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An Overview of Macroeconomic Policy

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Broadcasting. Question why? Subsidies. Agriculture. Public Transport ... Increase social safety net payments. Outcomes: If at potential = inflation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An Overview of Macroeconomic Policy


1
An Overview of Macroeconomic Policy
  • Class One
  • Economic Policy in Canada
  • POL 4130

2
Public Policy ChallengesThe Personal Baggage
  • Globalization
  • The world is interdependent imposes constraints
    on range of choices available to policy-makers
  • Shifts in Political Culture
  • Canadians expectations about policy supply
    displays changes over time impact on
    macro-economy
  • Compare Canada with developments in Germany of
    France for example
  • New Ideas about Governance and Public Management
  • Ethics, Roles of Market, Bureaucracy and
    Politicians

3
National Accounting and GDP
  • Macroeconomics What is It?
  • Demand Supply
  • Some National Accounting Identities
  • Estimating Output
  • Major Categories of Demand in the national economy

4
What is Macroeconomics?
  • The analysis of interactions among the principal
    parts of the economy
  • C I G X M (the Keynesian equation)
  • The principal actors are consumers (c), investors
    (i), the government (g) and the external sector
    (x-m)
  • GDP C I G X M (the nation total output)

5
Real Gross Domestic Product http//www.bankofcana
da.ca/en/mpr/pdf/mprjul08.pdf
6
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7
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8
What Affects GDP?Not all under control of
national government
  • Tax policy (consumers, investors)
  • Central Bank policy (interest rates, exchange
    rate, inflation)
  • Other government polices (subsidies, regulation)
  • Production capacity (modern or antiquated)
  • Policy in other countries (mainly the US but also
    Euro area and Asia)
  • International shocks (e.g., wars, oil prices,
    other commodity prices)

9
Tax policyhttp//www.fin.gc.ca/budget06/pdf/bp200
6e.pdf
10
Central Bank Policy I90 day commercial paper
ratewww.bankofcanada.ca/en/graphs/V122491-gr.html

11
Central Bank Policy IIKey Policy Indicators
  • Inflation Control Target CPI
  • Policy Instrument Overnight Interest Rate
  • Monetary Conditions Exchange Rate 90-day
    commercial paper rate
  • Monetary Aggregates M1, M2
  • Inflation Indicators CPI, Labor Costs,
    wholesale prices

12
Regulation and Subsidies
  • Regulation (Deregulation)
  • Financial Services
  • Telecom
  • Broadcasting
  • Question why?
  • Subsidies
  • Agriculture
  • Public Transport
  • Environment
  • Why subsidies?

13
Production Capacity
14
External Shocks
15
Developments Offshorehttp//www.bankofcanada.ca/e
n/mpr/pdf/mprjul08.pdf
16
Four Principles Affecting GDP(There could be
more!)
  • Up to the limits of a nations potential output
    capacity to produce) firms in aggregate will
    produce to meet demand.
  • Aggregate demand can fluctuate rather sharply
    from year-to-year
  • Successful economic performance in SR depends on
    how well a nation avoids large fluctuations in
    demand
  • In LR economic well-being depends on how well a
    nation increases the supply of goods and services

17
Demand and Supply Policies I
  • To increase aggregate demand
  • Cut taxes
  • Government spending
  • Monetary and credit expansion
  • Increase social safety net payments
  • Outcomes
  • If at potential gt inflation
  • If below potential gt aggregate demand rises

18
Demand and Supply Policies II
  • To raise aggregate supply
  • Government can spend more money for investment in
    education, roads, R D
  • Other projects that enhance a nations ability to
    produce
  • Reduction in taxes
  • Improve monetary incentives to work more or to
    take risks
  • Depending on economic conjuncture the monetary
    authorities may want to take offsetting measures
  • Labor Market Policies

19
Demand and Supply Policies III
  • Aggregate demand policy aims to change the level
    of GDP
  • Frequently aggregate supply policy has to achieve
    its objective by changing the composition of GDP
    increase the capacity of the economy to produce

20
National AccountingSome Identities
  • For every dollar of output produced there is a
    dollar of wage, profit or some other kind of
    income produced
  • Total amount that a country invests at home and
    abroad can never exceed the amount that it saves
  • A balance of payments deficit (imports gt exports)
    will always equal the excess of domestic
    investment over savings
  • A balance of payments surplus (exports gt imports)
    means excess of savings over domestic investment

21
GDP -gt Income Expenditure
22
GDP -gt Income Expenditure
23
GNP vs. GDP
  • GNP includes the net interest and dividends
    earned by residents and corporations from
    investments abroad. GDP excludes this.
  • Thus, GNP is output produced by residents of a
    country
  • And, GDP is the output produced within a country

24
Estimating GDP I
  • Goods and services included are those valued by
    the market
  • Only goods and services bought and sold in the
    market are included
  • Another measure of output eliminates the effects
    of inflation real GDP vs. nominal GDP

25
Estimating GDP II
  • Nominal GDP PGDP x Real GDP
  • P Nominal GDP / Real GDP
  • Real GDP Nominal GDP / PGDP
  • PGDP the GDP price deflator

26
Estimating GDP IIIReal vs. Nominal
  • GDP can increase if the nation produces a larger
    physical quantity of G S. Such a change would
    be important to the standard of living
  • GDP can also change because the prices of G S
    rise (inflation). GDP not physically larger
  • Thus need some way to distinguish between a
    physical change (which affects the standard of
    living) and a nominal change in total output

27
Real GDP Q/Q _at_ AR
28
PGDP vs. CPI
  • The CPI (consumer price index) measures the price
    of a bundle of G S based on a survey of
    consumer expenditures
  • CPI Current cost of a bundle of goods
    services / base year costs of the bundle x 100
  • The GDP deflator (PGDP) includes prices of all
    output
  • The CPI incorporates prices of imports which are
    excluded from the GDP deflator
  • The GDP deflator allows the output basket to
    change each year the CPI basket changes at
    discrete intervals

29
Major Categories of GDP I
  • Consumption
  • Durables
  • Semi-durables
  • Non-durables
  • Services
  • Investment
  • Machinery Equipment
  • Non-residential construction
  • Increases supply by adding to productive capacity
    of the economy
  • Housing

30
Major Categories of GDP II
  • Government
  • Current consumption
  • Investment
  • Exports
  • Imports
  • Change in inventories
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