nominal interest rate; r is real

interest rate; π is inflation.

Cost of Expected Inflation

 The cost of expected inflation includes shoe leather costs, menu costs, confusion and inconvenience, relative price variability, and tax distortions.

 Unexpected inflation has an additional cost that is

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CHAPTER 6

MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION

FILL IN THE BLANK

1. __________ is the proposition that changes in the money supply do not affect real variables.

2. A decrease in the overall level of prices is called __________. 3. ______________ is the separation theoretically between

nominal variables and real variables.

4. __________ measured by physical unit and __________

measured by monetary unit.

5. The rate at which money changes hands is called

____________.

6. The practice of a government raising revenue by printing money is called __________.

7. When prices rise at an extraordinarily fast rate that exceeds 50 percent per month, it is called __________.

8. Monetary injection will ______ the money supply curve to

______.

9. __________ is the one-for-one adjustment of the nominal interest rate to the inflation rate.

10. ____________ refers to the actual cost of holding less cash which includes wasted time and inconvenience.

TRUE OR FALSE

1. If money is neutral, a change in the money supply does not affect either prices or real output.

2. The impacts of monetary injection are lower price level and higher value of money.

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4. If the price level doubles, the value of money has been cut by half.

5. If the money supply is $500, real output is $2.500 units, and the price is $2/unit, the velocity of money is 2,5.

6. The quantity theory of money concludes that an increase in the money supply causes a proportional increase in real output. 7. An inflation tax is a tax borne only by people who hold

interest bearing savings accounts.

8. When inflation rises, people desire to hold more money and firms make less frequent price changes.

9. If actual inflation turns out to be greater than people had expected, then wealth was redistributed to lenders from borrowers.

10. Arbitrary redistributions of wealth do not occur when inflation is constant and predictable.

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. An example of a real variable is? a. the price of soda

b. the ratio of the value of wage to the price of soda c. the wage rate in rupiah

d. none of the above

2. Which statement is true according to the quantity theory of money?

a. V and M are constant.

b. Y are not affected by the quantity of money. c. P are not affected by the quantity of money. d. V are not affected by changes in the price level.

3. According to the quantity theory of money, money growth and inflation are

a. positively correlated b. negatively correlated

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d. positively correlated if the inflation rate is positive and negatively correlated if the inflation rate is negative.

4. Suppose initially the real interest rate is 4 percent, the nominal interest rate is 6 percent and the inflation rate is 2 percent. If the inflation is increased to 4 percent, according to Fisher

effect, the nominal interest rate should be…

a. 8 percent b. 6 percent c. 4 percent d. 2 percent

5. Suppose that, because of inflation, a business in Mozambik must calculate, print and mail a new price list to its customers

each month. This is an example of …

a. menu cost b. shoeleather cost

c. arbitrary redistribution of wealth d. inflation-induced tax distortions

6. In which of the following cases was the inflation rate 10 percent over the last year?

a. One year ago, the price index had a value of 132, and now it has a value of 120.

b. One year ago, the price index had a value of 121, and now it has a value of 110.

c. One year ago, the price index had a value of 110, and now it has a value of 121.

d. One year ago, the price index had a value of 100, and now it has a value of 121.

7. If M = 10,000, P = 2, and Y = 20,000, then velocity is ….. a. Velocity will rise if money changes hands more

frequently.

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c. Velocity will rise if money changes hands more frequently.

d. Velocity will fall if money changes hands more frequently.

8. When the price level falls, the number of dollars needed to

buy a representative basket of goods….

a. increases, so the value of money rises. b. increases, so the value of money falls. c. decreases, so the value of money rises.

d. remains constant to offset the fall in the value of money.

9. In 2016, Fathan gets €500 a month raise. With his new monthly salary, he can buy more goods and services than he

could buy last year. Hence …..

a. his real salary has fallen and his nominal salary has rise b. his real salary has risen and his nominal salary has fallen. c. his real and nominal salary has fallen.

d. his real and nominal salary has risen.

