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The National Economy

The National Economy. The National Economy. The Scope of Macroeconomics. COURSE OUTLINE. 1. The National Economy 2. Macroeconomic Issues & Analysis: An Overview 3. Short-run Macroeconomic Equilibrium 4. Money and Interest Rates 5. The Relationship between Money and Goods Markets

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The National Economy

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  1. The National Economy

  2. The National Economy The Scope of Macroeconomics

  3. COURSE OUTLINE 1. The National Economy 2. Macroeconomic Issues & Analysis: An Overview 3. Short-run Macroeconomic Equilibrium 4. Money and Interest Rates 5. The Relationship between Money and Goods Markets 6. Fiscal and Monetary Policy

  4. Fathers of modern macroeconomists • John Maynard Keynes- The general theory of employment, interest and money in 1776 • Milton Friedman • James Tobin • Paul Samuelson • Robert E. Lucas Jr • Robert solow • N. Gregory Mankiw • R Paul Krugman • Paul M. Romer

  5. macroeconomics • Macroeconomics is the economics of the economy as a whole and microeconomics is the economics of the single market. • Macroeconomics simplifies by ignoring differences among individual households. • Macroeconomics is important — and even interesting — because it affects all of us.

  6. Important issues in macroeconomics • Why does the cost of living keep rising? • Why are millions of people unemployed, even when the economy is booming? • Why are there recessions? • Can the government do anything to combat recessions? Should it?

  7. Important issues in macroeconomics • What is the government budget deficit? How does it affect the economy? • Why does Ghana have such a huge trade deficit? • Why are so many countries poor? What policies might help them grow out of poverty?

  8. THE SCOPE OF MACROECONOMICS • The major macroeconomic issues • economic growth • unemployment • inflation • balance of payments and exchange rates

  9. Economic growth (average % per annum), Unemployment (average %), Inflation (average % per annum)

  10. Economic growth (average % per annum), Unemployment (average %), Inflation (average % per annum)

  11. Economic growth (average % per annum), Unemployment (average %), Inflation (average % per annum)

  12. THE SCOPE OF MACROECONOMICS • Microeconomics and macroeconomics • The major macroeconomic issues • economic growth • unemployment • inflation • balance of payments and exchange rates • Government macroeconomic policy

  13. THE SCOPE OF MACROECONOMICS • Microeconomics and macroeconomics • The major macroeconomic issues • economic growth • unemployment • inflation • balance of payments and exchange rates • Government macroeconomic policy • choosing between macroeconomic theories

  14. THE SCOPE OF MACROECONOMICS • Microeconomics and macroeconomics • The major macroeconomic issues • economic growth • unemployment • inflation • balance of payments and exchange rates • Government macroeconomic policy • choosing between macroeconomic theories • choosing the order of priorities

  15. Societies face trade-offs between economic objectives. • The goal of faster growth may conflict with that of greater equality; • The goal of lower unemployment may conflict with that of lower inflation. • The existence of trade-offs means that policy-makers must make choices

  16. THE CIRCULAR FLOW OF INCOME • Aggregate demand (AD). This is the total spending on goods and services made within the country. • This spending consists of four elements. AD = C + I + G + X − M

  17. The National Economy The Circular Flow of Income

  18. THE CIRCULAR FLOW OF INCOME • The inner flow

  19. Consumption of domestically produced goods and services (Cd) Factor payments The circular flow of income Firms Households

  20. THE CIRCULAR FLOW OF INCOME • Difference between money and income • Withdrawalsnet saving • net taxes • import expenditure • Injections • investment • government expenditure • export expenditure

  21. Export expenditure (X) Investment (I) Government expenditure (G) BANKS, etc ABROAD GOV. Import expenditure (M) Net taxes (T) Net saving (S) The circular flow of income INJECTIONS Consumption of domestically produced goods and services (Cd) Factor payments WITHDRAWALS

  22. THE CIRCULAR FLOW OF INCOME • The relationship between injections and withdrawals • the links between them • planned injections may not equal planned withdrawals

  23. The circular flow and the four macroeconomic objectives • If Injections exceed withdrawals, the level of expenditure will rise and AD will rise • Consequence on macroeconomic objectives • Unemployment will fall • Inflation will tend to rise • The exports and imports part of the balance of payments will tend to deteriorate • There will be economic growth

  24. Equilibrium in the circular flow • When injections do not equal withdrawals, a state of disequilibrium will exist • This will set in train a process to bring the economy back to a state of equilibrium where injections are equal to withdrawals. • Assume injections exceeds withdrawals

  25. The National Economy Measuring National Income

  26. MEASURING NATIONAL INCOME • The three ways of measuring GDP • Gross domestic product (GDP): The value of output produced within the country over a 12-month period. • the product method • the income method • the expenditure method

  27. The circular flow of national income and expenditure

  28. The circular flow of national income and expenditure (1) Production (2) Incomes (3) Expenditure

  29. Nominal versus real GDP • Nominal GDP, measures GDP in the prices ruling at the time and thus takes no account of inflation. • Real GDP, measures GDP in the prices that ruled in the base year. Thus we could measure each year’s GDP in, say, 1990 prices. • This would enable us to see how much real GDP had changed from one year to another. In other words, it would eliminate increases in money GDP that were merely due to an increase in prices.

