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Macroeconomics

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Title: Macroeconomics


1
Macroeconomics
  • Part I
  • Chapters 13-14

2
Measuring the Economys Performance
  • National Income Accounting measures the
    economic performance of the United States
  • Output or production, and Income

3
Measuring GDP
  • Definition the total dollar value of all final
    goods and services produced in the nation during
    a single year.
  • Value GDP measures value, not quantity produced
  • Final Goods and Services
  • No used goods
  • Measures final products, not parts.

4
The United States has over 307 million people!
5
Computing GDP
  • To calculate the total GDP you must add
  • Consumer sector- goods and services purchased.
  • Investment sector purchased goods to produce
    other goods
  • Government sector all goods and services
    purchased
  • Net exports the difference between what the
    nation sells and what it buys from other
    countries.

1
2
3
4
6
Calculating GDP U.S. 2002
68.9
18
16.4
-3.9
  • Consumer goods and services


Investment
Gov.
Net Exports
C I G X (I - E)
7
Weaknesses of GDP as a measurement
  • While what the government spends is measurable
    and reliable, unpaid work is not calculated in
    the GDP, and extras given to workers such as
    food, fuel, or housing is not a part of the GDP.

btw - not a good idea.
8
Net Domestic Product
  • GDP does not take into account the depreciation
    of goods due to wear and tear.
  • NDP another method of economic measure that
    does take into consideration the amount of goods
    and services used towards depreciation.

9
Measurements of Income
  • National Income total amount earned by
    everyone.
  • Wages, salaries, self-employed salaries, rental
    income, corporate profits, and interest on
    savings and investments.
  • Personal income money earned before taxes.
  • Transfer payments welfare, disability, social
    security, Medicaid, and unemployment
  • Disposable Personal Income amount of personal
    income minus taxes.
  • Indicator of the overall health of the economy.

10
Math Problems (Barf)
  • 1. Country A has a consumer consumption spending
    of 3,456,798,000 in the year 2010, their
    population is 258,000,000, their government
    spends 3 billion, their imports total 27 billion,
    while they export 23 billion. Businesses
    invested 1.4 trillion.
  • Calculate country As GDP.
  • Calculate the Per Capita GDP for country A.
  • Determine the percentage of each contributing
    sector to the GDP.
  • If Businesses and the government spent 678
    million replacing items that have depreciated, or
    needed replacing, what is the Net Domestic
    Product of country A?

11
Vocabulary Quiz
  1. Income remaining for people to spend or save
    after taxes
  2. Loss of value because of wear and tear to durable
    goods and capital goods.
  3. Value of the nations total output minus the
    total value lost through depreciation on
    equipment
  4. Differences between what the nation sells to
    other countries and what it buys from other
    countries.
  5. Total dollar amount of all goods and services
    produced by a nation in a given year.
  6. Measurement of the national economys
    performance, dealing with the overall economys
    output and income.
  7. Welfare and other supplementary payments that a
    state or the federal government makes to
    individuals.
  • a. Net Exports
  • b. GDP
  • c. Depreciation
  • d. National Income Accounting
  • e. Net Domestic Product
  • f. Transfer Payments
  • g. Disposable Income

12
Inflation
http//www.foxnews.com/search-results/m/21961919/o
bama-inflation.htm
For example 100.00 in 1980 had the same buying
power as 262.97 today!
  • Purchasing power of money
  • Prolonged rise in the general price level of
    goods and services
  • Affects the current dollar value of the GDP and
    your ability to buy goods and services.
  • Corrected by the Federal Reserve Board
  • Feared by Republicans

Check out the CPI inflation calculator online!
13
Economic Philosophy and Inflation
Watch Nightline Inflation Video.
  • Democrats
  • Republicans

14
Measuring Inflation - CPI
  • Consumer Price Index measures the change in
    price over time of a specific group of goods and
    services used by the average household.
  • National sample is used of 29,000 families
  • Provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
  • Market Basket includes about 80,000 specific
    goods and services under general categories such
    as food, housing, transportation, apparel,
    education, recreation, medical care, and personal
    care.

