Macroeconomics: Canada in the Global EnvironmentAddison-Wesley, 1994 - 1088 ˹éÒ |
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˹éÒ 1005
... dollar , the larger is the quanti- ty of dollars demanded arising from the expectation of a capital gain . To see why , suppose that you expect the dollar to be worth 110 Japanese yen at the end of one year . If today the dollar is ...
... dollar , the larger is the quanti- ty of dollars demanded arising from the expectation of a capital gain . To see why , suppose that you expect the dollar to be worth 110 Japanese yen at the end of one year . If today the dollar is ...
˹éÒ 1006
... dollar assets and fewer foreign - currency assets , other things remain- ing the same . An increase in the expected future value of the Canadian dollar increases the demand for dollars and shifts the demand curve for dollars rightward ...
... dollar assets and fewer foreign - currency assets , other things remain- ing the same . An increase in the expected future value of the Canadian dollar increases the demand for dollars and shifts the demand curve for dollars rightward ...
˹éÒ 1010
... dollar assets . The effects of these actions are illustrated in Fig . 36.9 , which shows the market for Canadian dollar assets against the value of the Canadian dollar in terms of U.S. dollars . In August 1992 , the demand for Canadian ...
... dollar assets . The effects of these actions are illustrated in Fig . 36.9 , which shows the market for Canadian dollar assets against the value of the Canadian dollar in terms of U.S. dollars . In August 1992 , the demand for Canadian ...
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aggregate demand curve aggregate expenditure curve aggregate planned expenditure aggregate supply curve autonomous expenditure Bank of Canada billions of 1986 business cycle capital cars CHAPTER consumption expenditure consumption function decrease deficit demand and supply disposable income dollars economists effects equilibrium expenditure example expected exports factors of production falls Figure firms fiscal policy fluctuations GDP deflator government purchases graph gross domestic product growth households inflation rate investment demand curve Jane Jane's kilograms of corn labour force long-run aggregate supply macroeconomic marginal propensity ment metre of cloth million tapes monetary policy money supply multiplier opportunity cost output percent Phillips curve price level production possibility frontier quantity demanded quantity of labour quantity of money quantity of real quantity supplied Real GDP billions real interest rate real money real wage rate recession relationship rises short-run aggregate supply tapes a week taxes tion unem unemployment rate variables Walkman