58.
Suppose the economy is in long-run equilibrium. If the government increases its expenditures,
eventually the
increase in aggregate demand causes price expectations to
a.
rise. This rise in price expectations shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the right.
b.
rise. This rise in price expectations shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the left.
c.
fall. This fall in price expectations shifts the short–run aggregate supply curve to the right.
d.
fall. This fall in price expectations shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the left.
59.
Suppose the economy is in long-run equilibrium and the government decreases its expenditures.
Which of the
following helps explain the logic of why the economy moves back to long-run
equilibrium?
a.
as people revise their price-level expectations upward, firms and workers strike bargains for
higher nominal
wages.
b.
as people revise their price-level expectations upward, firms and workers strike bargains for
lower nominal
wages.
c.
as people revise their price-level expectations downward, firms and workers strike bargains for
higher
nominal wages.
d.
as people revise their price-level expectations downward, firms and workers strike bargains for
lower
nominal wages.