1 / 30

Bell work: Freyonomy Pay yourself and pay your Mon/Tues bills

Bell work: Freyonomy Pay yourself and pay your Mon/Tues bills. Inflation. Standard 5 Notes Part I. Inflation- a sustained rise in the level of prices generally or a sustained decrease in purchasing power. Inflation.

zarek
Download Presentation

Bell work: Freyonomy Pay yourself and pay your Mon/Tues bills

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. Bell work: Freyonomy • Pay yourself and pay your Mon/Tues bills

  2. Inflation Standard 5 Notes Part I

  3. Inflation- a sustained rise in the level of prices generally or a sustained decrease in purchasing power. Inflation

  4. Demand-pull inflation- results when total demand rises faster than the production of goods and services "more money chasing the same amount of goods.“  What causes inflation?

  5. Cost-push inflation- results when increases in the costs of production push up prices. • Inputs like labor, land, capital, and management • Wage-price spiral- a cycle that begins with increased wages, which lead to higher production costs, which in turn result in higher prices, which result in demands for higher wages. What causes inflation?

  6. Cost-push Inflation

  7. Decreasing Value of the Dollar • people on fixed incomes are hit hard. They do not receive wage increases. • EX: People on social security • Increasing Interest Rates • borrowing money becomes more expensive to keep up with the rate of inflation. Credit card payments rise. Consumers buy less items that require borrowing like houses and cars. • Ex. Fred wants to buy a car valued at $10,000 • Fred saved up for a plan where the interest rate is 5% ($188 a month) • Inflation caused interest rates to increase to 10% (now $212 a month) • Over his 5 yr loan period, Fred will end up paying over $1,425 more for his loan at the higher rate • Decreasing Real Returns on Savings • if the inflation rate is higher than your interest rate in your savings account or bond, you can lose money that you are trying to save. What is the impact of inflation?

  8. How is it measured? • Consumer Price Index (CPI)- a measure of changes in the prices of goods and services commonly purchased by consumers. • Producer Price Index (PPI)- a measure of change in wholesale prices • Inflation Rate- the rate of change in prices over a set period of time. Inflation

  9. Creeping inflation- small rate of inflation over a long period of time • Galloping Inflation- a rapid increase in price level • Hyperinflation- a rapid, uncontrolled rate of inflation in excess of 50% per month • Deflation-a decrease in the in the general price level Types of Inflation

  10. Deflation

  11. GDP Standard 5

  12. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) • Market value of all final G/S produced within a nation in a given time period • To be included, a G/S must be final (intermediate- fabric, final- shirt) and produced within borders

  13. Calculating GDP: Consumption (C) + Investment (I) + Government Spending (G) + Net Exports (Foreign trade, X) • When GDP is growing • an economy creates more jobs and more business opportunities • When GDP declines • jobs and more business opportunities become less plentiful

  14. 2 Types: • Nominal GDP- stated in the price levels for the year in which the GDP was measured • Real GDP- nominal GDP adjusted inflation (for changes in prices) • An estimate of the GDP if prices were to remain constant from year to year

  15. What GDP Does Not Measure • Nonmarket activities (i.e. home childcare or performing one’s own home repairs) • Underground economy (i.e. illegal- drug dealing and legal- plumber who works for cash) • Quality of Life (GDP does not show how G/S are distributed- 10%+ of Americans live in poverty)

  16. Just checking… • If you get paid in cash to baby-sit, mow lawns, or do other chores for neighbors, are you part of the underground economy? Why or why not? • Yes, if you are required to file taxes and do not report the income to the IRS • No, if you do report taxable income

  17. How economic value might be assigned to homemaking activities: • Choose a partner. • Attempt to determine a dollar value for one adult’s full-time homemaking activities for one year. • Take notes about the process you use to arrive at that figure.

  18. Bell work Freyonomy 1. Pay your Wednesday/ Thursday bills

  19. Marriage? Benefit= can split the mortgage bill with someone else Cost= have to pay for the wedding • Small Wedding • $1,500 • Or $125 a month • Medium Sized Wedding • $10,000 • Or $835 a month • Large Wedding • $20,000 • Or $1,670 a month

  20. GDP Timeline _______________________________________ 1912 2012 _______________________________________ 2012 2112

  21. Business Cycle • A series of periods of expanding and contracting economic activity • Four Phases: • Expansion • A period of economic growth (an increase in a nation’s real GDP) • Peak • The point at which GDP is highest • Contraction • Sometimes a recession (6 months+) or depression (extended period of high unemployment and limited business activity) • Trough • The point at which real GDP and employment stop declining

  22. How economic growth is measured • Real GDP per capita • Real GDP/Total Population • Reflects each person’s share of real GDP • Some people will have more money, others less • Does not measure quality of life

  23. One way to understand business cycles is through demand and supply… • Aggregate demand- the total amount of G/S that households, businesses, government and foreign purchases will buy at each and every price level • Aggregate supply- the total amount of G/S that producers will provide at each and every price level http://www.classzone.com/cz/books/econ_cnc/resources/htmls/animated_economics/ec12_anim_macroequilib.html

  24. Aggregate Demand Decrease in aggregate demand Contraction phase • Increase in aggregate demand • Expansion phase

  25. Why do Business Cycles Occur? • Business decisions • Aggregate supply increase can cause an economic expansion • Changes in interest rates • Rise in interest rates= decrease in AD (aggregate demand) • Fall in interest rates= increase in AD • Consumer expectations • Ways consumers feel about prices, job prospects, businesses activity cause changes in aggregate demand • External issues (i.e. Hurricane Katrina, oil embargo of 1973)

  26. Business Cycles in U.S. History • The Great Depression • Real GDP declined by about a third • Sales in some big businesses declined by as much as 50 percent • 1 in 4 people were unemployed • The New Deal • Government agencies created • Many Americans were put back to work • Some trees in Eagle Creek Park were planted during this time

More Related