Queens College, CUNY - ECON 201
CHAPTER 8: Inflation
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1)The quote “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” is attributed to:
Karl Marx d
Economics Mar 22, 2021
Queens College, CUNY - ECON 201
CHAPTER 8: Inflation
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1)The quote “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” is attributed to:
Karl Marx d. Alan Greenspan
Thomas Sargent e. David Ricardo
Milton Friedman
The quote “Inflation is always and everywhere a fiscal phenomenon” is attributed to:
Adam Smith d. Alan Greenspan
Thomas Sargent e. David Ricardo
Karl Marx
Inflation is calculated as:
the overall price level d. the difference in the price level
the rate of change of the price level e. the percent change in output
the percent change in the price level
If Ptis the price level in time t, inflation is calculated as:
1/Ptd.
b.
e.
c.
When discussing inflation, we generally speak of it in terms of:
the percent change in the consumer price index
the percent change in the GDP deflator
the level of the consumer price index
one over the consumer price index
the change in the producer price index
What contributed to Reagan’s defeat of Carter in the 1980 presidential election?
double-digit inflation
the low rate of unemployment
the takeover of the U.S. embassy in Tehran, Iran
Billy Carter’s beer
MargaretThatcher
In 1979, President Carter appointedas chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve to battle.
Greenspan; inflation d. Bernanke; unemployment
Volcker; the Soviet Union e. Powell; Ayatollah Khomeini
Volcker;inflation
In 1979, in the face of rising competition in the fast food hamburger market, McDonald’s reduced the price of its cheeseburger to $0.43. If the CPI in 1979 was 37.2 and the CPI in 2005 was 100, what is the price of a 1979 cheeseburger in 2005 dollars?
a. $0.77 d. $0.43
b. $7.36 e. $0.14
c. $1.16
In 2007, the movie Transformers generated about $27.8 million on its opening day. In 1995, Batman Forever generated $20 million on its opening day. If the CPI in 2005 was 100, the CPI in 1995 was 78.0, and the CPI in 2007 was 106.2,is the larger single-day grossing movie, with about
million in revenues in 2005 dollars.
Transformers; $27.8 d. Transformers; $35.6
Batman Forever; $35.6 e. Batman Forever; $27.8
Transformers; $26.2
Today, the Wendy’s Junior Cheeseburger Deluxe is on the “Right Price Right Size” menu and is priced at $1.19. If the CPI in 1979 was 37.2 and the CPI in 2012 was 117.6, what is the price of a 2012 cheeseburger in 1979 dollars?
a. $2.66 d. $0.38
b. $1.07 e. $3.76
c. $1.01
Sometimes when discussing inflation, we use a measure of inflation that excludesfrom its calculation because these prices tend to be volatile.
commodity and energy prices d. food and housing prices
food and energy prices e. energy and housing prices
housing prices
In the United States, money is backed by:
oil d. no physical commodity
gold e. None of these answers are correct.
silver
Money that has no intrinsic value except as money is calledmoney.
bonded d. intrinsic
commodity e. None of these answers are correct.
fiat
Silver, gold, and chocolate are examples of:
fiat money d. government money
commodity money e. None of these answers are correct.
backed money
A country on the silver standard uses:
coins d. commodity money
fiat money e. None of these answers are correct.
bond money
Fiat money has value because:
it is backed by gold d. it is backed by silver
people believe it has value e. None of these answers are correct.
it has intrinsic value
Fiat money has value because:
people believe it has value d. it has intrinsic value
it is backed by silver e. it is a commodity
it is backed by gold
Liquidity is a measure of:
the monetary base
how many coins are in circulation
how quickly coins can be melted down
how quickly an asset can be converted to currency
the amount of reserves
The measure of money that includes demand deposits and currency only is called:
M0 d. M1
MZ e. MB
M2
M2 includes M1 and:
large time deposits d. long-term bonds
overnight repurchase agreements e. gold reserves
saving accounts
The monetary base consists of:
reserves and currency
M1 plus M2
only M1
gold reserves plus currency
a country’s holdings of foreign and domestic currencies
In dollar amounts, which of the following is the largest?
