Title: What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain
1What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain
- Microeconomic deals with behavior of individual
decision makers and individual markets - Macroeconomic deals with broad outlines of the
economy - Which view is better?
- Depends on what were trying to do
2Macroeconomic Goals
- Economistsand society at largeagree on three
important macroeconomic goals - Economic growth
- Full employment
- Stable prices
- Why is there such universal agreement on these
three goals? - Because achieving them gives us opportunity to
make all of our citizens better off
3Economic Growth
- Economists monitor economic growth
- By keeping track of real gross domestic product
(real GDP) - Total quantity of goods and services produced in
a country over a year - Real GDP has actually increased faster than the
population - During this period (1929 to 2002), while U.S.
population did not quite triple. Quantity of
goods and services produced each year has
increased more than tenfold
4Figure 1 U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product,
1929-2002
5High Employment (or Low Unemployment)
- Unemployment affects distribution of economic
well being among our citizens - People who cannot find jobs suffer a loss of
income - Joblessness affects all of useven those who have
jobs - A high unemployment rate means economy is not
achieving its full economic potential
6High Employment (or Low Unemployment)
- Unemployment rate
- Percentage of the workforce that would like to
work, but cannot find jobs - Used to keep track of employment
- The nations commitment to high employment has
twice been written into law - With memory of Great Depression still fresh,
Congress passed Employment Act of 1946 - Required federal government to promote maximum
employment, production, and purchasing power - A numerical target was added in 1978, when
Congress passed Full Employment and Balanced
Growth Act - Called for an unemployment rate of 4
- In the 1990s, we came closer and closer and
finallyin December 1999we reached the target
again for the first time since the 1960s - In 2001 unemployment rate began to creep up
again, and continued rising through the first
half of 2003, when it averaged 6
7Figure 3 U.S. Quarterly Unemployment Rate,
19602003
8Employment and the Business Cycle
- When firms produce more output, they hire more
workerswhen they produce less output, they tend
to lay off workers - We would thus expect real GDP and employment to
be closely related, and indeed they are - Business cycles
- Fluctuations in real GDP around its long-term
growth trend - Expansion
- A period of increasing real GDP
- Contraction
- A period of declining real GDP
9Employment and the Business Cycle
- Recession
- A contraction of significant depth and duration
- Depression
- An unusually severe recession
- In the twentieth century, United States
experienced one decline in output serious enough
to be considered a depressionthe worldwide Great
Depression of the 1930s - From 1929 to 1933, the first four years of Great
Depression, U.S. output dropped by more than 25
10Figure 3 The Business Cycle
11Stable Prices
- With very few exceptions, inflation rate has been
positive - During 1990s, inflation rate averaged less than
3 per year - Other countries have not been so lucky
- An extreme case was the new nation of
Serbiaprices rose by 1,880 in August 1993 - Why are stable pricesa low inflation ratean
important macroeconomic goal? - Because inflation is costly to society
- With annual inflation rates in the thousands of
percent, the costs are easy to see - Purchasing power of currency declines so rapidly
that people are no longer willing to hold it - Economists regard some inflation as good
- Price stabilization requires not only preventing
inflation rate from rising too high. But also
preventing it from falling too low, where it
would be dangerously close to turning negative
12Figure 4 U.S. Annual Inflation Rate, 1922-2003
13- GDP Production and Income
14Production and Gross Domestic Product, GDP A
Definition
- The nations gross domestic product (GDP)
- Total value of all final goods and services
produced for the marketplace during a given
period within the nations borders
15Production and Gross Domestic Product, GDP A
Definition
- The total value
- Approach of GDP is to add up dollar value of
every good or servicethe number of dollars each
product is sold for - However, using the dollar prices at which goods
and services actually sell also creates a problem - If prices rise, then GDP will rise, even if we
are not actually producing more - GDP must be adjusted to take away the effects of
inflation - of all final
- When measuring production, we do not count every
good or service produced in the economy - Only those that are sold to their final users
- Avoids over-counting intermediate products when
measuring GDP - Value of all intermediate products is
automatically included in value of final products
they are used to create
16Figure 1 Stages of Production
17Production and Gross Domestic Product, GDP A
Definition
- goods and services
- We all know a good when we see one
- Final services count in GDP in the same way as
final goods - produced
- In order to contribute to GDP, something must be
produced - During the period being considered
- E.g. buying land, stocks and bonds
18Production and Gross Domestic Product, GDP A
Definition
- for the marketplace
- GDP does not include all final goods and services
produced in the economy - Includes only the ones produced for the
marketplacethat is, with the intention of being
sold - E.g. child, wash car, mowing, walk dog
- during a given period
- GDP measures production during some specific
period of time - Only goods produced during that period are
counted - GDP is actually measured for each quarter, and
then reported as an annual rate for the quarter - E.g. homes, old furnitures, old signed photoes
19Production and Gross Domestic Product, GDP A
Definition
- within the nations borders
- GDP measures output produced within U.S. borders
- Regardless of whether it was produced by
Americans - Americans abroad are not counted
- However, foreigners producing goods or services
within the country are
20Is GDP a good indicator?
