A. Shifts the supply of loanable funds to the left and increase the real interest rate
B. Shift the supply of loanable funds to the right and reduces the real interest rate.
C. Shifts the demand for loanable funds to the right and increases the real interest rate.
D. Shifts the demand for loanable funds to the left and reduces the real interest rate
Stocks
Stocks
A. Real interest rates rise and investment falls
B. Real interest rates rise and investment rises
C. Real interest rates fall and investment rises
D. Real interest rates fall and investment falls
A. an increase in public saving
B. a decrease in private saving
C. None of these answers
D. a decrease in public savings
A. raise the real interest rate and decrease the quantity of loanable funds demanded for investment
B. lower the real interest rate and increase the quantity of loaable funds demanded for investment
C. raise the real interest rate and increase the quantity of loandable funds demanded for investment
D. lower the real interest rate and decrease the quantity of loanable funds demanded for investment
A. Lower taxes on the returns to saving, provide investment tax credits and lower the deficit
B. Increase tax on the returns to saving Provide investment tax credits and increase the deficit
C. Increase tax on the returns to saving Provide investment tax credits and lower the deficit
D. Lower taxes on the returns to saving Provide investment tax credits and increase the deficit
A. The purchase of goods and services
B. The purchase of capital equipment and structures
C. When we place our saving in the bank
D. The purchase of stocks and bonds
A. Saving is unchanged
B. There is an increased in saving and the economy should grow more quickly
C. There is a decrease in saving and the economy should grow more slowly
D. There is not enough information to determine what will happen to saving
A. there is a budget deficit
B. None of these answers
C. There is a budget surplus
D. private saving is positive
A. none of these answers
B. investment + consumption expenditures
C. private saving + public saving
D. GDP government purchases
A. Probability of default
B. Price-earnings ratio
C. dividend
D. tax treatment