MB d. currency
M2 e. demand deposits
M1
Alternative forms of money include:
frequent flier miles d. PayPal
gift cards e. All of these answers are correct.
debit cards
The velocity of money is:
how quickly money can be printed
how quickly individuals spend their income
the average number of times a dollar is used in a transaction per year
how many times individuals are paid per year
None of these answers are correct.
In the quantity equation, the value is:
real GDP d. the velocity of money
nominal GDP e. real money
aggregate expenditure
The velocity of money can be calculated from the quantity equation with:
PtYtd. PtYt/Mt
PtYt Mte. Mt
Mt /PtYt
Using the quantity equation, if, Mt= $1,000, Pt= 1.1, and Yt= 100,000, then the velocity of money is: a. 100,000 d. 9.09
b. 0.09 e. 0.11
c. 110
Using the quantity equation, if Mt= $1,000, Pt= 1.1, and Vt = 11, then real GDP is: a. $100,000 d. $909.19
b. $0.01 e. $826.45
c. $100
The quantity theory states that the nominal GDP is equal to:
the real GDP
the number of dollars in circulation
the velocity of money
the effective amount of money used in purchases
velocity times real GDP
According to the classical dichotomy, in the long run there is:
accelerating economic growth
perfect connectivity between the nominal and real sides of the economy
complete separation of the nominal and real sides of the economy
no growth after the economy reaches the steady state
zero inflation
Which of the following has NO effect on long-run economic growth?
a store of gold d. investment
money e. population
productivity
In the quantity theory of money, the:
price level is exogenous
real GDP, velocity, and money supply are endogenous
real GDP and money supply are endogenous
real GDP, velocity, and money supply are exogenous
real GDP is endogenous
In the simple quantity theory of money, the supply of money is:
exogenous
a policy variable
determined by the relationship between output and the price level
endogenous
equal to the supply of gold reserves
According to the quantity theory of money, the price level is:
exogenous
determined by the money supply only
determined by the ratio of the effective quantity of money to the volume of goods
indeterminate in the long run
determined by the volume of goods produced
According to the quantity theory of money, the price level can be written as:
a.
d.
b.
e.
c.
The essence of the quantity theory of money is that:
the price level is indeterminate
in the long run, the only determinant of the price level is the money supply
in the long run, a key determinant of the price level is the money supply
only the central bank knows what the price level is
money cannot pin down the price level
Using the quantity theory of money, we can calculate inflation using, under the assumption that.
; velocity is constant
; percent change in velocity always equals one
; velocity is constant
; velocity is variable
; velocity is constant
If long-run real GDP growth is determined by real changes in the economy, the quantity theory of money implies that:
changes in the money growth rate lead one-for-one to changes in the inflation rate in the long run
changes in the money growth rate lead one-for-one to changes in the inflation rate but only in the short run
changes in velocity lead one-for-one to changes in the inflation rate
changes in the money growth rate lead to a greater than one-for-one change in the inflation rate in the long run
None of these answers are correct.
You are the head of the central bank and you want to maintain 2 percent long-run inflation, using the quantity theory of money. If the real GDP growth is 4 percent and velocity is constant, you suggest a:
6 percent interest rate d. 0 percent money supply growth
6 percent money supply growth e. 2 percent interest rate
2 percent money supply growth
If the real GDP growth is 4 percent per year, the money growth rate is 6 percent, and velocity is constant, using the quantity theory, the inflation rate is:
6 percent d. 2 percent
4 percent e. ?4 percent
?2 percent
If the real GDP growth is 6 percent per year, the money growth rate is 4 percent, and velocity is constant, using the quantity theory, the inflation rate is:
4 percent d. 6 percent
?2 percent e. ?4 percent
2 percent
You are the head of the central bank and you want to maintain 2 percent long-run inflation. Using the quantity theory of money, if real GDP growth is 4 percent and velocity is constant, you suggest a:
6 percent interest rate e. None of these answers are correct.
