EP ECONOMICS,AP EDITION-CONNECT ACCESS
20th Edition
ISBN: 9780021403455
Author: McConnell
Publisher: MCGRAW-HILL HIGHER EDUCATION
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Chapter 28, Problem 5DQ
To determine
The possibility for the investment spending to rise in which the real interest rate rises.
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CF
1
2
3
4.
5
Disposable income (trillions of 2005 dollars)
In the above figure, at a disposable income level of $2 trillion, saving equals
Select one:
O a. $4 trillion.
O b. zero.
O c. consumption expenditures.
O d. disposable income.
6.
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Consumption expenditure
(trillions of 2005 dollars)
5,
II
Manipulate the graph to show what will happen to supply and
demand in the market for loanable funds when the
government budget deficit increases, changing the
equilibrium quantity of loanable funds by 3
percentage points.
Ceteris paribus, what is the new interest rate?
interest rate:
Ceteris paribus, private investment would
increase.
not change.
decrease.
%
20
10
9
Supply
8
Interest rate (%)
7
CO
5
LO
3
2
1
0
0
2
Demand
4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28
Quantity of loanable funds (% of GDP)
Intended Spending (billions)
$2,300
$2,100
$1,900
$1,700
$1,500
The marginal propensity to consume is
01
O 19/21.
O 2/3.
O 5/7.
45%
$1,500 $1,800 $2,100 $2,400 $2,700
Gross Domestic Product (billions)
impossible to tell from the graph.
Consumption
plus
investment
Consumption
Chapter 28 Solutions
EP ECONOMICS,AP EDITION-CONNECT ACCESS
Ch. 28.2 - Prob. 1QQCh. 28.2 - Prob. 2QQCh. 28.2 - Prob. 3QQCh. 28.2 - Prob. 4QQCh. 28.5 - Prob. 1QQCh. 28.5 - Prob. 2QQCh. 28.5 - Prob. 3QQCh. 28.5 - Prob. 4QQCh. 28 - Prob. 1DQCh. 28 - Prob. 2DQ
Ch. 28 - Prob. 3DQCh. 28 - Prob. 4DQCh. 28 - Prob. 5DQCh. 28 - Prob. 6DQCh. 28 - Prob. 7DQCh. 28 - Prob. 8DQCh. 28 - Prob. 9DQCh. 28 - Prob. 1RQCh. 28 - Prob. 2RQCh. 28 - Prob. 3RQCh. 28 - Prob. 4RQCh. 28 - Prob. 5RQCh. 28 - Prob. 6RQCh. 28 - Prob. 7RQCh. 28 - Prob. 8RQCh. 28 - Prob. 9RQCh. 28 - Prob. 1PCh. 28 - Prob. 2PCh. 28 - Prob. 3PCh. 28 - Prob. 4PCh. 28 - Prob. 5PCh. 28 - Prob. 6PCh. 28 - Prob. 7PCh. 28 - Prob. 8PCh. 28 - Prob. 9PCh. 28 - Prob. 10P
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Similar questions
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- Which of the following changes in personal income tax would lead to the smallest increase in consumption? O a. O b. a $15 000 decrease in taxes, if MPC equals 0.6 O c. a $30 000 decrease in taxes, if MPC equals 0.25 Oe. a $20 000 decrease in taxes, if MPC equals 0.5 O d. a $12 000 decrease in taxes, if MPC equals 0.75 a $10 000 decrease in taxes, if MPC equals 0.2arrow_forwardADVANCED ANALYSIS Assume that the consumption schedule for a private open economy is such that consumption C= 60 + 08Y Assume further that planned investment lo government spending G, and net exports X are independent of the level of real GDP nd constant at lg 40, G= 0, and Xp= 10. Recall also that, in equilibrium, the real output produced () is equal to aggregate expenditures: Y= C+lg+ G+ Xp Instructions: Round your answers to the nearest whole number. a. Calculate the equilibrium level of income or real GDP for this economy S 1050 b. What happens to equilibrium Yif lg changes to 20? 950 What does this outcome reveal about the size of the multiplier? Multiplier=arrow_forward5. LO 2,5 A consumer receives income y in the current period and income y' in the future period, and pays taxes of t and t' in the current and future periods, respectively. The consumer can borrow and lend at the real interest rate r. This consumer faces a constraint on how much he or she can borrow, much like the credit limit typically placed on a credit card account. That is, the consumer cannot borrow more than x, where x < we-y+t, with we denoting lifetime wealth. Use diagrams to determine the effects on the consumer's current consumption, future consumption, and saving of a change in x, and explain your results.arrow_forward
- Suppose that consumer spending initially rises by $5 billion for every 1 percent rise in household wealth and that investment spending initially rises by $20 billion for every 1 percentage point fall in the real interest rate. Also assume that the economy�s multiplier is 3. If household wealth falls by 6 percent because of declining house values, and the real interest rate falls by 2 percentage points, in what direction and by how much will the aggregate demand curve initially shift at each price level? The aggregate demand curve will shift_____ by $____ billion. In what direction and by how much will it eventually shift? The aggregate demand curve will shift_____ by $____ billion..arrow_forward4. Below is a list of domestic output and national income figures for a certain year. All figures are in billions. The questions that follow ask you to determine the major national income measures by both the expenditures and income approaches. The results you obtain with the different methods should be the same. LO7.4 Personal consumption expenditures $245 7. Net foreign factor income 4 Transfer payments 12 Rents 14 Consumption of fixed capital (depreciation) 27 Statistical discrepancy 8. Social Security contributions 20 Interest 13 Proprietors' income 33 Net exports 11 Dividends 16 Compensation of employees 223 Taxes on production and imports 18 Undistributed corporate profits 21 Personal taxes 26 19 Corporate income taxes 56 Corporate profits 72 Government purchases 33 Net private domestic investment 20 Personal saving a. Using the above data, determine GDP by both the expenditures approach and the income approach. Then determine NDP. b. Now determine NI in two ways: first, by…arrow_forwardGiven that marginal propensity to save (MPS) is 0.5, what is the multiplier? O 2 O 4 0.5arrow_forward
- In a macro model where the marginal propensity to consume out of disposable income is 0.80, the net tax rate is 0.25, and the marginal propensity to import is 0.11, the simple multiplier will be O A. 3.448 O B. 2.041 OC. 0.490 O D. 1.961 O E. 1.408arrow_forwardIf the multiplier is 4, what is the MPC? O 0.25 O 0.5 O 0.75 1arrow_forward2. L Give Up! Suppose the Japanese economy has been experiencing slow growth. As a result, the Prime Minister, who thinks John Maynard Keynes was the greatest economist ever, has decided to increase government spending. The Prime Minister asks the head of the economic council to determine the increase in government spending necessary to bring the economy to full employment. Assume there is a GDP gap of 1 trillion yen and the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is 0.60. What advice should the head of the economic council give the Prime Minister? O The recessionary gap is equal to 400 billion yen. O The inflationary gap is equal to 400 billion yen. O The recessionary gap is equal to 625 billion yen. O The inflationary gap is equal to 625 billion yen.arrow_forward
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