1 / 27

Chapter 19

Chapter 19. What Macroeconomics Is All About. In this chapter you will learn to. 1. Describe the meaning and importance of the key macroeconomic variables, including national income, unemployment, inflation, interest rates, exchange rates, and trade flows.

kane-cobb
Download Presentation

Chapter 19

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 19 What Macroeconomics Is All About

  2. In this chapter you will learn to 1. Describe the meaning and importance of the key macroeconomic variables, including national income, unemployment, inflation, interest rates, exchange rates, and trade flows. 2. Explain that most macroeconomic issues are about long-run trends or short-run fluctuations, and that government policy is relevant for both.

  3. Key Macroeconomic Variables Output and Income The production of output generates income. To measure total output in dollars, we add up the values of the many different goods produced. This gives nominal national income (in current dollars). Using base-period prices, we get real national income (in constant dollars).

  4. Figure 19.1 Growth and Fluctuations in Real GDP, 1962–2005

  5. Movements in Real GDP Real GDP fluctuates around a rising trend: - the trend shows long-run economic growth - the short-run fluctuations show the business cycle APPLYING ECONOMIC CONCEPTS 19.1 The Terminology of Business Cycles

  6. Potential Output and the Output Gap Potential output is what the economy could produce if all resources were employed at their normal levels of utilization - often called full-employment output The output gap measures the difference between potential output and actual output. Output Gap = Y-Y* When Y < Y* ,there is a recessionary gap. When Y > Y*, there is an inflationary gap.

  7. Figure 19.2 Potential GDP and the Output Gap, 1971–2005

  8. Employment, Unemployment, and the Labor Force Employment: the number of workers (16+) who hold jobs. Unemployment: the number who are not employed but are actively looking for a job. Labor force: the total number of employed + unemployed. The unemployment rate is the number of unemployed expressed as a percentage of the labour force.

  9. Unemployment Rate Number of people unemployed Unemployment Rate = X 100 Number of people in the labor force Even when Y = Y*, some unemployment exists: • frictional unemployment • structural unemployment

  10. Full and Cyclical Unemployment The unemployment rate when Y=Y* is called full employment. Cyclical unemployment is neither structural or frictional - changes with the ebb and flow of the business cycle Why Does Unemployment Matter? Some unemployment is desirable, as it reflects the time required for workers and firms to “find” each other so that good matches are made. But some unemployment is associated with human hardship, especially for those individuals with skills that are not in high demand by firms.

  11. Figure 19.3 Labor Force, Employment, and Unemployment, 1960–2006

  12. Productivity Productivity: a measure of output per unit of input - often measured as GDP per worker (labor productivity) - or GDP per hour of work Increases in productivity are probably the single largest determinant of long-run increases in material living standards.

  13. Figure 19.4 Labor Productivity, 1960–2006

  14. Inflation and the Price Level The price level: the average level of all prices in the economy. Inflation: the rate at which the price level is changing. The CPI is based on the price of a typical “consumption basket,” relative to the price in some base year:

  15. Inflation Matters APPLYING ECONOMIC CONCEPTS 19.2 How the CPI Is Constructed Why Inflation Matters The purchasing power of money is negatively related to the price level. Also, because it is hard to forecast accurately, inflation adds to the uncertainties of economic life.

  16. Table 19.1 Expenditure Behavior in 1997

  17. Table 19.2 1997 Expenditure Behavior at 2007 Prices

  18. Figure 19.5 The Price Level and the Inflation Rate,1960–2006

  19. Interest Rates The interest rate is the price of borrowing funds — the percentage amount per period. Nominal interest rate: the rate expressed in money terms. Real interest rate: the rate expressed in terms of purchasing power. The burden of borrowing depends on the real interest rate.

  20. Figure 19.6 Real and Nominal Interest Rates, 1960–2006

  21. The International Economy Foreign exchange: foreign currencies or claims on foreign currencies. Exchange rate: the number of U.S. dollars required to purchase one unit of foreign currency. An appreciation of the U.S. dollar means that a U.S. dollar buys more foreign currency - a rise in the exchange rate A depreciation of the U.S. dollar means that a U.S. dollar buys less foreign currency - a fall in the exchange rate

  22. Figure 19.7 U.S. Dollars Needed to Purchase A Euro, 1999–2007

  23. Exports and Imports The balance of payments accounts record all payments made in international transactions — goods, services, and assets: - trade balance (exports – imports) - current account balance - capital account balance For the U.S., the increasing role of international trade is an important aspect of globalization.

  24. Figure 19.8 Imports, Exports, and Net Exports, 1960–2006

  25. Growth Versus Fluctuations Long-Term Economic Growth Long-term growth is considerably more important for a society’s living standards from decade to decade than short-term fluctuations. There is considerable debate regarding the ability of government to influence the economy’s long-run growth rate.

  26. Short-Term Fluctuations Short-term fluctuations are often called business cycles. Economists debate the effectiveness of monetary and fiscal policy in influencing these fluctuations. Some economists argue that despite the power of policy to affect the economy, governments should not attempt “fine-tuning.”

  27. What Lies Ahead? • To organize our thinking about macroeconomics, we must develop some tools. These will include: • discussing the measurement of national income • building a simple model of the economy • modifying the model to make it more realistic • using our model to analyze some pertinent economic issues

More Related