2 percent money supply growth
The implications of the quantity theory of money are the main basis for which of the following quotes?
“Inflation is always zero in the long run.”
“Inflation is always and everywhere a fiscal phenomenon.”
“Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
“Velocity growth should be equal to 2 percent in the long run.”
“Velocity is always constant.”
Figure 8.1: Money Growth and Inflation in the United States by Decade
The data presented in Figure 8.1 confirm that the relationship between inflation and money growth is:
positive, as suggested by the Fisher equation
positive, as suggested by money neutrality
positive, as suggested by the quantity theory of money
negative, as suggested by the quantity theory of money
None of these answers are correct.
The proposition that changes in money have no real effect on the economy and affect only prices is called:
inflation d. the neutrality of money
the classical dichotomy e. the quantity theory
the quantity equation
Empirically, a large amount of evidence suggests that money neutrality, but changes in money supply.
holds in the short run; do not affect nominal variables
does not hold in the long run; can have real effects in the short run
holds in the short run; can have real effects in the long run
holds in the long run; can have real effects in the short run
does not hold in the long run; have an effect on unemployment in the long run
The nominal interest rate is:
the interest rate not adjusted for inflation
the “advertised” interest rate
a description of the return in units of currency
All of these answers are correct.
None of these answers are correct.
The real interest rate is:
the interest rate not adjusted for inflation
the “advertised” interest rate
a description of the return in units of currency
All of these answers are correct.
None of these answers are correct.
The real interest rate describes:
the net return to government bonds
the rate of return adjusted for inflation
the rate of return in units of a currency
the return with an interest rate equal to zero
the rate of return in real goods
Let r denote the real interest rate and i denote the nominal interest rate; these two interest rates are related by:
d.
e. None of these answers are correct.
c.
Let r denote the real interest rate, i denote the nominal interest rate, and ? denote the rate of inflation. The equation is called:
the money supply d. the quantity theory of money
the quantity equation e. money neutrality
the Fisher equation
Suppose you put $100 dollars in the bank on January 1, 2013. If the annual nominal interest rate is 5 percent and the inflation rate is 5 percent, you will be able to buyworth of goods on January 1, 2014.
a. $90 d. $105
b. $110 e. $95
c. $100
Suppose you put $100 dollars in the bank on January 1, 2013. If the annual nominal interest rate is 5 percent and the inflation rate is 2 percent, you will be able to buyworth of goods on January 1, 2014.
a. $93 d. $105
b. $107 e. $99
c. $103
Suppose you put $100 dollars in the bank on January 1, 2013. If the annual nominal interest rate is 2 percent and the inflation rate is 5 percent, you will be able to buyworth of goods on January 1, 2014.
a. $95 d. $103
b. $102 e. ?$3
c. $97
If the inflation rate is larger than the nominal interest rate:
unemployment rises
the real interest rate is zero
the real interest rate is negative
the real interest rate is larger than the nominal interest rate
Not enough information is given.
