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Macroeconomics:

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Title: Macroeconomics:


1
Unit 3
  • Macroeconomics
  • Branch of economics as a whole employment, GDP,
    inflation, economic growth, distribution of income

2
Chapter 9Sources of Government Revenue
  • Section 1
  • Taxation

3
Economic Impact
  • Resource Allocation
  • Affected factors of prod.
  • How will people react to taxes?
  • Behavior Adjustment
  • May encourage/discourage activities
  • Can deduct mortgage interest on taxes
  • Cannot deduct on credit cards
  • Sin tax alcohol, tobacco

4
  • Productivity and Growth
  • Changes incentives to save, invest, and work
  • What is too high for taxes?
  • Do the rich get taxed too much or not enough?

5
What makes an Effective Tax?
  • Equity
  • Fairness
  • What is fair?
  • Simplicity
  • So both taxpayer and tax collector can understand
    them
  • People tolerate more when they understand
  • Income tax- complicated
  • Sales tax- simple

6
  • Efficiency
  • Easy to administer and be successful at
    generating revenue

7
Two Principles of Taxation
  • Benefit Principle
  • Those who benefit from gov. goods and services
    should pay in proportion to the amount of
    benefits they receive
  • Tax on gasoline (pay more if you drive more)
  • Limitations
  • People who get the greatest benefit are those who
    can least afford to pay for them
  • Benefits are hard to measure

8
  • Ability to Pay Principle
  • Belief people should be taxed according to their
    ability top pay regardless of the benefits they
    receive
  • Two factors that this is based on
  • Recognizes that societies cannot always measure
    the benefits derived from government spending
  • It assumes that people with higher incomes suffer
    less discomfort paying taxes than people with
    lower incomes

9
Types of Taxes
  • Proportional tax
  • Same rate on everyone
  • Progressive Tax
  • Higher rate on people with higher incomes
  • Regressive Tax
  • Higher tax on low incomes than high incomes

10
Section 2
  • Federal Tax System

11
Intro
  • Where does the Fed. Gov get most of their money
    from
  • Individual Income tax
  • Social Security Tax
  • Corporate Income Tax

12
Individual Income Tax
  • Paid by payroll withholding
  • Internal Rev. Service receives payment
  • Must file tax return by April 15 to report
    earnings

13
Progressive Income Tax
  • Individual income tax is a progressive tax

14
FICA Federal Insurance Contributions
  • 2nd most important tax
  • Both employees and employers pay to help with
    Social Security and Medicare
  • Usually done by payroll tax

15
Corporate Income Tax
  • 3rd largest category
  • Tax a corporation pays on its profits
  • Tax separately because it is seen as a separate
    entity

16
Excise
  • Tax on the manufacture or sale of selected items
  • Gas, alcohol
  • Tend to be regressive taxes

17
Estate and Gift Tax
  • Tax on the transfer of property when a person
    dies
  • Tax on donations of money or wealth and is paid
    by the person who makes the gift

18
Customs Duties
  • Tax on items brought in from other countries

19
Misc. fees
  • User fees charge for the use of a good or
    service
  • Charges to use national parks

20
Section 3
  • State and Local Tax

21
Intergovernmental Revenues
  • Largest source
  • Funds collected by one level of gov and
    distributed to another level
  • Receive from Federal gov.

22
Taxes and Fees
  • Sales Tax
  • 2nd largest
  • Merchants give tax to agency on weekly or monthly
    basis
  • 5 states do not have sales tax

23
Retirement and Insurance
  • State retirement and pension plans
  • 3rd largest

24
Income Tax
  • 4th largest

25
Local Revenue
  • Intergovernmental Revenues
  • Receive these from states and a small amount
    comes from Fed
  • Property Taxes
  • 2nd largest
  • Real estate, buildings, furniture, autos, farm
    animals, stocks, bonds, bank accounts

26
Other local Rev
  • Public Utilities and state owned liquor stores
  • 3rd largest
  • Towns and cities have sales tax
  • Collect money through hospital fees, income taxes