15
Measuring Income
  • Producer Price Index
  • Measure of the change in price over time that
    United States producers charge for their goods
    and services
  • Change in PPI occurs before a change in the CPI.
  • Most are mining, manufacturing, and agricultural
    producers

16
Real GDP
film - Inflation
  • GDP Price Deflator
  • Price index that removes the effect of inflation
    from GDP so that the overall economy in one year
    can be compared to another year
  • Real GDP GDP that has been adjusted for
    inflation by applying the price deflator
  • Nominal GDP current GDP not adjusted for
    inflation.

10,446.21/ 110.66 X 100 ? 9,439.9
Current GDP /Current CPI X 100 Real GDP
17
Aggregate
  • Demand
  • Total quantity of all goods and services in the
    entire economy demanded by all people.
  • Aggregate demand in NOT related to price
  • Supply
  • Real domestic output of producers based on the
    rise and fall of the price level.

Aggregate demand curve
18
Equilibrium Price Level
  • These two curves will intersect at Price 6,
    and Quantity 20.  In this market, the
    equilibrium price is 6 per unit, and equilibrium
    quantity is 20 units.
  • At this price level, market is in equilibrium.
    Quantity supplied is equal to quantity demanded (
    Qs Qd). 
  • Market is clear.

19
The Business Cycle
Trough lowest part of the business cycle
Peak or boom economic prosperity.
Contraction when economic activity is
down. Expansion activity slowly increases
Page 361
20
Causes of Economic Fluctuations
  • Businesses
  • Decisions
  • Innovations
  • Response to a projected outlook
  • Governments
  • Fiscal and Monetary policy/new administrations
  • External Factors
  • War
  • Availability of resources
  • New resources
  • People
  • Expectations/ fears

21
Economic Indicators U.S. Department of Commerce
(78)
  • Leading
  • Statistics that point to what will happen in the
    economy
  • The Commerce Department
  • 10
  • Coincident
  • Indicators that usually change at the same time
    as changes in overall business activity (sales)
  • Lagging
  • Indicators that lag behind changes in overall
    business activity
  • Unemployment
  • Change in CPI

22
Vocabulary Quiz
  1. Real GDP
  2. Base year
  3. Aggregate supply
  4. Depression
  5. GDP
  6. CPI
  7. Net Exports
  8. Trough
  9. Aggregate
  10. PPI
  11. Innovations
  12. Economic indicators
  1. 1. Statistics that measure variables in the
    economy.
  2. 2. Inventions and new production techniques
  3. 3. Major slowdown of economic activity
  4. 4. Lowest part of the business cycle in which
    the downward spiral of the economy levels off.
  5. 5. Real domestic output of producers based on the
    rise and fall of the price level
  6. 6. Summation of all the individual parts in the
    economy
  7. 7. Year used as a point of comparison for other
    years in a series of statistics
  8. 8. Adjusted for inflation by applying the price
    deflator
  9. 9. Measure of the change in price over time that
    United States producers charge for their goods
    and services
  10. 10. Measure of the change in price over time of a
    specific group of goods and services used by the
    average household.
  11. 11. The difference between what the nation sells
    to other countries and what it buys from other
    countries
  12. 12. Total dollar value of all final goods and
    services produced in a nation in a single year.

23
Market Basket Project
  • Step I
  • Create a survey to determine what kinds of foods
    the families of your peers eat on average each
    week.
  • Step 2
  • Identify seven categories of food that are bought
    the most often.
  • Identify five specific items in each category,
    including brand name and size.
  • Identify the locations of the supermarkets that
    are shopped most frequently with these items,
    choose one for your project.
  • Step 3
  • Accompany your mother/father to the grocery store
    once a week. Price your specific items on a per
    week basis for one month. You must price the
    same products in the same supermarket on the same
    day each week.
  • Step 4
  • After the first visit to the supermarket, add up
    the total amount of the 15 items in your market
    basket. This number will signify your base year.
  • Step 5
  • After each of the remaining three visits to the
    supermarket, add up the total amount of your
    market basket again, and compare the new totals
    to your base year.
  • Step 6
  • Use your totals to construct a price index (see
    page 351-353)
  • Step 7
  • Analyze your price index
  • What was the total amount of your market basket
    in your base year?
  • By how much did your price index change from your
    base year to week four?

