1 / 37

The Global Economy Introduction

The Global Economy Introduction. The week ahead. By midnight, Wednesday (2/6) Captains send group roster to me If not in a group, send group request to me In progress Be working on problem set #0 This is the only solo problem set . Roadmap. Trends Trade in goods and services

sydney
Download Presentation

The Global Economy Introduction

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. The Global EconomyIntroduction

  2. The week ahead • By midnight, Wednesday (2/6) • Captains send group roster to me • If not in a group, send group request to me • In progress • Be working on problem set #0 • This is the only solo problem set

  3. Roadmap • Trends • Trade in goods and services • Fluctuations • Inflation and output • Course information

  4. Class participation • A part of class • I expect everyone to participate: expect cold calls • Answer a question • Make a comment • Share an experience • Post to discussion board • Broad range of backgrounds • Expert: keep it short • Non-expert: don’t panic

  5. Long-Run Performance Production, Saving &Investment, Productivity, Institutions, Capital & Labor Markets, International Trade First half: Short-Run Performance Inflation, Economic Indicators, Aggregate Supply & Demand, Monetary Policy, Taxes & Deficits, Exchange Rates, Capital Flows, Emerging Market Crises Second half: The big picture

  6. Long run: GDP per capita, 2011 Source: Penn World Tables 8.0.

  7. Short run: US real GDP growth ?

  8. Key issue: Trends • U.S. GDP/capita > 70x Burundi GDP/capita • What explains these differences?

  9. Long-run economic growthGDP per capita in Year 2000 international dollars Source: Maddison, 2001; 2008 estimate based on Maddison tables.

  10. Trends are important Source: Maddison, “Historical Statistics for the World Economy”

  11. Do institutions matter? U.S. India Note: Size of circle is proportional to population. Data sources: World Bank and Transparency International.

  12. Common culture, different institutions

  13. Key issue: Globalization • Who are the U.S.’s largest trade partners? • How are trade patterns changing? • Why are they changing?

  14. U.S. imports

  15. U.S. exports Canada Mexico Japan China

  16. Key issue: Business cycles • What are business cycles? • Are they forecastable? • What can/should governments do ?

  17. Business cycles

  18. Business cycles

  19. Key issue: Inflation and output • Inflation • Growth rate of the price level • What causes inflation? • How are output and inflation related? • Is there a “Philips Curve?” • How do central banks work? • What is money?

  20. US inflation (annual)

  21. Argentina inflation (annual)

  22. Are these related?

  23. Inflation and output: evidence 1959-69

  24. Inflation and output: evidence 1959-99

  25. About the course • One-stop shopping • http://kimjruhl.com/global-economy-2014 • Google group: “the discussion board” • Announcements • Help with problem sets • Blog-ish things • FRED database (more next class)

  26. About me • Originally from Madison, WI • PhD in Economics, U. Minnesota • Previous: U. Texas-Austin, Minneapolis FED • Research interests: • International trade policy • Firm level export decisions • Emerging market crises • Other interests: • Computers, robots, beer making/drinking

  27. About the teaching assistant • Lioubov “Luba” Pogorelova • lp1140@nyu.edu • Office hours: TBA

  28. About class notes • No textbook! • Theoretical background to class discussion • Executive summaries: more concise than a textbook • Custom designed for this course • Read them before class • Entire PDF is available for download from Bb • Perfect for phone, tablet, etc.

  29. About slides • Meant to help guide in-class discussion • A complement to assigned reading • Not meant to be stand-alone reading • I will bring printouts to class • Posted online the day before class • Occasionally updated after class • We won’t use every slide • Don’t worry if we skip some!

  30. About your grade

  31. Group project • Goals • Analyze key obstacles or risks to economic growth in the target country. • Propose a policy change to promote stable long-run growth. • Group • Form on your own, 4-5 students, choose a captain • No cross-class groups • Submit roster by email to me by tomorrow midnight • If you need a group send me an email by tomorrow midnight • Target country randomly assigned on Thursday

  32. Group project • Deliverables • A virtual presentation • PowerPoint deck, 10-slide max • Writeup, 5-page max • Presentation should be viewable in 15-minute max • Evaluation criteria • Organization (brevity, clarity, and communication) • Analysis (focus and subject knowledge) • Recommendations and conclusions

  33. Group project • Project due April 3 • Peer review • Each student evaluates several other projects • Top group from each section has option to compete in NYU Stern Economic Growth Competition (April 30) • Street economists Lewis Alexander and John Lipsky to judge projects and pose questions! • Winning group awarded the Henry Kaufman Prize for Economic Analysis at Stern (including lunch with Henry!)

  34. About assignments 5 problem sets PS #0: individual problem set PS #1-4 group problem sets Same group as for project Due beginning of class Submit printed copy only 1 submission per group No late assignments See “problem set guidelines” online

  35. About help! Problem set help Post to discussion board, I will answer there Other help Send me an email Stop by See the teaching assistant

  36. About helping me • Course works best if communication goes both ways • If you have ideas, comments, questions, whatever: • Send an email • Speak to the teaching assistant • Post on the discussion board

  37. Professional behavior • Cellphones: off • Tablets, laptops: off • Be engaged, sit towards the front of class • If you bring something to eat/drink to class • Make sure it isn’t obnoxious

More Related