27
Chapter 10Gov. Spending
  • Section 1 The Economics of Spending

28
Intro
  • 2001 2.9 Trillion (Fed, State, Local)
  • Spending increases in 1940why?

29
Two Kinds of Spending
  • Goods and Services
  • Payments to disadvantaged Americans and other
    groups

30
Goods and Services
  • Buys planes, ships, buildings, parks, supplies,
    hire people, wages, salaries
  • The more the gov provides, the more goods and
    services it consumes

31
Transfer Payments
  • The gov. receives neither goods nor services in
    return
  • Social Security, welfare, unemployment, People
    with disabilities
  • Grant in aid payment one level of gov. makes to
    another
  • Highways and schools

32
Impact
  • Affect how resources will be used
  • Influences how wealth is distributed
  • Gov. competes with private sector
  • Public colleges compete with private
  • Military hospitals compete with private

33
Section 2
  • Expenditures

34
Intro
  • Fed Budget plan outlining revenues and
    expenditures for the coming year
  • Mandatory Spending by law without annual
    approval (2/3)
  • Soc. Sec., borrowed money, Medicare
  • Discretionary must get approval
  • Military, Coast Guard, welfare

35
Establishing the Budget
  • Fiscal year12 months (Oct. 1-Sept 30)
  • Surplus
  • Deficit

36
What do they spend on?Largest to Smallest (2002)
  • Social Security and disabled
  • National defense
  • Income Security
  • Retirement for railroad and coal miners, civil
    service retire and disability, etc.
  • Medicare
  • Health
  • Interest from borrowing money

37
Section 3
  • State and Local Spending

38
Intro
  • Some states have a law that forces them to have a
    Balanced Budgetcannot exceed revenues
  • Mayors, city council, judge usually control local
    spending

39
State
  • Intergovernmental Exp.
  • Sales tax
  • Public welfare
  • Insurance/retirement
  • Higher education
  • Highways

40
Local
  • Elem. And Secondary Education
  • Utilities
  • Hospitals
  • Police
  • Interest on debt
  • Welfare
  • highways

41
Section 4
  • Deficits, Surpluses, and the National Debt

42
  • Budgets are based on assumptions
  • Must borrow if running a deficit
  • Sells bonds and other forms to the public
  • Federal Debt all outstanding fed bonds and
    other debt obligations the total amount borrowed
    from investors to finance the govs deficit
    spending

43
Ch. 11
  • Money

44
  • Without money we would be on a barter economy
    moneyless economy that relies on trade

45
Functions of money
  • Money any substance that serves as a medium of
    exchange, a measure of value, and a store of
    value
  • Med. Of Exch accepted by all parties as payment
    for goods and services
  • Measure of V. can be used to express worth that
    most understand
  • Store of V allows purchasing power to be saved
    until needed

46
Characteristics
  • Portable
  • Durable
  • Divisible
  • Limited Availability

47
Money standard
  • Mechanism designed to keep the money supply
    portable, durable, dividable and limited
  • Legal tender fiat currency must be accepted in
    payments for debts
  • The US is now on a inconvertible fiat money
    standard standard in which the fiat money
    supply cannot be converted into gold or silver by
    its citizens
  • We have a managed supply the gov controls and
    quantity, composition and quality of the money
    supply

48
Banking
  • Fulfills two things provide a safe place for
    people to deposit their money and lend excess
    funds to people who need cash

49
FED (Federal Reserve System)
  • 1913
  • Central Bank bank that can lend to other banks
    in times of need
  • All national banks are required and state
    chartered banks are eligible to become members
  • Members own stock (privately-owned banks own the
    FED

50
  • The Banking Act of 1933
  • Created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    (FDIC) insure customer deposits in the event of
    a bank failure
  • 100,000 max
  • People worried less about the safety of deposits
    and reduce runs on banks

51
Chapter 12
  • Financial Systems

52
Stock Market
  • Investors buy equities represent ownership
    shares in corporations

53
Market Efficiency
  • Stock Prices vary
  • Outstanding shares
  • Number of shares
  • How profitable is the company?
  • Prospects for growth?
  • Difficulty is how to decide what to buy and sell

54
How to decide?
  • Efficient Market Hypothesis stocks are priced
    about right and that bargains are hard to find
  • You might get lucky or you might lose
  • Portfolio diversification holding a large
    number of different stocks so increases in some
    can offset unexpected declines in others

