1 / 24

Macroeconomics - ECO 2013

Macroeconomics - ECO 2013. Fall 2005 – 1 Term August 24 – December 16, 2005. Chapter 8: Intro to Economic Growth & Stability. Economic Growth Business Cycle Unemployment Inflation. Economic Growth. Defined by two ways: An increase in real GDP occurring over some time period

blake-house
Download Presentation

Macroeconomics - ECO 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Macroeconomics - ECO 2013 Fall 2005 – 1 Term August 24 – December 16, 2005

  2. Chapter 8: Intro to Economic Growth & Stability • Economic Growth • Business Cycle • Unemployment • Inflation

  3. Economic Growth • Defined by two ways: • An increase in real GDP occurring over some time period • An increase in real GDP per capita occurring over some time period • Best for comparing living standards between countries • Calculated as a percentage rate of growth per year

  4. Growth as a Goal • Expansion of total output v. population growth results in rising real wages and incomes  higher SOL • Better able to meet society’s wants & resolve socioeconomic problems • Rising real wages & income provide more opportunities to individuals & families w/o sacrificing others • Undertake new programs to alleviate poverty or protect environment

  5. Main Sources of Growth • Increasing Inputs of Resources (1/3) • FFOP: Land, Labor, Capital, & Entrepreneurial Abilities • Increasing Production of Inputs (2/3) • Improvements in health, training, education & motivation of workers • Capital enhancements (machinery) • Better natural resources • Organization & Management • Labor reallocated by efficiency

  6. Results of Economics Growth in the U.S. • Improved Products & Services • Added Leisure (50 to 40 hrs/week) • Environmental Impacts (Damaging) • Quality of Life (Stress)

  7. The Business Cycle: Four Phases • Peak: Business activity reaches temporary maximum • Recession: Period of decline in Total Output, Income, Employment, Trade • Lasts more than 6 months • Depression: a severe & prolonged recession, falling prices are likely • Trough: Output & employment “bottoms out” at lowest levels • Can be long or short • Recovery: Expansion phase where output & employment rise toward full employment • Prices may rise

  8. Causes of Fluctuations • Major innovations can trigger new investment and/or consumer spending • Changes in Productivity • Monetary Phenomenon • Governments create more/less money • Changes in Total Spending • In the U.S., long-run growth trend is expansionary

  9. Who is affected by Recessions in the Business Cycle? • Everyone & Everywhere • Firms & Industries producing Capital & Consumer Durable Goods are most affected • Service industries and Nondurable Consumer Goods are somewhat “insulated”

  10. Measuring Unemployment • Who is eligible & available to work? • Ineligible: Those less than 17 years and/or institutionalized • Not in Labor Force: Those not employed and NOT SEEKING WORK • Employed • Unemployed: Those not employed and SEEKING WORK • Labor Force = Employed + Unemployed • Approximately 50% of U.S. Population • Those “willing and able” to work

  11. Unemployment Rate • Calculated as a Percentage of Labor Force: • Unemployment Rate = (Unemployed / Labor Force) * 100 • BLS conducts survey of 60,000 households monthly

  12. Unemployment Rate • Part-time Employment underestimates the true unemployment rate • Many would prefer full-time work but can’t find it • Discouraged workers understate the true unemployment rate • Not in labor force but they wish they were

  13. Frictional Unemployment • Those “between jobs” • Voluntary • Fired • Seasonal shifts in demand • “Unemployment Pool” • Labor market is Imperfect & Noninstantaneous in matching workers to jobs • Inevitable & Desirable • Short-term

  14. Structural Unemployment • Changes over time in consumer demand & technology • Demand for certain skills may decline or vanish • Demand for other skills intensifies • Change in the COMPOSITION of the Labor Force • Geography • Long-term, more serious

  15. Cyclical Unemployment • Caused by decline in total spending during recessions • aka “Deficit Demand Unemployment” • Serious

  16. Full Employment • Occurs when economy is experiencing only frictional & structural unemployment (i.e., no cyclical unemployment) • Full Employment Rate of Unemployment or Natural Rate of Unemployment (NRU) • Economy is producing its Potential Output • NRU occurs when Job Seekers = Job Vacancies

  17. Reasons for the Decline in NRU • Less younger workers in the labor force • Growth of temp agencies • Improved information technology • Welfare reform • Doubling of U.S. prison population

  18. Economic Costs of Unemployment: GDP Gap • When the economy fails to create enough jobs for all who are able and willing to work, potential production of goods & services is lost • GDP Gap: Potential GDP – Actual GDP • Potential GDP is at the NRU

  19. Economic Costs of Unemployment: Unequal Burdens • Costs are unequally distributed among different groups • Occupation • Low-skilled laborers > High-skilled professionals • More frequent & longer unemployment spells • Bear brunt of recessions • Age • Teenagers > Adults • Lower skills • Less geographical mobility • New in labor market

  20. Economic Costs of Unemployment: Unequal Burdens • Race & Ethnicity: • African-Americans & Hispanics > Caucasian • Lower rates of educational attainment • Greater concentration of low-skilled jobs • Discrimination in the labor market • Education: • Less educated > More educated • Duration

  21. Inflation • Rise in the general level of prices • Does NOT mean ALL prices are rising • Prices rise unevenly • Measuring Inflation • Consumer Price Index [CPI(2) – CPI(1)]/CPI(1) * 100

  22. Redistribution Effects of Inflation • Who is hurt by Inflation (assuming it is unanticipated) • Fixed Income Receivers (e.g., elderly) • Savers • Value of savings will decline if rate of inflation is greater than the rate of interest • Creditors

  23. Who is Unaffected or Benefits from Inflation? • Flexible-Income Receivers • Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs) • Social Security Recipients • Borrowers

  24. Chapter 8 Study Questions • 4: Business Cycle • 5 & 6: Unemployment

More Related