10. For whom can inflation be beneficial? a. long-term creditors

b. long-term debtors

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ESSAY

1. Identify each of the following as nominal or real variables. a. the physical output of goods and services

b. the dollar price of apples

c. the price of apples relative to the price of oranges d. the amount that shows up on your paycheck after taxes e. the amount of goods you can purchase with the wage you

get each hour

f. the taxes that you pay the government

2. What happen to the value of money and the money market when Bank Indonesia injects more money in circulation? Draw and explain.

3. Explain the relationship between velocity of money, the money supply, and the nominal GDP. How must an increase in the money supply be reflected in velocity of money and nominal GDP?

4. How does the nominal interest rate differ from the real interest rate? Write down the equation that represents the real interest rate and explain what this equation shows. 5. Hyperinflation occurs in Zimbabwe because the government

prints too much money. Why do they keep printing money if they know it causes inflation?

6. Suppose that a hypothetical single-economy produce 600 tons of potatoes and sells by $15 per kilogram while the money supply is $1.200.000.

a. Calculate the nominal GDP b. Calculate the velocity of money

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7. Suppose Indonesia produce high quality cocoa bean and people spend a total of Rp. 50.000.000 per year for that commodity.

a. If the cocoa production is 2 tons and the quantity of money is Rp 6.000.000, what is the price level of cocoa (per 1 kg)?

b. What is the velocity of money?

c. If the cocoa production decreased by 50 percent due to El Nino, the quantity of money change to Rp. 4.000.000 and the price level increased by 20 percent, what is the velocity of money?

8. If the tax rate is 20 percent, compute the before-tax real interest rate and the after-tax real interest rate in each of the following cases:

a. The nominal interest rate is 10 percent and the inflation rate is 5 percent.

b. The nominal interest rate is 6 percent and the inflation rate is 3 percent.

c. The nominal interest rate is 4 percent and the inflation rate is 2 percent.

9. Unexpected inflation has an additional cost to the economy, because it arbitrarily redistributes wealth. Explain how the redistribution among borrower and lender can occur. In which condition redistribution most likely to take place, high inflation or low inflation?

10. Suppose that Nanda, Jo, and Amadea expect inflation to equal 3 percent, but in fact prices rise by 6 percent. Describe how this unexpectedly high inflation rate would help or hurt them if their conditions are as follow:

a. Nanda has invested some of his endowment in government bonds

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CHAPTER 7

OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS: BASIC

CONCEPT

Open economy is an economy that interacts freely with other economies around the world.

 Net export is the value of a nation’s exports minus the value of its

imports, also called trade balance.

 The situation when export exceeds the value of import, the trade balance is surplus. In contrast, when the value of exports is less than the value of imports, the trade balance is deficit. If exports equal imports it called balanced trade.

Net capital outflow (NCO) is the acquisition of foreign assets by domestic resident minus the acquisition of domestic asset by foreigners. Due to every international transaction involves an

exchange rate of an asset for a good or service, an economy’s net

foreign investment always equal its net export.

Nominal exchange rate is the relative price of the currency of two countries.

 The situation when the nominal exchange rate changes which each dollar buys more foreign currency, the dollar is said

appreciate or strengthen. In contrast, when nominal exchange rate changes and lead dollar buys less foreign currency, the dollar is said depreciate or weaken.

Real exchange rate is the relative price of the goods and service of two countries.

 𝑹𝒆𝒂𝒍 𝑬𝒙𝒄𝒉𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒆 𝒓𝒂𝒕𝒆 =𝑁𝑜𝑚𝑖𝑛𝑎𝑙 𝐸𝑥𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑔𝑒 𝑅𝑎𝑡𝑒 𝑥 𝐷𝑜𝑚𝑒𝑠𝑡𝑖𝑐 𝑝𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑒𝐹𝑜𝑟𝑒𝑖𝑔𝑛 𝑃𝑟𝑖𝑐𝑒  If arbitrage occurs, eventually prices that differed in two markets

would necessarily converge.

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CHAPTER 7

OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS: BASIC

CONCEPT

FILL IN THE BLANK

1. _______________ refers to condition when net exports are zero; exports and imports are exactly equal.

2. Decrease in the value of a currency as measured by the amount of foreign currency it can buy, called as________ 3. ______________ is a theory of exchange rates whereby a unit

of any given currency should be able to buy the same quantity of goods in all countries.

4. _____________ is the rate at which a person can trade the currency of one country to the another currency.