- Going Beyond GDP
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vEp4DWx1--sY
- Consumption
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v8YioR2ULrrQ
21The Expenditure Approach to GDP
- The Commerce Departments Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) http//www.bea.gov/newsreleases/ind
ustry/gdpindustry/gdpindnewsrelease.htm - Agency responsible for gathering, reporting, and
analyzing movements in the nations output - Calculates GDP in several different ways
- Expenditure approach divides output into four
categories according to which group in the
economy purchases it as final users - Consumption goods and services (C)purchased by
households - Private investment goods and services
(I)purchased by businesses - Government goods and services (G)purchased by
government agencies - Net exports (NX)purchased by foreigners
22The Expenditure Approach to GDP
- When we add up the purchases of all four groups
we get GDP - GDP C I G NX
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24Consumption Spending
- Consumption is the part of GDP purchased by
households as final users - Almost everything households buy during the year
is included as part of consumption spending when
we calculate GDP - One exception is construction of new homes
- Counted as private investment
- Some quirky exceptions to the definition of
consumption - Total value of all food products that farm
families produce and consume themselves - Total value of the housing services provided by
owner-occupied homes
25Private Investment (Capital formation)
- Private investment has three components
- Business Purchases of Plant, Equipment, and
Software - A firms plant, equipment, and software are
intended to last for many yearsonly a small part
of them is used up to make the current years
output - Software are regarded as final goods, and firms
that buy them as final users of those goods - New Home Construction
- Residential housing is an important part of
nations capital stock - House will continue to provide services into the
future - Changes in Inventories
- We count the charge in firms inventories as part
of investment in measuring GDP - Why?
- When goods are produced but not sold during the
year, they end up in some firms inventory stocks - Part of the nations capital stock
- Will provide services in the future, when they
are finally sold and used
26Case 1 When inventories are unchanged over the
course of a year
- Inventory on January 1 500
- Total production for the year 1000
- Total sales for the year 1000
- Inventory on December 31 500
- Change in inventory 0
27Case 2 When inventories increase over the course
of a year
- Inventory on January 1 500
- Total production for the year 1000
- Total sales for the year 800
- Inventory on December 31 700
- Change in inventory 200
28Case 3 When inventories fall over the course of
a year
- Inventory on January 1 500
- Total production for the year 1000
- Total sales for the year 1450
- Inventory on December 31 50
- Change in inventory 450
29Private Investment and the Capital Stock Some
Provisos
- Specifically, private investment does not include
- Government Investment
- An important part of the nations capital stock
is owned and operated not by business, but by
governmentfederal, state, and local - Consumer durables
- Goods such as furniture, automobiles, washing
machines, and personal computers for home use can
be considered capital goods - Will continue to provide services for many years
- Human capital
- To measure the increase in capital stock most
broadly we include the additional skills and
training acquired by workforce during the year
30Government Purchases
- Purchases by state, local governments and federal
government are included - Government purchases include
- Goods
- Fighter jets, police cars, school buildings, spy
satellites, etc. - Services
- Such as those performed by police, legislators,
and military personnel - Government is considered to be a purchaser even
if it actually produces the goods or services
itself
31Government Purchases
- Transfer payments represent money redistributed
from one group of citizens (taxpayers) to another
(poor, unemployed, elderly) - While transfers are included in government
budgets as outlays they are not purchases of
currently produced goods and services - Not included in government purchases or in GDP
32Net Exports
- Once we recognize dealings with the rest of the
world, we must correct an inaccuracy in our
