Title: ECN202: Macroeconomics
1ECN202 Macroeconomics
- Circular Flow Aggregate Supply-Aggregate Demand
2Circular Flow Diagram
- The Circular flow diagram is comparable to a
wiring or plumbing diagram for a house. Here is
shows the flow of money in a modern economy, and
in it you can see the four key players
(Households, Firms, Government, and Foreigners)
and the four macro markets in which these players
conduct their business (labor, output, capital,
and foreign exchange). For each market there is a
S D curve and price and quantity measures that
we look into later. In the circular flow you
just need to follow the money to understand how
the macro economy functions and how shocks in any
market spread to the other markets.
3Macro Markets, Players, Indicators
Markets Demanders Suppliers Key Concepts
Outputcars Firms GDP, NI / CPI / Productivity
Labor job Firms / Government Employment / Earnings / Unemployment
Capital loan Money supply / Interest Rates
Foreign Capital travel Foreign Trade balances / Exchange Rates
4Each Market has one of these
Supply
Price
Headlines are about Price Output changes
P
Demand
Q
Quantity
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6Foreigners
Four Players
7Four Markets
8An overview of macro environment
Markets Demanders Suppliers Key Concepts
Output Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms GDP, NI / CPI / Productivity
Labor
Capital Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms / Households / Fed / Foreign Money supply / Interest Rates
Foreign Capital Buyers of US stuff Sellers of US stuff Exchange rate
9Foreign Exchange Market (US s)
Price Exchangerate
Supply
P
Demand
Q
Quantity units of currency
10What is happening to the value of the US in
these two graphs
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12An overview of macro environment
Markets Demanders Suppliers Key Concepts
Output Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms GDP, NI / CPI / Productivity
Labor Firms / Government Households Employment / Earnings / Unemployment
Capital Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms / Households / Fed / Foreign Money supply / Interest Rates
Foreign Capital Foreign US Trade balances / Exchange Rates
13Labor Market
Supply
Price wage
P
Demand
Q
Quantity Employment
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15An overview of macro environment
Markets Demanders Suppliers Key Concepts
Output Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms GDP, NI / CPI / Productivity
Labor Firms / Government Households Employment / Earnings / Unemployment
Capital Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms / Households / Fed / Foreign Money supply / Interest Rates
Foreign Capital Foreign US Trade balances / Exchange Rates
16Capital Market
Supply
Price Interestrate
P
Demand
Q
Quantity Funds s
17What is happening here to interest rates?
18Output Market
Supply
P
Demand
Q
19An overview of macro environment
Markets Demanders Suppliers Key Concepts
Output Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms GDP, NI / CPI / Productivity
Labor Firms / Government Households Employment / Earnings / Unemployment
Capital Firms / Households / Government / Foreign Firms / Households / Fed / Foreign Money supply / Interest Rates
Foreign Capital Foreign US Trade balances / Exchange Rates
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21What is happening to real GDP growth rate?
22How does WW II seem to divide the two periods?
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24Aggregate Supply Aggregate Demand
- You have now looked at the labor and output
markets, and now we are going to look at the
picture of the output market more carefully.
This is the market for ALL goods and services
cars, lawyers, school, milk and while it looks
like the SD graph, it is not. One thing is the
same if you follow the rules you will be OK.
Now we will look at the AS-AD model economists
use to understand the macro economy.
25AS-AD Analysis Cookbook Approach
- Identify the participants
- AS Suppliers (firms)
- AD Demanders ( firms, households, government,
foreigners) - Identify the determinants of behavior
- Identify the appropriate curves
- KNOW the AXES (variables)
- Identify any special situation
26Determinants of aggregate supply (AS)
- Number of inputs
- Capital, labor, resources
- Costs of production
- Price of inputs / resources
- Productivity / efficiency of resources
- Price level
27Aggregate Supply Curve
AS has positive slope since higher prices coax
out more supply
AS (depends on and price of inputs their
productivity
Price Level
P1
P0
Q1
Q0
GDP
28What shifts the Aggregate Supply curve?
- Change in any of the factors (other than price
level) that affect Aggregate Supply will change
the AS curve.
29Aggregate Supply Curve
When productivity increases _at_ each price
Aggregate Supply has increased and curve shifts
to the right
Price Level
AS
P1
P0
Q1
Q0
Quantity GDP
30Components of aggregate demand (AD)
- Who buys American stuff in the output market?
- (Households) Consumption Spending
- (Firms) Investment spending
- (Government) Government spending
- (Foreigners) Export Import spending
31Determinants of aggregate demand (AD)
- What affects demand for American stuff?