55
Securities Exchanges
  • Places where buyers and sellers meet to trade
    securities
  • People pay a fee to join and trading only takes
    place on the floor

56
New York Stock Exchange
  • Oldest and largest
  • 1400 seats
  • Members pay millions for each seat
  • Lists stocks of 3000 plus companies
  • Firms must meet requirements

57
American Stock Exchange
  • 1000 stocks
  • Companies are smaller than NYSE

58
Regional Exchanges
  • Chicago, Pacific, Philadelphia, Boston, Memphis
  • Exchanges were either too small or too new to be
    listed on NYSE or AMEX

59
Global Exchanges
  • Sydney, Tokyo, Hong Kong
  • Computer technology and electronic trading

60
Over the Counter Market (OTC)
  • Majority are traded by this method
  • Traded in a computer network (National Market
    System)
  • Securities are listed in a network called the
    National Market System (NMS)
  • Members of the OTC belong to the National
    Association of Securities Dealers (NASD)
  • National Association of Securities Dealers
    Automated Quotation (NASDAQ) is the listing that
    provides info on stocks that this group trades

61
Stock Performance
  • Dow-Jones Industrial Average
  • Most popular
  • Average closing price of 30 active stocks
  • Standard Poors 500 (SP 500)
  • Uses the price changes of 500 representative
    stocks

62
Bull Market
  • Strong market
  • Prices move up for several months or years

63
Bear Market
  • Mean market
  • Prices drop for several months or years

64
Futures
  • Spot transactions made immediately
  • Futures exchange takes place later on
  • Usually done with grain, livestock
  • Options like futures but you have to option to
    back out

65
Economic Performance
  • Ch. 13

66
Measuring Nations Output
  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) dollar amount of
    all final goods and services produced within a
    countrys borders in a year
  • Single most important measure of the economys
    overall performance
  • 14.58 Trillion (2008)
  • National Income Accounting Economist devised
    this to keep track of performance

67
GDP (Continued)
  • Multiply all final goods and services produced in
    a 12 month period by their prices, then add them
    up to get total dollar amount
  • Things not counted
  • Intermediate products products used to make
    other products
  • Secondhand sales used goods
  • Nonmarket goods transactions that do not take
    place in market it is difficult to measure
  • Ex. Your own lawn care, or maintenance

68
Gross National Product
  • The dollar value of all final goods, services,
    and structures produced in one year with labor
    and property supplied by a countrys residents
  • GNP is based on GDP
  • GNP measures the income of all Americans whether
    the goods and services are produced in the US or
    other countries
  • GNP is 1 of 5 measures included in the National
    Income and Products Accounts (NIPA)

69
Net National Product
  • GNP less depreciation
  • Depreciation the capital equipment that has
    worn out or become obsolete

70
National Income
  • Income that is left after all taxes (except
    corporate profits tax) are subtracted from the
    NNP
  • Excise, property, licensing, custom duties, and
    general sales tax

71
Personal Income
  • Total amount of income going to consumers before
    individual income taxes are subtracted

72
Disposable Personal Income
  • Total income the consumer sector has at its
    disposal after personal income taxes
  • What consumers are able to spend

73
Economic Sectors and Circular Flows
  • Several parts receive various components of
    national income and use to purchase the total
    output

74
Consumer Sector (Private)
  • Largest
  • Made up of a basic unit called the household

75
Investment Sector (business)
  • Proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations
  • The productive sector for bringing the factors of
    production together to produce output

76
Government (Public)
  • All levels of government

77
Foreign Sector
  • All consumers and producers outside the US
  • Does not have a source of income specific to it
  • Represents the difference between the value of
    goods sent abroad and the value of goods
    purchased from abroad

78
Chapter 14
  • Economic Instability

79
Business Cycles
  • Systematic ups and downs of real GDP
  • Phases
  • 1. Recession real GDP declines for two
    consecutive quarters (begins when economy peaks)
  • It ends when the economy reaches a trough
    (turnaround point)
  • 2. Expansion period of recovery from a
    recession
  • Continues till it reaches a new peak
  • Trend Line if there were no periods of recession
    and expansion
  • Depression-- if recession becomes very severe
    with many people out of work, shortages, and
    excess capacity in manufacturing plants

