Chapter 16: Problem 2
According to Friedman, how do we know when the economy is in long-run equilibrium?
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Chapter 16: Problem 2
According to Friedman, how do we know when the economy is in long-run equilibrium?
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Assume a current short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment, as well as a change in technology that permits the wider dispersion of economic policy news. How would the change affect the trade-off? Explain your answer.
"Even if some people do not form their expectations rationally, the new classical theory is not necessarily of no value." Discuss this statement.
Suppose the government undertakes an expansionary fiscal policy measure that raises aggregate demand but individuals incorrectly anticipate the measure, bias upward. What will the short-and long-run changes be in the price level and Real GDP?
"The policy ineffectiveness proposition (connected with new classical theory) does not eliminate policy makers' ability to reduce unemployment through aggregate demand-increasing policies, because they can always increase aggregate demand by more than the public expects." What might be the weak point in this argument?
Why is the new classical theory associated with the word "classical?" Why has it been said that classical theory failed where new classical theory succeeds- because the former could not explain the business cycle (the ups and downs of the economy), but the latter can?
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