  30. Taking account of population: the use of per-capita measures • Taking account of exchange rates: the use of PPP measures: For example, $1 may exchange for, say, Ghs3.26. But will $1 in the US buy the same amount of goods as Ghs 3.26 in Ghana? The answer is almost certainly no

  31. MEASURING NATIONAL INCOME • The product method • Non-marketed activities • Underground activities • the problem of double counting • the measuring of value added • gross value added (GVA) • some qualifications • government services • ownership of dwellings • taxes and subsidies on products

  32. UK GVA (product-based measure): 2004 Agriculture, forestry and fishing £9,381 m Mining, energy and water supply £46,171 m Manufacturing £154,636 m Construction £67,619 m Wholesale and retail trade; repairs £128,382 m Hotels and restaurants £33,757 m Transport and communication £78,279 m Banking, finance, insurance, etc. £20,794 m Letting of property £254,669 m Public administration and defence £53,483 m Education, health and social work £131,918 m Other services £54,236 m

  33. UK GVA (product-based measure): 2004 Agriculture, forestry and fishing £9,381 m Mining, energy and water supply £46,171 m Manufacturing £154,636 m Construction £67,619 m Wholesale and retail trade; repairs £128,382 m Hotels and restaurants £33,757 m Transport and communication £78,279 m Banking, finance, insurance, etc. £20,794 m Letting of property £254,669 m Public administration and defence £53,483 m Education, health and social work £131,918 m Other services £54,236 m Total GVA £1,033,324 m

  34. UK GVA (product-based measure): 2004 0.9 4.5 15.0 6.5 12.4 3.3 7.6 2.0 24.6 5.2 12.8 5.2 100.0 Agriculture, forestry and fishing £9,381 m Mining, energy and water supply £46,171 m Manufacturing £154,636 m Construction £67,619 m Wholesale and retail trade; repairs £128,382 m Hotels and restaurants £33,757 m Transport and communication £78,279 m Banking, finance, insurance, etc. £20,794 m Letting of property £254,669 m Public administration and defence £53,483 m Education, health and social work £131,918 m Other services £54,236 m Total GVA £1,033,324 m Percentage of GVA

  35. MEASURING NATIONAL INCOME • The income method • adding factor earnings (wages, rent, dividend, interest etc) • some qualifications • stock appreciation • transfer payments • direct taxes; taxes and subsidies on products

  36. Compensation of employees (wages and salaries) £684,734 m Operating surplus (gross profit, rent and interest of firms government and other institutions) £293,494 m Mixed incomes £73,116 m Tax less subsidies on production (other than those on products) plus statistical discrepancy £17,980 m UK GVA by category of income: 2004

  37. Compensation of employees (wages and salaries) £684,734 m Operating surplus (gross profit, rent and interest of firms government and other institutions) £293,494 m Mixed incomes £73,116 m Tax less subsidies on production (other than those on products) plus statistical discrepancy £17,980 m Total GVA £1,033,324 m UK GVA by category of income: 2004

  38. 62.8 28.4 7.1 1.7 100.0 Compensation of employees (wages and salaries) £684,734 m Operating surplus (gross profit, rent and interest of firms government and other institutions) £293,494 m Mixed incomes £73,116 m Tax less subsidies on production (other than those on products) plus statistical discrepancy £17,980 m Total GVA £1,033,324 m UK GVA by category of income: 2004 Percentage of GVA

  39. UK GDP: 2004 GVA (gross value added at basic prices) £1,033,324m

  40. UK GDP: 2004 GVA (gross value added at basic prices) £1,033,324m plus Taxes on products £138,639m

  41. UK GDP: 2004 GVA (gross value added at basic prices) £1,033,324m plus Taxes on products £138,639m less Subsidies on products £7,524m

  42. UK GDP: 2004 GVA (gross value added at basic prices) £1,033,324m plus Taxes on products £138,639m less Subsidies on products £7,524m GDP (at market prices) £1,164,439m

  43. MEASURING NATIONAL INCOME • The expenditure method • C + G + I + X – M • From GDP to Gross national income (GNY) is GDP at market prices + net income from abroad • From GNY to Net national income (NNY)

  44. UK GDP by category of expenditure, GNY and NNY: 2004 £ million Consumption expenditure of households and NPISH (C) 760 678 Government final consumption (G) 246 810 Gross capital formation (I) 194 798 Exports of goods and services (X) 289 959 less Imports of goods and services (M) –328 384 Statistical discrepancy 578 Gross domestic product (GDP) (at market prices) 1 164 439 .

  45. UK GDP by category of expenditure, GNY and NNY: 2004 £ million Consumption expenditure of households and NPISH (C) 760 678 Government final consumption (G) 246 810 Gross capital formation (I) 194 798 Exports of goods and services (X) 289 959 less Imports of goods and services (M) –328 384 Statistical discrepancy 578 Gross domestic product (GDP) (at market prices) 1 164 439 plus Net income from abroad 25 184 Gross national income (GNY) 1 189 623 .

  46. UK GDP by category of expenditure, GNY and NNY: 2004 £ million Consumption expenditure of households and NPISH (C) 760 678 Government final consumption (G) 246 810 Gross capital formation (I) 194 798 Exports of goods and services (X) 289 959 less Imports of goods and services (M) –328 384 Statistical discrepancy 578 Gross domestic product (GDP) (at market prices) 1 164 439 plus Net income from abroad 25 184 Gross national income (GNY) 1 189 623 less Capital consumption (depreciation) –121 577 Net national income (NNY) 1 068 046

  47. MEASURING NATIONAL INCOME • National income statistics: suitable measures of living standards? • items that are excluded • non-marketed items • the underground economy • production: poor indicator of welfare? • production does not equal consumption • human costs of production • externalities • the production of 'regrettables' • distribution of income • The use of ISEW

  48. Contributions to the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) (£ per capita, 1990 prices)

  49. Contributions to the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) (£ per capita, 1990 prices)

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