Assignment title: Information
1) Explain why the Aggregate Supply curve becomes increasingly steeply
sloped at levels of RGDP near "full employment" and becomes especially
steeply sloped beyond "full employment" RGDP (hint: this topic is not
discussed in your text... you will need to understand this week's lecture notes
to answer this).
2) Why might the rate at which the Aggregate Supply curve shifts vertically
upward increase when an economy produces beyond full employment. (Hint:
think about the effect of very low unemployment rates on the balance of
bargaining power between employers and workers)
3) Explain why inflation rates are likely to rise when an economy expands
beyond full employment capacity output. Draw an aggregate supply-
aggregate demand diagram to illustrate your answer. (Hint: utilize your
answers to #1 & #2 to answer this question)
4) Suppose worker productivity increased at the rate of 1.9% per year. If the
labor force grew by 1.5% per year, what rate of increase in RGDP would be
sustainable without increasing inflation pressures?
5) In the period 2000-2003, the RGDP (real GDP adjusted for inflation) growth
rate in the US averaged 2.39% per year, while inflation rates remained at
around 2.53% per year. In the latter half of the 1970's, by contrast, inflation
rates accelerated markedly even though annual growth in RGDP did not
exceed 3%.
Now in 2012-2013 the US economy is slowly recovering from the great
recession, what will determine whether it can recover in the coming years at
strong growth performance similar to 2003-2006 without triggering a
noticeable acceleration of inflation?
6) Illustrate how each of the following events would shift the AS schedule and
potential RGDP, thereby altering equilibrium prices and output levels in the
economy. Use an aggregate supply-aggregate demand diagram in your
explanation and assume that the economy is initially at full employment. Note:
Although some of the events listed below will also shift AD conditions in the
economy, you do not need to show AD shifts in answering these questions.
We will discuss AD shifts in next week's lesson.
a) an increase in the general level of money wages
b) an increase in the price of imported oil and related energy products.
c) a decrease in the level of US interest rates
d) an increase in the productivity of labor
e) an increase in the expected inflation rate
f) an increase in the labor force growth rate.