Use the standard IS-LM-FE framework and assume the country begins at a triple intersection. Show using the graph and explain in words the effect that an increase in the country's money supply will have on domestic interest rates, output levels, and the official settlements balance (before we consider the implications of pressure on the country's exchange rate).

What will be an ideal response?

POSSIBLE RESPONSE: The LM curve shifts to the right, and the country moves to a new short-run equilibrium at the intersection of the IS curve and the new LM curve. The domestic interest rate decreases, and real gross domestic product (GDP) increases. The new IS-LM intersection is to the right of the FE curve, so the official settlements balance goes into deficit.

With the increase in the money supply, the larger money supply is temporarily greater than money demand. To bring about equilibrium in the money market, interest rates must fall. The fall in interest rates increases interest-sensitive spending, so the GDP level increases.

The reduction in the country's interest rate drives a capital outflow (the nonofficial financial account shifts toward deficit), and the increase in real GDP increases imports (the current account shifts toward deficit), so the official settlements balance goes into deficit.

Economics

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The slope of an indifference curve

A) measures total utility. B) is calculated by dividing the quantity of the good on the vertical axis by the quantity of the good on the horizontal axis. C) measures the marginal rate of substitution between the two goods in question. D) is calculated by dividing the price of good on the vertical axis by price of the good on the horizontal axis.

Economics

Which one of the following is/are INCORRECT? An argument against floating exchange rates is that

A) a fixed rate automatically prevents instability in the domestic money market from affecting the economy if shocks come from home domestic money market. B) a fixed rate might become unpredictable, complicating economic planning. C) a rise in money demand under a fixed exchange rate would have no effect on the exchange rate and output. D) a fixed rate functions within the price-specie-flow mechanism and maintains a balance of payments equilibrium. E) a fixed rate automatically prevents instability in the economy from output market shocks.

Economics