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Macroeconomics Chp. 12, 13, 14

Terms

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The market in which goods and services are exchanged and in which the equilibrium level of aggregate output is determined
Goods market
The market in which financial instruments are exchaged and i which the equilibrium level of the interest rate is determined
Money Market
An increase in government spedinging or a reduction in net taxes aimed at increasing aggregate output
Expansionary fiscal policy
An increase in the money supply aimed at increasing aggregate output
Expansionary monetary policy
The tendency for increases in government spending to cause reduction in private investment spending
Crowding-out effect
A decrease in government spending or an increase in net taxes aimed at decreasing aggregate output
contractionary fiscal policy
A decrease in the money supply aimed at decreasing aggregate output
Contractionary monetary policy
The combination of monetary and fiscal policies in use at a given time
Policy mix
Interest rate Expectations of future sales Capital utilization rates Relative capital and labor costs
Determinants of planned investment
The total demand for goods and services in the economy
Aggregate Demand
A curve that shows the negative relationship between aggregate output and the price level.
Aggregate demand curve
Each point on the AD curve is a point at which both the goods market and the money market are in equilibrium
True
The change in consumption brought about by a change in real wealth that results from a change in the price level
real wealth effect
The total supply of all goods and services in an economy
Aggregate supply
A graph that show the relationship between the aggregate quantity of output supplied by all firms in an economy and the overall price level
Aggregate Supply curve
A change in costs that shifts the aggregate supply curve
Cost shock/Supply shock
The price level at which the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves intersect
Equilibrium price level
The leel of aggregate output that can be sustained in the long run without inflation
Potential output/potential GDP
An increase in the overall price level
Inflation
Occurs when the overall price level continues to rise over some fairly long period of time
Sustained inflation
Inflation that is initiated by and increase in aggregate demand
Demand-pull inflation
Inflation caused by an increase in cost
Cost-push/supply-side inflation
Occurs when output is falling at the same time that prices are rising
stagflation
A period of very rapid increases in the price level
Hyperinflation
The number of people unemployed as a percentage of the labor force
unemployment rate
The portion of unemployment that is due to the normal working of the labor market
Frictional unemployment
The portion of unemploument that is due to changes in the structure of the economy that result in a significant loss of jobs in certain industries
Structural unemployment
The increase in unemployment that occurs during recessions and depressions
Cyclical unemployment
A graph that illustrates the amount of labor that households want to supply at each given wage rate
Labor supply curve
A graph that illustrates the amount of labor that firms want to employ each give wage rate
Labor demand curve
The downward rigidity of wages as an explanation for the existence fo unemplyment
Sticky wages
Workers are concerned about their wages relative to other workers in other firms and industries, they may be unwilling to accept a wage cut unless they know that all other workers are recieving similar cuts
Relative-wage explanation of unemployment
Emplyment contracts that stipulate worker\'s wages, usually for a period of 1 to 3o years
Explicit contracts
Conract provision that tie wages to changes in the cost of living. The greater the inflation rate, the more wages are raised
cost-of-living adjustments
The productivity of workers increases with the wage rate
Efficiency wage theory
Laws that set a floor for wage rates..minimum hourly rate for any kind of labor
Minimum wage laws
The percentage change in the price level
Inflation rate
A graph showing the relationship between the inflation rate and the unemployment rate
Phillips Curve
The unemployment that occurs as a normal part of the functioning of the economy. Sometimes taken as the sum of frictional unemployment and structural unemployment
Natural rate of unemployment

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