5. ____________ is purchasing of foreign assets by domestic residents minus the purchasing of domestic assets by foreigners.

6. If the yen price of the dollar increases, the dollar has _______against the yen.

7. ________ is the rate at which a person can trade the goods and services of one country for the goods and services of another.

8. Good and services that are produced abroad and sold domestically is _______.

9. If a case of German beer is twice as expensive as American beer, the real exchange rate is _____case of German beer per case of American beer.

10. An appreciation in the U.S. real exchange rate means that U.S. goods have become more _______compared to foreign goods

TRUE OR FALSE

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2. When the nominal exchange rate changes that each dollar buys more foreign currency, the dollar is said depreciate. 3. A country with negative net exports has a trade surplus 4. If a country’s import exceed its exports it has a trade deficit 5. If a country sells more goods and services abroad than it

purchases abroad, it has positive net exports and a trade surplus

6. If a case of German beer is twice as expensive as American beer, the real exchange rate is 1/2 case of German beer per case of American beer.

7. Net Capital Outflow is the purchase of domestic asset by foreign residents minus the purchase of foreign assets by domestic residents.

8. The process of taking advantage of differences in prices in different markets is called arbitrage.

9. A decrease in government spending and a real depreciation is the right policy mix to improve the trade balance without changing the level of domestic output

10. If a dollar buys more foreign currency, there is an appreciation of the dollar.

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. Bob, a Greek citizen, opens a restaurant in Chicago. His expenditures

a. Increase U.S. net capital outflow and have no impact on Greek net capital outflow.

b. Increase U.S. net capital outflow and increase Greek net capital outflow.

c. Increase U.S. net capital outflow, but decrease Greek net capital outflow.

d. Decrease U.S. net capital outflow, but increase Greek net capital outflow.

2. What is the primary determinant of long-run movements in nominal exchange rates?

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b. Domestic and foreign interest rates

c. Domestic inflation rate and foreign interest rate d. Domestic interest rate and foreign inflation rate

3. If you go to the bank and notice that a dollar buys more Mexican pesos than it used to, then the dollar has

a. Appreciated. Other things the same, the appreciation would make Americans less likely to travel to Mexico. b. Appreciated. Other things the same, the appreciation

would make Americans more likely to travel to Mexico. c. Depreciated. Other things the same, the depreciation would make Americans less likely to travel to Mexico. d. Depreciated. Other things the same, the depreciation

would make Americans more likely to travel to Mexico.

4. Which of the following refers to goods and services produced abroad and consumed in domestic?

a. imports b. exports

c. net foreign investment d. net exports

5. Country A is a small country. Country B is a large country. If Country A's currency is pegged to Country B's currency,

a. Country B's interest rates will be determined by Country A's monetary policy.

b. Country A's interest rates will be determined by Country B's monetary policy.

c. Country B's monetary will have no effect on Country A. d. None of the above.

6. Which of the following refers to net saving or investment abroad and is approximately equal to the value of net exports?

a. Imports b. Exports

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7. We would expect that an increase in investment demand would result in a(n) _______ in the exchange rates and a(n) _______ in net exports.

a. increase; increase b. increase; decrease c. decrease; increase d. decrease; decrease

8. You are staying in London over the summer and you have a number of dollars with you. If the dollar depreciates relative to the British pound, then other things the same,

a. The dollar would buy more pounds. The depreciation would discourage you from buying as many British goods and services.

b. The dollar would buy more pounds. The depreciation would encourage you to buy more British goods and services.

c. The dollar would buy fewer pounds. The depreciation would discourage you from buying as many British goods and services.

d. The dollar would buy fewer pounds. The depreciation would encourage you to buy more British goods and services.

