Assume that the government increases spending and finances the expenditures by borrowing in the domestic capital markets. If the nation has low mobility international capital markets and a flexible exchange rate system, what happens to the real GDP and net nonreserve-related international borrowing/lending in the context of the Three-Sector-Model?

a. Real GDP rises, and net nonreserve-related international borrowing/lending becomes more positive (or less negative).
b. Real GDP rises, and net nonreserve-related international borrowing/lending becomes more negative (or less positive).
c. Real GDP falls, and net nonreserve-related international borrowing/lending becomes more positive (or less negative).
d. Real GDP and net nonreserve-related international borrowing/lending remain the same.
e. There is not enough information to determine what happens to these two macroeconomic variables.


.A

Economics

You might also like to view...

Which of the following is NOT true of adverse selection?

A) It would not exist in a world of perfect information. B) It arises because borrowers typically know more than lenders. C) It describes a lender's problem of distinguishing the good-risk applicants from the bad-risk applicants. D) It describes a lender's problem in verifying borrowers are using their funds as intended.

Economics

Global warming is an externality

Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Economics

The minimum wage can be thought of as a price floor. The great majority of labor economists believe that a minimum wage __________ unemployment among young and unskilled workers

a. increases b. decreases c. eliminates d. has no effect on e. There is not enough information to answer the question.

Economics

Suppose you get a tax refund of $20,000 and instead of spending it on items that had been on your wish list for two years, you put it all in your checking account at the First National Bank of Urbana. And if that deposit allows the bank to loan out $17,000 . then the potential money multiplier must be

a. 0.067 b. 0.117 c. 0.667 d. 1.176 e. 6.667

Economics