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Macroeconomic Measurement & Basic Concepts

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1 Macroeconomic Measurement & Basic Concepts
Chapter 8 Review Macroeconomic Measurement & Basic Concepts

2 With an MPS of .5, the MPC will be:
 1.0 minus .5

3 The most important determinant of consumption and saving is:
level of income.

4 As disposable income goes up the
APC falls

5 Which fiscal policy actions would be most effective in combating a recession
Taxes decrease Government Spending increase

6 The consumption schedule relates:
consumption to the level of disposable income

7   The consumption schedule in the above diagram indicates that:  up to a point consumption exceeds income, but then falls below income.

8 APC + APS = 1

9 The sector of the economy that is responsible for Consumption is:
the Household sector

10 The relationship between consumption and disposable income is such that:
 a direct and relatively stable relationship exists between consumption and income.

11 If the Government increases Government Purchases by $800 billion dollars and increases taxes by $800 billion dollars the effect on GDP will be positive.

12 If the marginal propensity to consume is three quarters, then an increase in personal income taxes of $100 will most likely result in a decrease in consumption of $75 and a decrease in savings of $25.

13 The spending multiplier will have an effect on any new, additional spending in the component(s) of
Investment and Government Purchases

14 MPC is greater in A than in B.

15 If X’s MPC is .0, this means that X will:
spend seven-tenths of any increase in its disposable income.

16 Dissaving occurs where:
consumption exceeds income.

17 The saving schedule is drawn on the assumption that as income increases:
 saving will increase absolutely and as a percentage of income.

18 If the marginal propensity to consume is
If the marginal propensity to consume is .9, then the marginal propensity to save must be:  .1

19 The greater is the marginal propensity to consume, :
The smaller is the marginal propensity to save.

20 In the late 1990s the U. S. stock market boomed, causing U. S
In the late 1990s the U.S. stock market boomed, causing U.S. consumption to rise. wealth effect.

21 The wealth effect is shown graphically as a:
 rightward shift of the consumption schedule.

22 MPS/MPC Marginal propensity to save (MPS) change in saving =
change in income Marginal propensity to consume (MPC) change in consumption

23 The investment demand slopes downward and to the right because lower real interest rates:
 enable more investment projects to be undertaken profitably.

24 An increase in the real rate of interest will
reduce the level of investment.

25 The investment demand curve suggests:
there is an inverse relationship between the real rate of interest and the level of investment spending.

26 A decrease in corporate income taxes will:
shift the investment-demand curve to the right.

27 Investment spending in the United States tends to be unstable because:
 profits are highly variable.

28 Capital goods, because their purchases can be postponed like durable consumer goods, tend to contribute to instability in investment spending. 

29 The multiplier is:  1/MPS Or 1/(1 MPC)

30 Which economy has the highest marginal propensity to consume? 
Which economy has the largest multiplier?  4

31 The practical significance of the multiplier is that it:
 magnifies initial changes in spending into larger changes in GDP.

32 If the MPC is 0.75 and gross investment increases by $8 billion, GDP will increase by


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