9. We would expect that an increase in government spending would result in a(n) _______ in the exchange rates and a(n) _______ in net exports.

a. increase; increase b. increase; decrease c. decrease; increase d. decrease; decrease

10. Suppose saving is $1000 billion and net capital outflow is – $200 billion. Domestic investment is

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c. $200 billion d. $5 billion

ESSAY

1. Suppose that UK consumers’ taste for Japanese cars increases. Answer this question using the open economy model from the Japanese perspective.

a. What happens to the demand for yen in the foreign currency exchange market

b. What happens to the value of yen in the foreign currency exchange market

c. What happens to Japanese net exports? Why?

d. If the Japanese are selling more cars, what must be true about Japanese imports and exports of other items? 2. Suppose the United Kingdom is perceived to be politically

unstable, which induces capital flight to the United States. a. Describe what happens in the foreign currency exchange

market from the perspective of the United Kingdom b. Describe what happens in the foreign currency exchange

market from the perspective of the United States. c. Are your answers to part (a) and (b) above consistent with

one another? Why?

d. If the economy of United Kingdom is small when compared to the economy of the United States, what should this event do to each country's balance of trade? 3. What do you think would happen to U.S. net exports if:

a. Canada experiences a recession (falling incomes, rising unemployment)

b. U.S. consumers decide to be patriotic and buy more

products “Made in the U.S.A.”

c. Prices of goods produced in Mexico rise faster than prices of goods produced in the U.S.

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b. Is there any difference between your answer above and the answer you would write if the government had reduced its deficit? Why?

c. Suppose the government were to introduce an investment subsidy that increases domestic investment at each real interest rate. How would this change the important economic variables in the model?

5. Explain variables that Influence Net Exports and Net Capital Outflow.

8. Would each of the following groups be happy or unhappy if the U.S. dollar appreciated? Explain.

a. Dutch pension funds holding U.S. government bonds b. U.S. manufacturing industries

c. Australian tourists planning a trip to the United States a. an American firm trying to purchase property overseas 9. A can of soda costs $0.75 in the United States and 12 pesos

in Mexico. What would the peso-dollar exchange rate be if purchasing-power parity holds? If a monetary expansion caused all prices in Mexico to double, so that soda rose to 24 pesos, what would happen to the peso dollar exchange rate? 10. A case study in the chapter analyzed purchasing-power parity

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Hungary 600 forints

180 forints/$

Czech Republic

52.9 korunas

21.1 korunas/$

Brazil 6.90 real

1.91 real/$

Canada 3.88 C$ 1.05 C$/$

a. For each country, compute the predicted exchange rate of the local currency per U.S. Dollar. (Recall that the U.S. price of a Big Mac was $3.41.)

b. According to purchasing-power parity, what is the predicted exchange rate between the Hungarian forint and the Canadian dollar? What is the actual exchange rate?

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CHAPTER 8

A MACROECONOMIC THEORY OF THE OPEN

ECONOMY

There are two basic assumption of macroeconomic model of open economy:

 the first is the model takes the economy’s GDP as given

 the second is the model takes the economy’s price level as

given.

To understand about open economy we need to focus on supply and demand in two markets.

 The market for loanable funds,

coordinates the economy’s saving, investment, and flow of

loanable funds abroad (called the net capital outflow).

At the equilibrium interest rate, the amount that people want to save exactly balances the desired quantities of investment and net capital outflows.

S = I + NCO  The market for foreign-currency exchange,

coordinates people who want to exchange the domestic currency for the currency of other countries. In this section, we discuss supply and demand in each of these markets.

NCO = NX

Government budget deficit occurs when the revenue applied by the government is lower than the expenditure.

Trade policy is a government policy that influence the quantity of goods and services that a country import or export.

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CHAPTER 8

A MACROECONOMIC THEORY OF THE OPEN

ECONOMY

FILL IN THE BLANK

1. The supply of loanable funds comes from ; the demand

for loanable funds comes from _____________and .

2. The supply of dollars in the market for foreign exchange comes from ; the demand for dollars in the market for foreign exchange comes from . The link between the two markets is .

3. The two markets in the model of the open economy are and the . .

4. If Net Capital Outflow increases, the ________ of loans will increase, causing the real domestic interest rate to ________. 5. If the Net Capital Outflow increases, the ________ of dollars in the Foreign Currency Exchange Market will increase, causing the real exchange rate to ________.

6. If American goods became more popular abroad, the ________ of dollars in the Foreign Currency Exchange Market will increase, causing the real exchange rate to ________.