Compared to the nominal interest rate, the real interest rate is:
negative d. relatively stable
always smaller e. relatively volatile
always greater than zero
If the real interest rate is negative, it must mean that:
in the short run, bond rates can be very volatile
in the short run, the real interest rate equals the marginal product of capital
in the short run, the real interest rate can deviate from the marginal product of capital
it is difficult to predict long-term interest rates
there is no relationship between long- and short-term interest rates
Practically, the real interest rate is equal to:
a savings account d. the return to stock markets
the rate of return to long-term bonds e. the return to housing
the marginal product of capital
A risk a bank takes on by offering long-term fixed interest rate loans is:
the loss of real returns due to anticipated inflation
the gain that could be made from offering short-term loans
the loss of real returns due to an unexpected inflation surprise
the gains that could have been made if the money were invested in an alternative asset
the loss of customers wanting flexible interest loans
When calculating fixed retirement payments, it is important not to forget:
changes in flexible interest rates
the decline in the payment’s value due to inflation
the increase in the payment’s value due to inflation
rates of return in other markets
the price of tea in China
By purchasing a fixed-rate 30-year mortgage, inflation risk is:
eradicated
spread equally to the borrower and lender
passed from the lender to the borrower
passed from the borrower to the lender
borne by the government
If you decide to buy a house with an adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM), you are:
exposing yourself to inflation risk
reducing your inflation risk
passing inflation risk to the lender
taking on some of the lender’s inflation risk
increasing your mortgage payment
Negative inflationary surprises lead to:
an increase in the real interest rate
a redistribution of wealth from borrowers to lenders
a decline in the nominal interest rate
a decline in inflation risk for lenders
a redistribution of wealth from lenders to borrowers
If income tax rates are based on nominal income, as inflation increases, taxpayers will see:
an increase in their real incomes
their taxes fall as their incomes fall
their taxes rise even though their real incomes are falling
an increase in the nominal income
their taxes fall even though their real incomes are rising
Ifsome goods’ prices adjust more quickly than others, there is:
decreases; leaves unchanged e. leaves unchanged; increases
increases; leaves unchanged
During times of high inflation, people holdand must incur.
less savings; lower interest rates
more money; lower interest rates
less money; higher shoe-leather costs
more savings; shoe-leather costs
less savings; higher transaction costs
The costs associated with changing prices in times of inflation are called:
inflation risks d. shoe-leather costs
price staggering e. menu costs
transaction costs
One problem with unexpected changes in inflation is that:
it steadily erodes real income
it often comes in surprising and unpredictable ways
nominal interest rates are not indexed to inflation
fixed-rate mortgages are not adjusted for inflation
price staggering occurs
To minimize what was believed to be a wage-price spiral, theadministration.
Reagan; increased corporate income
Carter; increased interest rates
Clinton; released oil from the strategic reserves
first Bush; increased taxes
Nixon; imposed price controls
The price controls imposed by the Nixon administration lasted for:
four weeks
six months c.
ninety days
one year
two years
With unanticipated inflation:
creditors are hurt unless they have an indexed contract, because they get less than they expected in real terms
debtors with an indexed contract are hurt, because they pay more than they contracted for in nominal terms
debtors with an unindexed contract lose, because they pay exactly what they contracted for in nominal terms
creditors with indexed contracts gain, because they receive more than they contracted for in nominal terms
debtors with an indexed contract are hurt, because they pay more than they contracted for in real terms
According to the government’s budget constraint, if the government spends more than it generates in taxes, it can raise revenues by:
printing money d. privatizating
decreasing its debt e. increasing interest rates
lowering interest rates
The right to seignorage is the right to:
make coins d. borrow from the public
raise tax revenues e. raise an army
print money
The revenue governments obtain from printing money is called:
issued debt d. government expenditures
the inflation tax e. None of these answers are correct.
raised taxes
With an inflation tax:
everybody loses
all individuals in an economy feel the pressures equitably
there is a redistribution of income from owners of real assets to income earners
there is a redistribution of income from income earners to owners of real assets
the government has a lot of debt to repay
A government that relies on seignorage to finance excess government expenditures is the foundation for the following quote:
“Inflation is always zero in the long run.”
“Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.”
“Inflation is always and everywhere a fiscal phenomenon.”
“Velocity growth should be equal to 2 percent in the long run.”
“Velocity is always constant.”
prevent(s) governments from being tempted to use seignorage excessively.
