Monday, March 2, 2015

Unit 3 Macroeconomics

Unit III

2/11/15
Aggregate Demand

  • Shows that amount of Real GDP that the private, public, and foreign sectors collectively desire to purchase at each possible price level
  • The relationship between the price level and the level of GDP is inverse
  • Aggregate Demand (AD) Graph Demand Curve

  • Three reasons AD is downward sloping
1. Real-Balances Effect

  • When the price-level is high households and businesses cannot afford to purchase as much output
  • When the price-level is low households and businesses can afford to purchase output

2. Interest-Rate Effect

  • A higher price-level increases the interest rate which tends to discourage investment
  • A lower price-level decreases the interest rate which tends to encourage investment

3. Foreign Purchases Effect

  • A higher price-level increases the demand for relatively cheaper imports
  • A lower price-level increases the foreign demand for relatively cheaper United States imports
  • Shifts in AD
-There are two parts to a shift in AD:
  1. A change in C, Ig, G, and/or Xn
  2. A multiplier effect that produces a greater change than the original change in the 4 components
-Increase in AD=AD shifts to the right
-Decrease in AD=AD shifts to the left

  • Consumption
-Household spending is affected by:
1. Consumer wealth
  • More wealth=more spending (AD shifts to the right)
  • Less wealth=less spending (AD shifts to the left)
2. Consumer expectations
  • Positive expectations=more spending (AD shift to the right)
  • Negative expectations=less spending (AD shift to the left)
3. Household indebtedness
  • Less debt=more spending (AD shifts to the right)
  • More debt=less spending (AD shifts to the left)
  • Gross Private Investment
-Investment spending is sensitive to:

1. The Real Interest Rate
  • Lower=more investment (AD shifts to the right)
  • Higher=less investment (AD shifts to the left)
2. Expected Returns
  • Higher=more investment (AD shifts to the right)
  • Lower=less investment (AD shifts to the left)
3. Expected Returns are influenced by:
  • Expectations of future profitability
  • Technology
  • Degree of excess capacity (existing stock of capital)
  • Business taxes
  • Government Spending
-More government spending (AD shifts to the right)
-Less government spending (AD shifts to the left)
  • Net Exports
-Sensitive to:
  • Exchange Rates (international value of dollars)
  1. Strong money=more imports and fewer exports (AD shifts to the left)
  2. Weak money=fewer imports and more exports (AD shifts to the right)
  • Relative Income
  1. Strong foreign economies=more exports (AD shifts to the right)
  2. Weak foreign economies=less exports (AD shifts to the left)

2/12/15

Aggregate Supply 

  • The level of Real (GDPr) that forms will produce at each Price Level (PL)
Long-Run vs. Short-Run 

  • Long-Run is a period of time where input prices are completely flexible and adjust to changes in the price-level
  • In the long-run, the level of Real GDP supplied is independent of the price-level
  • Short-Run is a period of time where input prices are sticky and do not adjust to changes in the price-level
  • In the short-run, the level if Real GDP supplied is directly related to the price level
This example shows LRAS and SRAS in the same graph:

Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS)

  • The LRAS marks the level of full employment in the economy (analogous to PPC)
Change in the Short-Run

  • An increase in SRAS is seen as a shift to right
  • A decrease in SRAS is seen as a shift the left
  • The key to understanding shifts in SRAS is per unit cost of production 
Per-Unit Production Cost=(total input cost)/(total output)

  • Determinants of SRAS
  1. Input prices
  2. Productivity
  3. Legal-institutional environment
  • Input Prices
-Domestic Resource Prices

  • Wages (75% of all business costs)
  • Cost of capital 
  • Raw materials (commodity prices)
-Increase in resources prices=SRAS shifts to the right
-Decrease in resource prices=SRAS shifts to the left

  • Productivity
Productivity=(total outputs)/(total inputs)

-More productivity=lower unit production cost (SRAS shifts to the right)
-Lower productivity=higher unit production cost (SRAS shifts to the left)
  • Legal Productivity
-Tax and Subsidies
  • Taxes ($ to government) on business increase per unit production cost (SRAS shifts to the left)
  • Subsidies ($ to government) to business reduce per unit production cost (SRAS shifts to the right)
-Government Regulation
  • Government regulation creates creates a cost of compliance (SRAS shifts to the left)
  • Deregulation reduces compliance cost (SRAS shifts to the right)
The AS/AD Model
  • The equilibrium of AS and AD determines current output (GDPr) and the price level (PL)
  • Full Employment: full employment equilibrium exists where AD intersect SRAS and LRAS at the same point
  • Recessionary Gap: exists when equilibrium occurs below full employment output
  • Inflationary Gap: an inflationary gap exists when equilibrium occurs beyond full employment output
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3 Ranges Of The AS Curve

  • Horizontal or Keynesianincludes only levels of real output that are less than full employment output, implies that the economy is a recession, therefore you have a decrease in real output
  • Vertical or Classical: the economy reaches it's full capacity real output
  • Intermediate Range: expansion of real output and price level