24
Money
scarce
divisible
durable
portable
acceptable
  • Voluntary exchange
  • Accepted by the seller for goods or services
  • Store of value
  • Can be saved
  • Unit of accounting
  • Divisible

Bartering coincidence of wants (seen in small
societies)
25
World Currency
26
Characteristics and Types of Money
  • Commodity
  • Cattle, gems, grain
  • Representative
  • Money that is backed by gold or silver
  • Fiat
  • Money that has value because a government fiat,
    or order, has established it as acceptable for
    payment of debts
  • All U.S. money today is called fiat money
  • Legal tender
  • What a government deems acceptable currency for
    public and private debt.

Pennsylvania banknote (bond) 1836
Fiat a formal or official order, authoritative
command
27
American Banking
  • 1791 First national bank
  • 20 years charter
  • Privately owned
  • 1792
  • Coinage act and the dollar established
  • 1816
  • Second bank of the U.S
  • 1861-1865
  • Greenbacks (fiat money)
  • 1869-1900
  • Gold standard
  • 1913
  • Federal Reserve System
  • To control the amount of money in circulation to
    curb inflation and prevent shortages.
  • 1929-1934
  • Stock market crash, government regulation of
    banks, FDIC
  • 1970s
  • Consumer rights laws based.

28
Banking Services
  • Savings Accounts
  • Some offer interest (varies with banks)
  • Checking Accounts
  • Free Maintenance
  • Monthly fee (usually 12.00)
  • ATM machines
  • Free if you use theirs, if you use another banks
    ATM you could be charged anywhere from .50 to
    3.00
  • Debit cards
  • Also debt/credit (has the Visa or MasterCard
    logo)
  • Overdraft Checking allows a customer to write a
    check for more money than exists in his or her
    account.
  • Online Banking
  • Pay bills
  • Transfer funds
  • Some even offer ways to invest online

29
Online Bill Pay
Convenient Green Keep track of your
funds Immediately pay your bills
30
Electronic Banking Concerns
  • Increased risk of getting private information
    stolen.
  • Increase of someone gaining access to your card
    and using your account to purchase goods or
    services
  • You only have to pay 50.00 if your card is
    stolen as long as you report it within two
    business days.
  • Electronic Fund Transfer Act of 1978
  • Increase risk of someone stealing your checking
    account number and paying their bills online.
  • Fraud Department

31
American Money
  • Currency
  • Coins are tokens (value is less than what the
    government says it is)
  • Five percent
  • Bureau of the Mint makes all coins
  • Treasury Department (The Bureau of Engraving and
    Printing)
  • Federal Reserve Notes in 1,2,5,10,20,100
  • They no longer make larger bills to prevent
    criminals from hiding money.
  • Checks
  • Credit Cards and Debit Cards
  • Near Moneys Assets that can be turned into
    money easily without risk of loss of value.
  • Savings accounts
  • Stocks
  • Time Deposits

32
The Money Supply
  • How much money is in the United States?
  • M1 narrowest definition of the money supply
    consists of money that can be spent immediately
    and against which checks can be written
  • All currency (bill and coins), all checkable
    deposits and travelers checks.
  • M2 broader definition of the money supply
    includes all of M1 plus such near moneys as money
    market mutual fund balances, CDs, and Eurodollars

33
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34
Chapter 14 Quiz
  1. Money that by law must be accepted for payment of
    debts
  2. Currency in circulation, travelers checks, plus
    checking-type deposits
  3. Money in a bank that can be withdrawn at any time
  4. Money that has value because the government has
    established it as acceptable payments for debts
  5. Computerized banking functions that previously
    were handled on paper.
  6. Assets that can be turned into money fairly
    easily
  7. Money that has value aside from its value as
    money
  8. Includes all of M1 plus such near moneys as money
    market mutual fund balances, CDs, and
    Eurodollars.
  9. Use of money to store purchasing power for later
    use
  10. Exchange of goods and services for other goods
    and services must have a coincidence of wants.
  • A. fiat money
  • B. checkable deposits
  • C. M1
  • D. commodity money
  • E. Near Moneys
  • F. Legal tender
  • G. Electronic funds transfer
  • H. M2
  • I. Store of value
  • J. Barter

3
35
Chapter 14 Assessment and Activities
  • FRQ
  • (find one on aggregate demand and supply)
  • Page 395
  • Identifying key terms through thinking critically
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