According to quantity theory of money
MV = PY
1000(4) = P(2000)
P= 2
Price level is 2
Quantity theory in percentage terms
% change in money supply + % change in velocity = inflation rate + % change in output
6 = inflation rate + 3
Inflation rate = 3%
Inflation rate would be 3 %
Question 28 (5 points) Saved Suppose full employment real GDP is $2,000 billion and the money...
Page 2 Suppose full employment real GDP is $1,000 billion and the money supply is $800 billion. Suppose also that the monetary velocity is constant and equal to 5. What is the price level? 00 Page 3: Now suppose the Fed increases the money supply by 4% and potential real GDP rises by 3%. In the long run, the inflation rate would be 00% Page 4 Previous Page Next Page Page 9 of 28 Page 5: Submit Quiz 26 of...
Question 20 (6 points) Suppose full employment real GDP is $1,000 billion and the money supply is $800 billion. Suppose also that the monetary velocity is constant and equal to 5. What is the price level? _.00 Now suppose the Fed increases the money supply by 4% and potential real GDP rises by 3%. In the long run, the inflation rate would be _.00% A/
Suppose that this years money supply is $500 billion, nominal GDP is $6 trillion, and real GDP is $2 trillion. a. What is the price level? What is the velocity of money? b. Suppose that velocity is constant and the economy's output of goods and services rises by 3% each year. What will happen to nominal GDP and the price level next year if the Fed keeps the money supply constant? c. What money supply should the Fed set next...
Suppose that this year's money supply is $500 billion, nominal GDP is $10 trillion and real GDP is $5 trillion. a. What is the price level? b. What is the velocity of money? (Please calculate your answers in billions, i.e. leave off the zeros (0) if necessary.) c. Suppose that velocity is constant and the economy's output of goods and services rises by five percent each year. What will happen to nominal GDP and the price level next year if the Fed...
Suppose the full-employment level of real GDP is increasing at a rate of 3% per period and the money supply is growing at a 4% rate. What will happen to the long-run inflation rate, assuming constant velocity?
Given: Money supply = $275 billion Velocity of money = 20 Real GDP = $525 billion 1) Solve for the price level. 2) Solve for the nominal GDP. 3) Let real GDP be $550 billion, holding the velocity of money constant. 3.1) Solve for the new price level. 3.2) Solve for the new level of nominal GDP 3.3) The Fed wants to target a 2 percent inflation rate for the following year. Solve for the appropriate money supply to meet...
Suppose that money supply is $4 trillion, nominal GDP is $20 trillion, and real GDP is $16 trillion. a. What is the price level? What is the velocity of money? Suppose that velocity is constant and the economy’s output of goods and services rises by 3 percent each year. b. What will happen to nominal GDP and the price level next year if the Fed increases the money supply by 5 percent? c. What money supply should the Fed set...
Suppose real GDP = $148 billion and full-employment GDP = $160. Based on this information you know: Question 4 options: You are at a short-run outcome You are at a long-run outcome The economy could be art a short-run or long-run outcome. More information is needed to know which one is correct.
of 40> Suppose the Fed sells $500 billion in government securities and the reserve ratio is 0.1. Calculate the resulting change in the money supply. Be certain to include a negative sign. change in the money supply: $ billion Next, show the impact this open market operation wilEhave on the graph in the short run 10 Solow growth curve Short-run aggregate supply 7 Next, show the impact this open market operation will have on the graph in the short run....
Refer to the table below Suppose that aggregate demand increases such that the amount of real output demanded rises by $7 billion at each price levela. By what percentage will the price level increase?Will this inflation be demand-pull inflation or will it be
cost-push inflation?b. If potential real GDP (that is, full-employment GDP) is $510
billion, what will be the size of the positive GDP gap after the
change in aggregate demand?c. If government wants to use fiscal policy to counter...