2/20/15
Consumption and Saving

  • Disposable Income (DI):
-Income after taxes or net income
-Two choices, households can either consume or save
DI=(gross income)-(taxes)

  • Consumption:
-Household spending
-The ability to consume is constrained by:

  • The amount of disposable income
  • The propensity to save
  • Autonomous consumption
  • Dissaving
APC=C/DI=% DI that is spent

  • Saving
-Household not spending
-The ability to save is constrained by:

  • The amount of disposable income
  • The propensity to consume
APS=S/DI=% DI that is not spent

  • APC & APS
-APC: average propensity to consume
-APS: average propensity to spend

APC+APS=1
1-APC=APS
1-APS=APC
APC>1: Dissaving 
(-APS):Dissaving

  • MPC & MPS
-Marginal Propensity to Consume
-Percent of every extra dollar earned that is spent
MPC=(Change in Consumption)/(Change in Disposable Income) 



-Marginal Propensity to Save

-Percent of every extra dollar earned that is saved
MPC=(Change in Savings)/(Change in Disposable Income)



MPC+MPS=1

1-MPC=MPS
1-MPS=MPC

If you need more help, refer to this!


  • Determinants on Consumption and Savings: wealth, expectations, household debt, taxes
  • The Spending Multiplier: an initial change in spending causes a larger change in aggregate spending or AD
Multiplier=(Change in AD)/(Change in Spending)
Multiplier=(Change in AD)/(Change in C, G, I, or X)
-Expenditures and income flow continuously which sets off a spending increase in the economy

  • Calculating The Spending Multiplier

-Multipliers are (+) when there is an increase in spending and (-) when there is a decrease

  • Calculating The Tax Multiplier

-When the government taxes, the multiplier works inverse
-Money is leaving the circular flow
-If there is a tax cut, then the multiplier is positive, because there is now more money in the circular flow



Interest Rate and Investment Demand 

  • Investment: money spent or expenditures on
  1. New plants (factories)
  2. Capital equipment (machinery)
  3. Technology (hardware and software)
  4. New homes
  5. Inventories (goods sold by producers)
  • Expected Rates of Return
-How to make decisions: cost/benefit analysis
-How to determine benefits: expected rate of return
-How businesses count the cost: interest costs
-How businesses determine the amount of investment they undertake: compare expected rate of return to interest cost
  • If expected return > interest cost, then invest
  • If expected return < interest cost, do not invest
  • Real (r%) v. Nominal (i%)

-Nominal is the observable rate of interest, real subtracts out inflation an is only know as expost facto
-The real interest rate determines the cost of an investment decision
  • Investment Demand Curve (ID)

-Downward sloping
-When interest rates are high, fewer investments are profitable; when interest rates are low, more investments are profitable
-Shifts in ID:
  1. Cost of production
  2. Business taxes
  3. Technological change
  4. Stock of capital 
  5. Expectations
2/25/15
Fiscal Policy
  • Changes in the expenditures or tax revenues of the federal government
  • Two tools for fiscal policy:
  1. Taxes: government can increase or decrease
  2. Spending: government can increase or decrease spending
  • Fiscal policy is enacted to promotes our nation's economic goals: full employment, price stability, economic growth
  • Deficit, Surpluses, and Debt
Balance Budget: revenues-expenditures
Budget Deficit: revenues<expenditures
Budget Surplus: revenues>expenditures
Government Debt: sum of all deficits-sum of all surpluses
  • Government must borrow money when it ruins a budget deficit
  • Government borrows from:
  1. Individuals
  2. Corporations
  3. Financial institutions
  4. Foreign entities or foreign government
  • Two Options (Fiscal Policy)

1. Discretionary (action)
  • Expansionary: think deficit
  • Contractionary: think surplus

2. Non-Discretionary (non-action)
  • Discretionary v. Automatic

-Discretionary: decreasing or increasing tax or spending
-Automatic: unemployment compensation
  • Contractionary v. Expansionary

-Contractionary: policy designed to decrease AD, strategy for controlling inflation
-Expansionary: policy designed to increase AD, strategy for increasing GDP combating a recession and reducing unemployment
  • Expansionary Fiscal Policy: recession is countered with expansionary policy

-Increase government spending
-Decrease taxes
-Price level increases: this mean expansionary fiscal policy creates some inflation
  • Contractionary Fiscal Policy: inflation is countered with contractionary policy

-Decrease government spending 
-Increase taxes 
-U% increased: this means contractionary 
  • Automatic or Built in Stabilizer: anything that increases the government budget deficit during a recession and increases it's budget surpluses during inflation without requiring action from policy makers (social security)
  • Three Taxes Systems
  1. Progressive Tax System: average tax rate that rises with GDP
  2. Proportional Tax System: average tax rate remains constant as GDP changes
  3. Regressive Tax System: average tax rate falls with GDP

1 comment:

  1. I like how your information is all together, so it will be easier for me to look at it, and it makes it easier for me to find the information. I also enjoyed the graphs that you put up it gives me a better understanding on how the LRAS graphs work since I did not have it in my notes.

    ReplyDelete