7. If American goods become more popular abroad, the real exchange rate will ________, and Net Exports will ________. 8. Other things remaining equal, if the Federal government budget deficit increases, the real interest rate will ________, causing Net Capital Outflow and Net Exports to ________. 9. If the government imposes hefty taxes on imports (tariffs),

imports will decrease, causing the real exchange rate to ________ exports, so that overall, Net Exports ________. 10. If an economic crisis were to occur in the U.S., domestic

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TRUE OR FALSE

1. The government budget deficit leads to reduced national saving, causing the interest rate to decrease, thus reducing net capital outflow, which in turn reduces net exports.

2. If a union of textile workers encourages people to buy only American-made clothes, imports would be reduced, so net exports would increase for any given real exchange rate. 3. Japan generally runs a trade surplus because the Japanese

saving rate is high relative to Japanese domestic investment. The result is low net capital outflow, which is matched by high net exports, resulting in a trade surplus.

4. A reduction in the U.S. government budget deficit would increase national saving, shifting the supply curve of loanable funds to the right. This would increase the real interest rate in the United States, thus increasing net capital outflow, and reducing the real exchange rate.

5. Capital flight is a large and sudden movement of funds out of a country.

6. Capital flight causes the interest rate to increase and the exchange rate to appreciate

7. The market for loanable funds determines the real interest rate 8. The market for foreign-currency exchange determines the real

exchange rate.

9. When domestic conditions are uncertain, capital leaves a country increasing the supply of its currency to foreign exchange markets and rising the exchange rate.

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MULTIPLE CHOICES

Figure 1

1. Refer to Figure 1 ---- Which of the following is consistent with capital flight from Mexico?

a. The real exchange rate of the peso appreciates from E0 to E1. b. The real exchange rate of the peso depreciates from E0 to E1. c. The real exchange rate of the peso appreciates from E1 to E0. d. The real exchange rate of the peso depreciates from E1 to E0.

2. Other things the same, people in the United States would want to save more if the real interest rate in the United States…

a. fell. The increased saving would increase the quantity of loanable funds supplied.

b. rose. The increased saving would increase the quantity of loanable funds demanded.

c. rose. The increased saving would increase the quantity of loanable funds supplied.

d. rose. The increased saving would increase the quantity of loanable funds supplied and would increase the quantity of loanable funds demanded.

3. You see on the Internet that the U.S. exchange rate has fallen. This might have been caused by

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b. a decrease in the demand for or an increase in the supply of dollars in the market for foreign-currency exchange.

c. an increase in the demand for or a decrease in the supply of dollars in the market for foreign-currency exchange.

d. an increase in the demand for or a increase in the supply of dollars in the market for foreign-currency exchange.

4. Suppose that the United States imposes an import quota on automobiles. In the open-economy macroeconomic model this quota shifts the

a. U.S. supply of loanable funds left. b. U.S. demand for loanable funds left.

c. demand for U.S. dollars in the market for foreign-currency exchange right.

d. supply of U.S. dollars in the market for foreign-currency exchange left.

Figure 2

5. Refer to Figure 2--- Which curve shows the relation between the exchange rate and net exports?

a. the demand curve in panel a. b. the demand curve in panel c. c. the supply curve in panel a. d. the supply curve in panel c.

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a. decreases, the real exchange rate of the dollar depreciates, and U.S. net capital outflow increases.

b. decreases, the real exchange rate of the dollar appreciates, and U.S. net capital outflow decreases.

c. increases, the real exchange rate of the dollar appreciates, and U.S. net capital outflow decreases.

d. increases, the real exchange rate of the dollar depreciates, and U.S. net capital outflow increases.

7. Which of the following contains a list only of things that decrease when the budget deficit of the U.S. increases?

a. U.S. net exports, U.S. domestic investment, U.S. net capital outflow

b. U.S. supply of loanable funds, U.S. interest rates, U.S. domestic investment

c. U.S. imports, U.S. interest rates, the real exchange rate of the dollar

d. None of the above is correct.

8. In the open-economy macroeconomic model, if a country's interest rate increases, its net capital outflow

a. and the real exchange rate increase. b. and the real exchange rate decrease.

c. increases and the real exchange rate decreases. d. decreases and the real exchange rate increases.

