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ECN 001B B01-B04 FQ 2025 Final Examination

Single choice

The graph above shows the AD, LRAS, and SRAS functions for a country. The Fed is following an inflation targeting policy. Its target inflation rate is Π* = 5.00 percent and the potential GDP equals YP = 100,000. The Fed is quite successful in achieving its inflation target in the long run.  Okun's alpha equals 2. Currently the economy is in the state of long-run equilibrium. Marginal propensity to consume is MPC = 0.80. The government increases transfer payments (TR) by 4,000 units and finances it through an equal increase in taxes (TX). If the Fed does not follow the inflation targeting policy, and if the increases in TR and TX turn out to be permanent, private spending will be crowded out by X units.  What is the value of X?

Options
A.1,000
B.2,000
C.3,000
D.4,000
E.None of the above
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We begin by restating the given information and the question context to frame the analysis. The problem provides that the Fed targets a long-run inflation rate of Π* = 5.00%, potential GDP YP = 100,000, Okun's alpha = 2, MPC = 0.80, and that the government increases transfer payments (TR) by 4,000 financed by an equal tax increase (TX). If the Fed does not follow the inflation targeting policy and if the TR and TX increases are permanent, private spending will be crowded out by X units. We are asked for the value of X. Option 1: 1,000. The crowding out value depends on the fiscal multiplier and the marginal propensity to consume, along with any Ricardian or balanced-budget effects. With MPC = 0.80, the simple fiscal spending multiplier for an equal increase in TR financed by TX under a balanced budget is roughly 1/(1 − MPC) minus some consideration of tax offsets. If TR increases by 4,000 and TX increases by the same amount, the net effect on disposable income is the change in TR minus the tax offset times the MPC, which yields a relatively modest crowding out, but 1,000 is quite small given a 4,000 stimulus and a high M......Login to view full explanation

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