measure of GDP - Deduct all U.S. imports during the year, leaving
us with just output produced in United States - To properly account for output sold to, and
bought from, foreigners - Must include net exportsdifference between
exports and importsas part of expenditure in GDP
33Other Approaches to GDP The Value-Added Approach
- Value added
- Firms contribution to a product or
- Revenue it receives for its output
- Minus cost of all the intermediate goods that it
buys - GDP is sum of values added by all firms in economy
34Figure 1 Stages of Production
1.50
1 0.50 0.75 1.25 1.5 5
1.25
0.75
0.50
35Other Approaches to GDP The Factor Payments
Approach
- In any year, value added by a firm is equal to
total factor payments made by that firm - GDP equals sum of all firms value added
- Each firms value added is equal to its factor
payments - Thus, GDP must equal total factor payments made
by all firms in the economy - All of these factor payments are received by
households in the form of wages and salaries,
rent, interest or profit - GDP is measured by adding up all of the
incomewages and salaries, rent, interest, and
profitearned by all households in the economy - Gives us an important insight into the
macroeconomy - Total output of economy (GDP) is equal to total
income earned in the economy
36Measuring GDP A Summary
- Different ways to calculate GDP
- Expenditure Approach
- GDP C I G NX
- Value-Added Approach
- GDP Sum of value added by all firms
- Factor Payments Approach
- GDP Sum of factor payments made by all firms
- GDP Wages and Salaries interest rent
profit - GDP Total household income
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38Real Versus Nominal GDP
- Since GDP is measured in dollars, a serious
problem exists when tracking change in output
over time - Value of the dollarits purchasing poweris
changing - Usually need to adjust our measurements to
reflect changes in the value of the dollar - Nominalwhen a variable is measured over time
with no adjustment for the dollars changing
value - Realwhen a variable is adjusted for the dollars
changing value - Most government statistics are reported in both
nominal and real terms - Economists focus almost exclusively on real
variables
39How GDP Is Used
- Governments reports on GDP are used to steer the
economy over both short-run and long-run - In short-run, to alert us to recessions and give
us a chance to stabilize the economy - In long-run, to tell us whether our economy is
growing fast enough to raise output per capita
and our standard of living, and fast enough to
generate sufficient jobs for a growing population - Many (but not all) economists believe that, if
alerted in time - Government can design policies to help keep the
economy on a more balanced course
40Figure 2 Real GDP Growth Rate,19602003
Actual GDP growth rate
41Problems With GDP
- Quality changes
- While BEA includes impact of quality changes for
many goods and services (such as automobiles and
computers) - Does not have the resources to estimate quality
changes for millions of different goods and
services - By ignoring these quality improvements, GDP
probably understates true growth from year to year
42The Underground Economy
- Some production is hidden from government
authorities - Either because it is illegal or
- Drugs, prostitution, most gambling
- Because those engaged in it are avoiding taxes
- Production in these hidden markets cannot be
measured accurately - BEA must estimate it
- Many economists believe that BEAs estimates are
too low - As a result, GDP may understate total output
43Non-Market Production
- GDP does not include non-market production
- Goods and services that are produced, but not
sold in the marketplace - Whenever a non-market transaction becomes a
market transaction GDP will rise - Even though total production has remained the
same - Can exaggerate the growth in GDP over long
periods of time - What do these problems tell us about value of
GDP? - For certain purposesespecially interpreting
long-run changes in GDPwe must exercise caution - GDP works much better as a guide to short-run
performance of economy - Short-term changes in real GDP are fairly
accurate reflections of the state of the economy - A significant quarter-to-quarter change in real
GDP virtually always indicates a change in actual
production rather than a measurement problem - This is why policy makers, business people, and
the media pay such close attention to GDP as a
guide to the economy from quarter to quarter