9. In an open economy, the source of supply of loans in the loanable funds market is ________, and the source of demand is ________. a. Investment and Net Capital Outflow, National Saving b. Investment, National Saving and Net Capital Outflow c. National Saving and Net Capital Outflow, Investment d. National Saving, Investment and Net Capital Outflow

10. In the Foreign Currency Exchange Market, the supply of dollars comes from ________, and the demand for dollars comes from ________.

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b. National Saving, Investment and Net Capital Outflow c. Net Exports, Investment

d. Net Capital Outflow, Net Exports

ESSAY

1. Explain the differences of open economy and close economy! 2. Explain with graph the market for loan-able funds and the effect

raising real interest rate in demand site!

3. Explain and graph the market for foreign currency exchange! 4. How are the market for loan-able funds and the market for

foreign currency exchange linked?

5. Why the supply curve in foreign currency exchange is vertical? 6. What is purchasing power parity?

7. Explain the effect of capital flight in a country! (use graph) 8. Explain about import quota into foreign- currency exchange

market! (use graph)

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CHAPTER 9

AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

 Three key of facts about economic fluctuations:

1. Economic fluctuations are irregular and unpredictable 2. Most macroeconomic quantities fluctuate together 3. As output falls, unemployment rises

 Economists use the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply to analyse economic fluctuations.

Aggregate Demand Curve

 Aggregarte demand curve shows the quantity of goods and services that households, firms, and the government want to buy at each price level.

 The curve slopes downward for three reasons: 1. Wealth effect

2. Interest-rate effect 3. Exchange-rate effect

 A change in consumption, investment, government purchases, and net export might shift the aggregrate demand curve.

Aggregate Supply Curve

 Aggregate suppy curve shows the quantity of goods and services that firms choose to produce and sell at each price level.

 In the long run, the aggregate supply curve is vertical because the quantity of output does not depend on the level of prices.

 In the short run, the curve slopes upward for three reasons: 1. Sticky-wage theory

2. Sticky-price theory 3. Misperception theory

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CHAPTER 9

AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

FILL IN THE BLANK

1. __________ and __________ is the model economists use to analyze short run fluctuations in economic activity around its long-run trend.

2. A period of falling incomes and rising unemployment is called __________ if it is relatively mild and __________ if it is more severe.

3. __________ is based on classical dichotomy and monetary neutrality that are true in long run but not in short run. 4. __________ is short run economic fluctuations.

5. The aggregate supply curve is ________ sloping in the short run and ________ in the long run.

6. Shifts in aggregate demand might arise from __________,

__________, __________, and __________.

7. An increase in government purchase will ______ the aggregate demand curve to the ______.

8. A ________ in the expected price level raises the quantity of goods and services supplied and shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the ______.

9. When output falls below the natural rate of employment the

____________ shifts to the ______.

10. A period of falling output and rising prices is called ________.

TRUE OR FALSE

1. Economic fluctuations are regular and predictable.

2. Most macroeconomic variables that measure some type of income or production fluctuate separately by exactly same amount.

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4. The wealth effect suggest that a decrease in the price level makes consumers feel more wealthy, which in turn encourages them to spend less.

5. According to the exchange rate effect, a rise in the Canadian price level causes Canadian interest rates to fall, the real exchange rate depreciates, which stimulates Canadian net exports.

6. The level of production in long run aggregate supply curve is also referred to as potential output or full-employment output. 7. The discovery of a new mineral deposit shifts the long-run

aggregate-supply curve to the left.

8. The rises of unemployment shifts aggregate supply curve to the right.

9. In the long run, shifts in aggregate demand affect both the overall price level and output.

10. When short-run aggregate supply falls, policymakers can accommodate the shift by contracting aggregate demand to keep output at its natural rate.