- Consumption Spending (Households)
- Income, expectations, interest rate
- Investment spending (Firms)
- Profit, expectations, interest rate
- Government spending (Government)
- Policies, state-of-economy, interest rate
- Export spending (Foreigners)
- Income, expectations, exchange rate in ROW
- Import spending (US firms Householde)
- Income, expectations, exchange rate in US
32Aggregate Demand Curve
AD has negative slope since higher prices mean
there is less money to purchase stuff
P1
P2
AD CIGX-M
Q2
Q1
33Aggregate Demand Curve
When interest rates fall and demand for cars
increases _at_ each price increases Aggregate
Demand and the curve shifts to the right
P1
P2
AD CIGX-M
Q2
Q1
34AS-AD Model of Output Market
AS( and price of inputs, productivity)
P
AD (CIGX-M)
Q
35We now have a model that helps us understand
changes in the price level (CPI) and national
output (GDP). We can use it to explain past
changes or forecast future changes in these
variables and it looks very much like the
analysis of SD. We need to look at how the
economy adjusts to shocks to the system using
the same technique.
36Use AS-AD model to explain the following headlines
- a decrease in US consumer confidence that pushes
consumption spending lower - a significant expansion in Asia that raises Asian
demand for US exports - an increase in the productivity of American
workers - China growth pushes oil prices higher
Get out that pad and draw the diagrams for each
question before reading on
37a. Impact of decrease in US confidence that
pushes consumption spending lower.
AS
AD
- Cookbook approach
- Identify the participants - US consumers AD
- Identify the determinants of behavior Consumer
confidence decrease reduced consumption spending - Identify the appropriate curves - AD curve
shifts in - Result lower GDP (recession) and lower inflation
(price level)
38b. a significant expansion in Asia that raises
Asian demand for US exports.
AS
AD
- Cookbook approach
- Identify the participants - Asian demand for US
exports AD - Identify the determinants of behavior Expansion
in Asia means more income more demand for US
exports - Identify the appropriate curves - AD curve
shifts out - Result higher GDP and higher inflation (price
level)
39c. an increase in the productivity of American
workers.
AS
AD
- Cookbook approach
- Identify the participants - productivity of
workers AS - Identify the determinants of behavior Increase
productivity lower costs of production
increase AS - Identify the appropriate curves - AS curve
shifts out - Result higher GDP and lower inflation (price
level)
40d. China growth pushes oil prices higher.
AS
AD
- Cookbook approach
- Identify the participants - oil prices AS
- Identify the determinants of behavior higher
oil prices raise costs of production reduces AS - Identify the appropriate curves - AS curve
shifts in - Result lower GDP (recession) and higher
inflation (price level)
41- Note on oil price shock
- In a more complete analysis you need to account
for the fact the US imports a good deal of its
oil and that demand for oil is inelatic so when
the price goes up we do not cut demand much. In
this case if the price of oil rises then US
imports rise so we get the inward shift of the AS
curve from higher production costs AND an inward
shift in the AD curve because imports rise. In
exams you should not worry about the more
detailed analysis.
42Here are a few more examples
- A rise in the value of the US pushes US imports
higher - A rise in interest rates slows housing sales
- Rise in housing prices raises household wealth
- Business confidence falls lower spending on new
equipment
Get out that pad and draw the diagrams for each
question before reading on
43- A rise in the value of the US pushes US imports
higher
44b. A rise in interest rates slows housing sales
45c. Rise in housing prices raises household wealth
46d. Business confidence falls lower spending on
new equipment
47See how you did
- A rise in the value of the US pushes US imports
higher higher US imports affects AD but be
careful since Imports have a negative sign so
higher imports reduces demand for US stuff so
AD decreases and shifts left. - A rise in interest rates slows housing sales-
higher interest rates reduce demand for housing
reduce home building reduce investment spending
shift AD in - Rise in housing prices raises household
wealth-households feeling wealthier increase
consumption spending shift AD out - Business confidence falls lower spending on new
equipment-lower equipment spending lower I
spending shift AD in
48Generalization Single Shift
Based on what you have done, fill in the
following table
Price Level GDP
AD -
AD -
AS -
AS -
49Questions
a. What happens when oil prices rise and war
spending rises?
Get out that pad and draw the diagram before
reading on
50Questions
b. What happens when productivity rises and
exports rise due to growth in China?
Get out that pad and draw the diagram before
reading on
51See how you did
- What happens when oil prices rise and war
spending rises? - Oil prices rise decrease in AS shift AS
inward - War spending increases increase in AD (G)
shift AD outward
52See how you did
- b. What happens when productivity rises and
exports rise due to growth in China? - Productivity rises increase in AS shift AS
outward - Exports grow increase in AD (X) shift AD
outward
53Generalizations Double Shift
Fill in this table and see what you get Remember
Double shifts mean only predict price of output
Price Level Quantity (GDP)
AD AS
AD AS
AD AS
AD AS