Gold reserves d. Future generations
The power of bond markets e. Central bank independence
The government budget constraint
According to the quantity equation, the cure for hyperinflation is:
higher taxes d. All of these answers are correct.
reducing government spending e. None of these answers are correct.
reducing money growth
The cure for hyperinflation is:
reducing money growth d. seignorage
maintaining government spending e. All of these answers are correct.
lower taxes
In the text, the country that experienced the highest inflation rate in 1990 was:
Afghanistan
Argentinac.
Mexico
Brazil
Russia
The coordination problem is difficult to solve because:
policymakers cannot make unified decisions
aggregate price-setting behavior has built-in inflation inertia
individual price-setting behavior economywide has built-in inflation inertia
central banks are controlled by many different interests
All of these answers are correct.
If all price setters are not convinced that high inflation rates will end soon, there is:
price staggering
a transfer of wealth from one group to another
substantial menu costs
a coordination problem
negative real interest rates
TRUE/FALSE
Economists often use a rate of inflation that is calculated using all goods EXCEPT vehicles and housing, because prices for these goods are relatively volatile.
The U.S. dollar is backed by the belief that it has value.
Short-term treasury bills are the most liquid form of asset.
M1 consists of savings and money market accounts.
The velocity of money is defined as the average number of times a dollar is used in a transaction over the course of year.
In the quantity equation, the value PtYtis the real GDP.
According to the quantity theory of money, the price level is determined by the ratio of the effective quantity of money to the volume of goods.
Money neutrality is the proposition that changes in money have no real effect on the economy.
The costs associated with changing prices are called menu costs.
An implication of the quantity theory of money is that money growth rates have a less than one-to-one relationship with inflation.
If the inflation rate is higher than the nominal interest rate, the real interest rate is positive.
Compared to the real interest rate, the nominal interest rate has been relatively constant, moving with changes in inflation.
If the real interest rate is less than zero, it implies that the real interest rate deviates from the marginal product of capital in the short run.
If you put $100 in the bank for one year at an annual nominal interest rate of 5 percent and yearly inflation is running at 7 percent, you will be able to buy $105 worth of goods when you pull it out of your account.
If allgoods’pricesadjust simultaneously,there will be a short-term misallocation of resources.
If a bank offers you a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, it is passing inflation risk over to you.
Inflationary surprises transfer wealth from lenders to borrowers.
The right to seignorage is the right to apply income taxes.
In the United States, decisions about monetary policy are conducted by the Federal Reserve, which is likely to lower income taxes.
In times of high inflation, shoe-leather costs rise.
The Federal Reserve believed that the productivity slowdown in the 1970s was a long-lived recession and therefore increased the supply of money.
The high rate of inflation in the United States in the late 1970s and early 1980s was due to high inflation taxes.
SHORTANSWER
Table 8.1
Year
CPI
Year
CPI
1970
40.8
2000
181.3
1975
53.9
2005
200.9
1980
80.8
2010
221.3
1985
109.3
2011
225.0
1990
135.5
2012
229.8
1995
161.2
(Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Considering the end-of-year CPI data in Table 8.1:
Calculate the rate of inflation between 1970 and 1975 and between 1995 and 2000.
Calculate the average rate of inflation for 1970–1975 and 1970–1980.
Calculate the average rate of inflation for 2000–2012 and 2005? 2010.
Briefly comment on your results.
Briefly discuss what makes up the monetary base, M1, and M2.
Write down the quantity equation in growth terms, and identify each variable.
According to the quantity theory of money, what determines the long-run rate of inflation?
If real output growth is 3 percent and velocity is constant, what must the growth rate of money be to ensure that inflation is 5 percent?
Below is the three-year bond real interest rate from 2000–2012. Explain why the real interest rate is positive for most of the 2000s and what explains it being negative in 2008–2009 and 2011–2012.
Figure 8.2: Three-Year Bond Real Interest Rate: 2000–2012
Explain how increases in government expenditures can lead to inflation.
Briefly explain the cause of the Great Inflation in the 1970s.
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