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. An aggregate supply curve depicts the relationship between… a. the price level and nominal GDP

b. household expenditures and household income c. the price level and the aggregate quantity demanded d. the price level and the aggregate quantity supplied

2. Which of the following is true about the long-run aggregate supply curve?

a. It is vertical at the level of potential GDP

b. It shows the relationship between the price level and real GDP when the economy is at full employment

c. It shifts due to changes in labor, capital, natural resources, and technology

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3. An individual holds $10,000 in a checking account and the

price level rises significantly. Hence….

a. the individual’s real wealth and consumption expenditure decrease

b. the individual’s real wealth decreases but real national wealth increases

c. there is no change in the individual’s real wealth d. the individual’s wealth increases

4. Other things constant, the economy’s aggregate demand

curve shows that…

a. as the price level falls, real GDP decreases

b. any change in the price level shifts the aggregate demand curve

c. the quantity of real GDP demanded decreases when the price level rises

d. the quantity of real GDP demanded and the price level are not related

5. An aggregate supply curve has positive slope, because not all prices adjust instantly to changing condition so the sales will depresses and leads the firm to cut back production. This

theory is called ….

a. Misperception theory b. Classical theory c. Sticky-wage theory d. Sticky-price theory

6. According to ….. effect, if price rises, goods and services require more dollars, and to get these dollars, people sell bonds or other assets; this drives ….. interest rates and

therefore the investment ….. so does the aggregate demand.

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7. Last year in Namibia, the price level increased and real GDP increased. Such an outcome might have occurred because sort-run aggregate supply ….. and aggregate demand …...

a. decreased; decreased b. decreased; increased c. increased; decreased d. did not changed; increased

8. In the short run, a supply shock that shifts the short-run

aggregate supply curve leftward ….. real GDP and …... the

price level.

a. increases; raises b. decreases; raises c. increases; lowers d. decreases; lowers

9. Below are some examples of changes in natural resources that shift aggregate supply curve, except …..

a. discovery of new mineral deposits b. reduction in supply of imported oil

c. changing weather patterns that affect agricultural production

d. factories destroyed by a hurricane

10. An adverse shifts in short-run aggregate supply will cause ... a. stagflation

b. deflation c. contraction d. expansion

ESSAY

1. Why the aggregate supply curve in the long run is vertical? Draw and explain.

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3. Explain the short-run and long-run effects of a positive supply shock and an adverse supply shock!

4. Explain the chain of events that leads from an increase in the price level to an increase in output in the sticky-wage model! 5. Explain the chain of events that cause aggregate demand to

be downward sloping according to the wealth effect?

6. What are the short-run and long-run effects of a decrease in aggregate demand! Draw and explain.

7. Suppose suppliers suddenly believe that inflation will be quite high over the coming year. Suppose also that the economy begins in long-run equilibrium, and the aggregate demand

curve does not shift. What will happen to the supplier’s

willingness to sell in the current time, output level and price level?

8. Draw and explain each of the following events. What will happen to the short run and long run equilibrium?

a. The government cuts the tax rate on goods and services b. The government announce a reduction in fuel prices 9. The recent flare-up of tension following Israel’s attack on

Lebanon has increased the risk that other Middle-East countries could get drawn into a widening war. As a result, Iran has made it clear it is prepared to use oil as a weapon by cutting off export. In your opinion, what will happen to the equilibrium across the world? Use graph and explain how this event affect the economy?

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CHAPTER 10

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL

POLICYON AGGREGATE DEMAND

How Monetary policy influences aggregate demand

 Theory of liquidity preference tells Keynes’s theory that the

interest rate adjust to bring money supply and money demand into balance.

 The aggregate demand curve slopes downward is caused of three reason : the wealth effect, the interest rate effect, the exchange rate effect.

 Equilibrium interest rate the rate at which quantity of money demanded exactly balances the quantity of money supplied.

 Changes in money supply > changes in interest rate > changes in total ouput at a given price.

 If money supply increase, it will lowers interest rate and increase total output for any given price, so the aggregate demand curve will shift to the right.

 If money supply decrease, it will rises interest rate and decrease total output for any given price, so the aggregate demand curve will shift to the left.

How fiscal policy influences aggregate demand

 Fiscal policy influences aggregate demand in two ways : 1. Changes in government purchase

 The multiplier effect, is an additional shifts in aggregate demand that result when expansionary fiscal policy increases income and thereby increase consumer spending. Multiplier = 1 / (1 – MPC)

 The crowding out effect, is the offset aggregate demand that results when expansionary fiscal policy raises the interest rate and thereby reduces investment spending.

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A tax increase depresses consumer spending and shifts aggregate demand curve the the left and vice versa.

Economic Stabilizer

 Automatic stabilizers : change in fiscal policy that stimulate aggregate demand when the economy goes into recession without policymakers having to take any deleberate action.

