According to the traditional Keynesian analysis, if the government increases spending by $10 million, then

A) consumption will increase, and so total expenditures will increase by more than $10 million.
B) consumption will decrease, and so total expenditures will increase by less than the $10 million.
C) consumption will remain the same, and so total expenditures will increase by exactly $10 million.
D) consumption will increase or decrease, and so total expenditures will increase or decrease depending on the change in consumption.


Answer: A) consumption will increase, and so total expenditures will increase by more than $10 million.

Economics

You might also like to view...

What are the types of market power? How do they arise?

What will be an ideal response?

Economics

U.S. imports rise when income in the United States increases

a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Economics

Economists who are skeptical about the relevance of "liquidity traps" argue that

a. a central bank continues to have tools to stimulate the economy, even after its interest rate target hits its lower bound of zero. b. a central bank continues to have the option of committing itself to future monetary contraction, even after its interest rate target hits its lower bound of zero. c. a central bank can greatly reduce the likelihood of a liquidity trap by setting the target rate of inflation at zero. d. while the concept of a liquidity trap is theoretically possible, nothing resembling a liquidity trap ever has been observed in the real world.

Economics

Answer the following statements true (T) or false (F)

1) An employer (biased against African Americans) whose discrimination coefficient is $5 will hire only whites if the actual African-American-white wage gap is $7. 2) A reduction in the collective discrimination coefficients of employers will increase the wage rate of those discriminated against but reduce their employment. 3) Statistical discrimination is also known as occupational discrimination. 4) The crowding model of occupational segregation predicts that domestic output will increase if occupational segregation is ended.

Economics