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Ch 4: What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain

Ch 4: What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain. Microeconomic deals with behavior of individual decision makers and individual markets Macroeconomic deals with broad outlines of the economy Which view is better? Depends on what we’re trying to do. Macroeconomic Goals.

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Ch 4: What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain

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  1. Ch 4:What Macroeconomics Tries to Explain • Microeconomic deals with behavior of individual decision makers and individual markets • Macroeconomic deals with broad outlines of the economy • Which view is better? • Depends on what we’re trying to do

  2. Macroeconomic Goals • Economists—and society at large—agree on three important macroeconomic goals • Economic growth • Full employment • Stable prices • Why is there such universal agreement on these three goals? • Because achieving them gives us opportunity to make all of our citizens better off • There are some disagreement among economists about how to make the macro-economy perform well

  3. Economic Growth • - the increase in our production of goods and services that occurs over long period of time. - in most developed economies, the annual output of goods and services has risen over time and risen faster than population (therefore…?????) • Economists monitor economic growth • By keeping track of real gross domestic product (real GDP) - The total quantity of goods and services produced in a country over a year • Real GDP has actually increased faster than the population • During this period (1929 to 2004), while U.S. population did not quite triple • Quantity of goods and services produced each year has increased more than tenfold

  4. Economic Growth • Part of the reason for the rise in real GDP is an increase in population(why?)… therefore.. • Although output has grown, rate of growth has varied over the decades • Over long periods of time small differences in growth rates can cause huge differences in living standards • Economists and government officials are very concerned when economic growth slows down- growth increases the size of the economic pie (for every citizen to have a larger slice?) - growth doesn’t benefit everyone. example?) - some people believe that in the long run everyone will benefit from growth - others see role for the government (in ?) • Macroeconomics helps us understand a number of issues surrounding economic growth.

  5. Real GDP (Billions of1998 dollars) 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1990 2000 2002 Figure 1: U.S. Real Gross Domestic Product, 1929-2002

  6. High Employment (or Low Unemployment) • Unemployment affects distribution of economic well being among our citizens • People who cannot find jobs suffer a loss of income • Joblessness affects all of us—even those who have jobs - A high unemployment rate means economy is not achieving its full economic potential • Average standard of living falls

  7. High Employment (or Low Unemployment) • Unemployment rate • Percentage of the workforce that would like to work, but cannot find jobs (unemployment rate is never zero, even though the economy is doing well) • Used to keep track of employment • The nation’s commitment to high employment has twice been written into law • With memory of Great Depression still fresh, Congress passed Employment Act of 1946 • Required federal government to “promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power” • A numerical target was added in 1978, when Congress passed Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act • Called for an unemployment rate of 4%

  8. In the 1990s, we came closer and closer and finally—in December 1999—we reached the target again for the first time since the 1960s • In 2001 unemployment rate began to creep up again, and fluctuated between 5.2 and 6.3 percent though the first half of 2005 • All these facts are critically examined under the subject Macroeconomics.

  9. 25 Unemployment Rate (Percent) 20 15 10 5 0 3 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 200 Figure 2: U.S. Unemployment Rate, 1920-2003

  10. Employment and the Business Cycle • When firms produce more output, they hire more workers—when they produce less output, they tend to lay off workers • We would thus expect real GDP and employment to be closely related, and indeed they are • Business cycles • Periodic fluctuations in GDP around its long-term growth trend- the bumps in the figure • Expansion • A period of increasing real GDP • Contraction • A period of declining real GDP

  11. Employment and the Business Cycle • Recession • A contraction of significant depth, breadth and duration • Depression • An unusually severe recession • In the twentieth century, United States experienced one decline in output serious enough to be considered a depression—the worldwide Great Depression of the 1930s • From 1929 to 1933, the first four years of Great Depression, U.S. output dropped by more than 25%

  12. Real Long-run upward trend of real GDP GDP The business cycle fluctuation of actual output around its long-run trend. Expansion Recession Expansion Time Figure 3: The Business Cycle

  13. Stable Prices • With very few exceptions, inflation rate has been positive • During 1990s, inflation rate averaged less than 3% per year • During the 2000s (through June 2005) inflation rate averaged about 2.5% • Other countries have not been so lucky • An extreme case was the new nation of Serbia—prices rose by 1,880% in August 1993 • Why are stable prices—a low inflation rate—an important macroeconomic goal? • Because inflation is costly to society • With annual inflation rates in the thousands of percent, the costs are easy to see • Purchasing power of currency declines so rapidly that people are no longer willing to hold it

  14. Economists regard some inflation as good • Price stabilization requires not only preventing inflation rate from rising too high • But also preventing it from falling too low, where it would be dangerously close to turning negative

  15. 15 10 5 Inflation Rate (Percent) 0 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2003 -5 -10 Figure 4: U.S. Annual Inflation Rate, 1922-2003

  16. The Macroeconomic Approach • In macroeconomics, we want to understand how the entire economy behaves • Thus, we apply the steps to all markets simultaneously • How can we possibly hope to deal with all these markets at the same time? • The answer is aggregation—process of combining different things into a single category and treating them as a whole

  17. Aggregation in Macroeconomics • Aggregation plays a key role in both micro- and macro-economics • In macroeconomics, we take aggregation to the extreme • Because we want to consider the entire economy at once, and yet keep our model as simple as possible • Must aggregate all markets into broadest possible categories • By aggregating in this way, can create workable and reasonably accurate models that teach us a great deal about how overall economy operates

  18. Macroeconomic Controversies • Macroeconomics is full of disputes and disagreements • Modern macroeconomics began with publication of The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money by British economist John Maynard Keynes in 1936 • Keynes was taking on conventional wisdom of his time • Which held that the macroeconomy worked very well on its own, and the best policy for the government to follow was laissez faire – ‘leave it alone’. • This new school of thought held that the economy does not do well on its own and needed guidance from an activists and well-intentioned government.

  19. Macroeconomic Controversies • While some of the early disagreements have been resolved, others have arisen to take their place • For example—the controversy over the Bush administration’s $330-billion ten-year tax cut • Because of such political battles, people who follow the news often think that there is little agreement among economists about how the macroeconomy works • In fact, the profession has come to a consensus on many basic principles, and we will stress these as we go

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