MacroeconomicsAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1994 - 598 ˹éÒ |
¨Ò¡´éÒ¹ã¹Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í
¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 3 ¨Ò¡ 84
˹éÒ 41
... shown on the horizontal axis and the num- ber of rainy days a month in California is shown on the vertical axis . Again , the output of French wine ( 3 billion gallons a year in this example ) does not change when the number of rainy ...
... shown on the horizontal axis and the num- ber of rainy days a month in California is shown on the vertical axis . Again , the output of French wine ( 3 billion gallons a year in this example ) does not change when the number of rainy ...
˹éÒ 83
... shown in the table in Fig . 4.1 and the supply schedule shown in the table in Fig . 4.4 appear together in the table in Fig . 4.7 . If the price of a tape is $ 1 , the quantity demanded is 9 million tapes a week , but no tapes are ...
... shown in the table in Fig . 4.1 and the supply schedule shown in the table in Fig . 4.4 appear together in the table in Fig . 4.7 . If the price of a tape is $ 1 , the quantity demanded is 9 million tapes a week , but no tapes are ...
˹éÒ 199
... shown as a movement along a con- sumption function . Consumption expenditure also increases when expected future income increases . Such an increase is shown as an upward shift in the con- sumption function . The data reported by the ...
... shown as a movement along a con- sumption function . Consumption expenditure also increases when expected future income increases . Such an increase is shown as an upward shift in the con- sumption function . The data reported by the ...
©ºÑºÍ×è¹æ - ´Ù·Ñé§ËÁ´
¤ÓáÅÐÇÅÕ·Õ辺ºèÍÂ
$1 trillion aggre aggregate demand curve aggregate expenditure aggregate planned expenditure aggregate supply curve amount autonomous expenditure banks billion hours business cycle capital CHAPTER consume consumption expenditure curve for real decrease deficit deposits dollars economists equal equilibrium expenditure example exports factors factors of production fall Federal Reserve Figure firms fiscal policy fluctuations forecast GDP deflator government purchases graph growth higher households labor curve labor force labor market long-run aggregate supply macroeconomic ment million tapes monetary policy money multiplier money supply money wage rate multiplier natural rate OPEC open market operation opportunity cost output Phillips curve price level production possibility frontier quantity demanded quantity of labor quantity of money quantity of real quantity supplied rational expectations Real GDP trillions real wage rate recession relationship rises short-run aggregate supply slope tapes a week taxes tion trillions of 1987 U.S. economy unem unemployment rate