 Economist behaviour, economist have a different ways to see about economic stabilization

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CHAPTER 10

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL

POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

FILL IN THE BLANK

1. _____ tells Keynes’s theory that the interest rate adjust to bring money supply and money demand into balance. 2. _____ has two effects for economic activity, they are the

multiplier effect and the _____

3. When Indonesian Bank _____ the money supply, it raises the interest rate and _____ the quantity of goods and services demanded for any given price level.

4. If money supply is _____ less than the decreasing in money demand, interest rate will _____

5. Change in _____ that stimulate aggregate demand when the econonomy goes into a _____ without policymaker having to take any deliberate action is called automatic stabilizers. 6. Aggregate demand curve will shift to the right as a result from

_____

7. The theory of liquidity preferences illustrates that monetary policy can be described either in terms of _____ or in terms of the

8. When the _____ wants to contract the aggregate demand, it will _____ tax rate.

9. _____ is the offset aggregate demand that the result when expansionary fiscal policy raises the interest rate and thereby _____ investment spending.

10. If money demand decreasing, meanwhile money supply

doesn’t change, then the interest rate will _____

TRUE OR FALSE

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2. When central bank increase the money supply, it lowers interest rate and increase total output.

3. Theory of liquidity preference tells Keynes’s theory that the price level adjust to bring money supply and money demand into balance

4. Increasing in price level makes aggregate demand curve shift outward.

5. Changes in fiscal policy caused two effects for economics, there is multiplier effect and crowding out effect.

6. A tax cut depresses consumer spending and shifts aggregate demand curve the the left.

7. Fiscal policy is the setting of the level of government spending and money supply by government policymakers. 8. Automatic stabilizers is change in fiscal policy that stimulate

aggregate demand when the economy goes into recession without policymakers having to take any deliberate action. 9. The formulation of multiplier effect is 1/(1+MPC).

10. When central bank decrease the money supply, aggregate supply curve will shift to the left.

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. The intersection between money demand curve and money supply curve occured in...

a. Output market b. Money market c. Input market d. Bonds market

2. An increase in money demand will result... a. Higher interest rate

b. Lower interest rate

c. Aggregate demand curve shift outward d. Aggregate supply curve shift outward

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a. Manual of Political Economy

b. The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money c. The Principles of Economic

d. The Economic Consequences of the Peace

4. The slopes of aggregate demand is the result from these three reasons, except...

a. The interest rate effect b. The income effect c. The wealth effect d. The exchange rate effect

5. When central bank wants to expand the economy, they will... a. Increase money supply

b. Decrease money supply c. Increase money demand d. Decrease money demand

6. The slopes of money supply curve is... a. Upward

b. Downward c. Vertical d. Horizontal

7. When government wants to makes economic growth slowly, they will...

a. Decrease the tax rate and decrease the government expenditure

b. Decrease the tax rate and increase the government expenditure

c. Increase the tax rate and decrease the government expenditure

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8. The crowding out effect is a result of increasing in nmoney demand, whereas the increasing in money demand will increase the interest rate, so that the ... will decrease.

a. Money supply b. Interesr rate effect c. Investment d. Money demand

9. When MPS is 0,3, then the multiplier effect will be... a. 1,6

b. 1,4 c. 3,3 d. 6,1

10. Tax cut will increase ..., and it will shift the aggregate demand curve to the....

a. Consumer spending and Left b. Consumer spendind and Right c. Interest rate and left

d. Interest rate and right

ESSAY

1. What is the crowding out effect?

2. Use the theory of liquidity preference to explain how a decrease in money supply affects the aggregate demand curve. 3. The government spends Rp 3 billion to buy new super

computers. What will happen to aggregate demand?

4. What is the theory of liquidity preference? How does it help explain the downward slope of the aggregate demand curve? 5. What is the multiplier effect? Please give an example ! 6. What is the theory of liquidity preference? If there is a curve,

please draw the curve !

7. What is automatic stabilizer? Please give an example! 8. What happen to the aggregate demand if central bank

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Gambar

Figure 1  1. Refer to Figure 1 ---- Which of the following is consistent with
Figure 2  5. Refer to Figure 2--- Which curve shows the relation between the

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