Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Practice Quiz
The Self-Correcting
Aggregate Demand and Supply Model
1. An assumption of the short-run aggregate supply curve is that it is a period of time
which
a. knowledge is complete.
b. wages are fixed.
c. wages are constant for under one year.
d. prices firms charge for products are fixed.
ANS:
b. The short-run aggregate supply curve (SRAS) is based on two assumptions: (1)
incomplete knowledge and (2) fixed-wage contracts.
2. The long-run aggregate supply curve is based on the assumption that
a. both the price level and nominal incomes are fixed.
b. prices are flexible after one year.
c. both the price level and nominal incomes change by the same percentage.
d. potential GDP is undermined.
ANS:
c. The long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is a vertical curve at full-employment
real GDP along which profits remain unchanged because the price level and nominal
income change proportionally.
3. Graphically, long-run macro equilibrium occurs at the
a. midpoint of the aggregate demand curve.
b. Intersection of the aggregate demand and long-run aggregate supply curves regardless
of the short-run aggregate supply curve.
c. midpoint of the long-run aggregate supply curve.
d. intersection of the aggregate demand, short-run aggregate supply, and long-run
aggregate supply curves.
ANS:
d. The intersection of these curves establishes the equilibrium price level and fullemployment real GDP.
ANS:
c. In the long-run, the rightward shift of the short-run aggregate supply curve (SRAS)
will establish long-run equilibrium where the aggregate demand curve (AD2) intersects
the long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS).
10. In A-8, the self-correcting AD/AS model predicts that the long-run result of the
decrease from AD1 to AD2 will be a (an)
a. higher price level and higher unemployment rate.
b. lower price level and higher unemployment rate.
c. unchanged price level and full employment.
d. lower price level and full employment.
ANS:
d. At any real GDP below the point where the long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS)
intersects the horizontal real GDP axis, the unemployment rate is higher than the fullemployment rate. Also, observe that along the vertical axis that the price level (CPI) falls
in this case from moving to long-run equilibrium.
11. Which of the following is the most likely to cause a leftward shift in the long-run
aggregate supply curve?
a. An increase in labor
b. An increase in capital
c. An advance in technology
d. Destruction of resources
ANS:
d. A leftward shift in the long-run aggregate supply curve is caused by decreases in
resources (land, labor, or capital) that reduce the productive capacity of the economy.
12. As shown in Exhibit A-9, and assuming the aggregate demand curve shifts from AD1
to AD2, the full-employment level of real GDP is
a. $12 billion.
b. $8 billion.
c. $150 billion.
d. unable to determined.
ANS:
b. The full-employment level of real GDP is established by the vertical LRAS curve.
13. Given the shift of the aggregate demand curve from AD1 to AD2 in Exhibit A-9, the
real GDP and price level (CPI) in long-run equilibrium will be
a. $8 billion and 150.
b. $12 billion and 200.
c. $8 billion and 250.
d. $8 billion and 200.
ANS:
c. E2 is a short-run equilibrium because in the long run competition among firms for
scarce workers will drive upward the wages of labor causing SRAS1 to shift leftward to
SRAS2.
14. Beginning from long-run equilibrium at point E1 in Exhibit A-9, the aggregate
demand curve shifts to AD2. The real GDP and price level (CPI) in short-run equilibrium
will be
a. $12 billion and 200.
b. $8 billion and 250.
c. $8 billion and 150.
d. $12 billion and 250.
ANS:
a. E2 is a short-run equilibrium for an overheated economy operating beyond its fullemployment capacity.
15. Beginning from short-run equilibrium at point E2 in Exhibit A-9, the economys
movement to a new position of long-run equilibrium would best be described as
a. a movement along the AD2 curve with a shift in the SRAS1 curve.
b. a movement along the SRAS2 curve with a shift in the AD2 curve.
c. a shift in the LRAS curve to an intersection at E1.
d. no shift of any kind.
ANS:
a. At E2 the increase in nominal wages (a resource price) shifts SRAS1 leftward to SRAS2
and equilibrium E2. The result is a movement upward along AD1.