A. fiscal policies
B. incomes policies
C. supply-side policies
D. monetary policies
A. fiscal policies
B. incomes policies
C. supply-side policies
D. monetary policies
A. real balance effect
B. menu costs of inflation
C. money illusion.
D. cost-push inflation.
A. ratio of the frictional unemployment rate to the cyclical unemployment rate.
B. Sum of structural unemployment and cyclical unemployment.
C. Sum of frictional unemployment and cyclical unemployment
D. sum of frictional unemployment and structural unemployment.
A. regional
B. technological
C. structural
D. demand-deficient
A. natural
B. frictional
C. disequilibrium
D. structural
A. the household and government sectors
B. the household sector.
C. all sectors of except the rest of the world
D. all sectors of the economy including the rest of the world.
A. not change the unemployment rate
B. decrease the unemployment rate
C. increase the unemployment rate
D. have an indeterminate impact on the unemployment rate
A. a labour force survey.
B. the number out of work and claiming benefit
C. the percentage of the labour force not in work
D. the ILO/OECD standardised unemployment measurement
A. Unemployment population ratio.
B. Unemployment rate
C. employment rate
D. Labour force rate.
A. Increasing employment
B. Increasing economic growth
C. Increasing government spending
D. Increasing the level of exports