January 27, 2015
GDP: Gross Domestic Product: Total dollar
value of all goods and services produced within a country's borders within a
year.
GNP: Gross National Product: The total
value of all final goods and services produced by Americans for a given
year.
- United States working in other
counties
- Working in other places for the
U.S.
Included in GDP:
C+Ig+G+Xn = GDP
C: Consumption: 67% of the economy. Has
to be final good or service. Has to be money spent.
Ig: Gross Domestic Investment:
1. Factory equipment
maintenance
2. New factory equipment
3. Construction of housing
4. Unsold inventory of products built
in that year.
Ex: Purchasing a house built in 2014-
applied to 2014 GDP
G: Government spending:
-Military buys weapons
-FDISD hires teachers
Xn: Net exports: (exports- imports)
Not included in GDP:
1. Non- Market Activities: volunteering, family work, illegal drugs, babysitting
2. Intermediate goods: Goods and services that are purchased for
resale, or for further processing and manufacturing
- to avoid double counting
- they are things that go into buying
a finished product
3. Used or secondhand goods: counted 1st year purchased
4. Financial transactions: 3 groups
-Stocks
-Bonds
-Real Estate
5. Gifts or transferred payments (public and private)
Private: Produce no output, simply
transfer funds from one private individual to another- Scholarship
Public: Recipients contribute nothing
to the current production- Social security; welfare payments
January 28, 2015
Expenditure Approach
C+Ig+G+Xn = GDP: most popular
Income Approach
- Add all income earned by households
and firms in a single year
GDP= W+R+I+P+Statistical Adjustments
I: Interests
P: Profit (proprietors income )
Budget
Government Purchases of Goods & Services + Government
Transfer Payments - Government tax and fee collections
If
+= deficit
-= surplus
Trade
Exports- Imports
GNP: GDP + Net Foreign Factor Payment
NNP:
Net National Product
GNP- Depreciation
NDP:
Net Domestic Product
GDP- Depreciation
National Income:
*GDP- Indirect Business Taxes - Depreciation - Net Foreign
Factor Payment
*Compensation of Employees+ Rental Income + Interest Income +
Proprietors Income + Corporate Profits
Disposable Personal Income
National Income - Personal House and Taxes + Government Transfer
Payments
January 29, 2015
Real and Nominal GDP
Nominal GDP: The value of output produced in
current prices
Price x Quantity
- it can increase from year to year,
if either output or price increase
Real GDP: The value of output produced in
constant or base year prices (could be earliest year)
Base Price x Quantity
- it can increase from year to ear
ONLY if the output increases.
-output is measured by quantity
- real GDP only uses base year because
it is adjusted for inflation and base prices are the same.
Price Index
- it measures inflation by tracking
changes in the price of a market basket of goods compared with the base
year
Same year (QuantityxProducts) added together = Market Basket of Goods
Price of MBG Current year/ Price of MBG Base year X 100 = Price
Index
GDP Deflator
- A price index used to adjust from
nominal to real GDP.
- IN the base year, GDP Deflator
=100
- AFTER base year, GDP Deflator is
GREATER than 100
- Before base year, GDP Deflator is
LESS than 100
GDP Deflator= Nominal GDP/ Real GDP X
100
Inflation
= New GDP Deflator - Old GDP Deflator
/ Old GDP Deflator x 100
Inflation: A rise in the general level of
prices
- standard: 2-3%
A.
Inflation rate: measures percentage increase in the price level over time. A
key indicator of the economy's health.
-Deflation: A decline in the
general price level.
-Disinflation: Occurs when the
inflation rate itself declines.
B.
CPI( Consumer price index):
Measures inflation by tracking the
yearly price of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services. In addition, CPI
indicates changes in the cost of living and price level.
5 ways to solve inflation
problems:
1. Finding inflation rate using market
basket data.
Current year market basket value-
Base year market basket value/
Base year market basket value
2. Finding inflation rate using
price index
Current year price index- base year
price index/ base year price index x100
3. Finding inflation using the
rule of 70
The rule of 70: used to calculate
number of years it will take the price level to double at any given rate of
inflation
Years needed to double inflation= 70/
annual inflation rate
4. Determining real wages
Real wages= nominal interest rate-
inflation premium
• real interest rate: the cost of
borrowing or lending money adjust for expected inflation rate (%)
• nominal interest rate: the
unadjusted cost of borrowing or lending money
Causes of inflation
·
Demand and pull
inflation: Caused by an excess of (demand /output) that pulls prices outward
·
Cost-push inflation:
Caused by a rise in (Per unit production cost) due to (increase in resource
cost)
Effects of inflation
Anticipated: Expected- COLA added
to pay/ wages adjusted
Unanticipated: Unexpected
Hurt by inflation:
·
COLA: Fixed income (received
from the government)
·
Savers
·
Lenders/ Creditors
Help by inflation
·
Borrowers: Debt
repaid with cheaper dollars than which was loaned out
·
Fixed Contract
February
3, 2015
Frictional
Unemployment: People between jobs- Choosing new opportunities, lifestyle,
choices, new education level.
(Seasonal Unemployment):
Waiting for the right season to conduct your trade. Mall: Holidays,
construction, lifeguarding, bus drivers.
Cyclical
Unemployment: Down turns in the business cycle. Bad for society as well as
individuals: Recession; Trough
Structural
Unemployment: A lack of skills, a decline in an industry, technology changes;
Factory moved, no skill for new technology, don’t know how to read/write
Unemployment: The
percentage of people who do not have a job, but they are in the labor force.
Labor Force:
Number of people in a country that are classified as either employed of
unemployed.
Unemployment
Rate:
#of Unemployed/
# of Unemployed + # of Employed x 100
Not in labor
force:
1. Kids
2. Retired
People
3. Military
Personnel
4. Mentally
Insane
5. Incarcerated
6. Stay at Home
Parents
7. Full-Time
Students
8. Discouraged
Workers- Leave the workforce; applied/ never got job
Full employment:
Occurs when
there is no cyclical unemployment present in the economy.
SO, full
employment IS the natural rate of unemployment: NRU:
Standard
Percentage: 4-5%
Why is
unemployment good?
1. Less pressure
to raise wages
Why is unemployment
bad?
1. Not enough
consumption (GDP)
2. Too much
poverty
3. Too much government
assistance needed
Okun’s law:
For every 1% of unemployment
above the NRU (Natural Rate of Unemployment) causes a 2% decline in real GDP.
If NRU= 3.5
7%= GDP GONE







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