80
Great Depression
  • Oct. 29, 1929 Black Tuesday
  • 25 percent of people were unemployed
  • No FDIC to insure banks
  • Bank Holiday declared to stop runs on banks

81
Causes of G.D.
  • Uneven distribution of Income
  • Easy and plentiful credit
  • Global Conditions
  • High American tariffs

82
Causes of Business Cycles
  • Capital Expenditures
  • Businesses expand and then pull back by laying
    off
  • Inventory Adjustments
  • Cut back on signs of slowing and then build back
    up which causes GDP to fluctuate
  • Innovation and Imitation
  • Gain edge on competition and they must imitate to
    keep up. Eventually, the playing field is even
    and there is no need to innovate
  • Monetary
  • Credit and loan policies of the FED
  • Low rates cause more borrowing, in the long run,
    rate will go back up because of demand and people
    stop borrowing
  • External Shock
  • Increases in oil prices, wars, conflicts

83
Predicting Cycles
  • Using economic models

84
Unemployment
  • Section 2

85
Rate
  • People available for work who make an effort to
    find a job
  • Number of unemployed divided by the total number
    persons in the civilian labor force

86
Full Employment
  • Does not mean zero unemployment
  • The lowest possible rate with the economy growing
    and all factors of production being used as
    efficient as possible
  • 4-5 percent

87
Inflation
  • Section 3

88
Inflation and Deflation
  • Rise in the general level of prices
  • The decrease in the general prices

89
Causes
  • Demand of goods causes shortages
  • Government deficit spending
  • Rising input cost drive up cost of products
  • Monetary Growth money supply grows faster than
    real GDP
  • Extra money not spent causes prices to go up
  • Most popular reason

90
Consequences
  • Dollar buys less
  • Changes spending habits
  • Causes people to speculate in investments
  • Alters the distribution of income

91
Chapter 15The FED and Monetary Policy
  • Section 1
  • FED

92
Structure of the FED
  • Private Ownership
  • Owned by membership banks
  • Own shares of stock like a corporation
  • National Banks must be members

93
  • Board of Governors
  • 7 members
  • Appointed by president
  • Approved by the Senate
  • Regulatory and supervisory agency

94
  • Fed Reserve District Banks
  • 12 Banks who is responsible for a district
  • 25 additional banks
  • Supervised by the Fed Reserve Board in Washington
    D.C.
  • Carry out many of the actions normal banks do

95
  • Federal Open Market Committee
  • Makes decisions about the growth of the money
    supply and level of interest rates
  • 12 members
  • Meets 8 times a year to review economy and make
    decisions
  • The Feds primary monetary policy making body

96
  • Advisory Committees
  • 3 committees that advise the Board of Gov.
    directly
  • Fed. Advisory Council
  • Representatives from 12 district banks
  • Advice on overall health of economy
  • Consumer Advisory Council
  • Meet to discuss consumer credit laws
  • Thrift Institutions
  • Advise on thrift industry

97
Regulatory Responsibilities
  • State Member Banks
  • Must maintain reserves against deposits
  • Bank Holding Companies
  • Fed controls corporations that own one or more
    banks
  • International Operations
  • 60 countries operate 500 branches in US
  • Control about 20 percent of all banking assests
  • Fed has authority to supervise and regulate
  • Member Bank Mergers
  • Must get the approval of the appropriate federal
    banking authority
  • Fed has authority over state member banks

98
Other Services
  • Clearing checks, enforcing consumer legislation,
    maintaining currency and coins, and providing
    financial services to the government
  • Figure 15.2 page 412
  • Truth in Lending Act requires sellers to make
    complete and accurate disclosures to people who
    buy on credit
  • Currency- paper component is made up of Fed
    Reserve Notes which is fiat and is printed by the
    Bureau of Engraving and Printing
  • Coins are made by the Bureau of the Mint
  • When banks need money, they call the Fed, when
    money cannot be used, they send it to the Fed and
    they destroy it

99
Monetary Policy
  • US is a fractional reserve system requires
    banks to keep a fraction of deposits as reserves
  • 12 percent requirement must be kept in the vault
    as cash
  • Banks lend excess money to others

100
  • Easy money supply supply grows and interest
    rates fall to stimulate the economy
  • Tight money supply Restricts money supply and
    rates go up to slow economic growth
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