Midterm1 Note - PDF
Midterm1 Note - PDF
Ch4 GDP
GDP (gross domestic product): market value of the nal goods and services produced within a country
in a given time period.
• Market Value: the prices at which items are traded in markets. (To measure total production)
• Final Good and Service: item that is bought by its nal user during a speci ed time period. (To
calculate GDP)
• p.s. Intermediate Good(service): good or service made and bought by rms for nal goods
or services(if add to nal good/service will cause double counting)
• Produced Within a Country: Only goods and services that are produced within a country count
as part of that country's GDP.
• In a Given Time Period: normally either a quarter of a year(quarterly/annual GDP data)
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Governments
• G => government expenditure - good/service bought by government (taxes, social bene t not
included)
Aggregate Income(Blue Flows): the total amount paid for the services of the factors of production used
to produce nal goods and services—wages, interest, rent, and pro t.
• Depreciation: the decrease in the value of a rm's capital that results from wear and tear and
obsolescence.
• Gross Investment:
• The total amount spent both buying new capital and replacing depreciated capital.
• Is one of the expenditures included in the expenditure approach to measuring GDP
• The resulting value of total product is a gross measure
Gross Pro t: rm's pro t before subtracting depreciation, is one of the incomes included in the income
approach to measuring GDP
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Further Adjustment (not sure it will be included in the test or not)
Indirect Tax: tax paid by consumers when they buy goods and services (An indirect tax makes the
market price exceed factor cost)
Subsidy: payment by the government to a producer(With a subsidy, factor cost exceeds market price)
Statistical Discrepancy: Gap between the expenditure approach and the income approach
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Real GDP:
• The value of nal goods and services produced in a given year when valued at the prices of a
reference base year.
• One of the broadest measures of economic health
Nominal GDP: The value of nal goods and services produced in a given year when valued at the prices
of that year
Standard of Living: Calculate “Real GDP Per Person (Real GDP/Population)” in di erent years.
Potential GDP: The maximum quantity of real GDP that can be produced while avoiding shortages of
labour, capital, land, and entrepreneurial ability that would bring rising in ation. Grows at steady pace,
but not constant pace. Occurs when full-employment.
Business Cycle
• Periodic but irregular up-and-down movement of total production and other measures of economic
activity.
• Every cycle has two phases: Expansion, Recession
• And two turning points: Peak, Trough
Expansion: A period during which real GDP increases(between through and peak)
Recession: A period during which real GDP increases for at least 2 successive quarters
An expansion ends and recession begins at a business cycle peak, which is the highest level that
real GDP has attained up to that time. A recession ends at a trough, when real GDP reaches a
temporary low point and from which the next expansion begins.
Limitations of Real GDP (Not included ,Underestimate production and overestimate the growth rate)
• Household Production: child caring
• Underground Economic Activity: Illegal, avoid taxes
• Leisure Time: working time is valued as part of GDP, but leisure time is not
• Environment Quality: nature resources, pollution
Ch5 Unemployment
Unemployment is a problem:
• Lost income and production
• Lost human capital
Unemployed:
• On temporary layoff with an expectation of recall
• Without work but has looked for work in the past four weeks
• Has a new job to start within four weeks
Unemployment Rate:
1. ⬆ as recession deepens, reaches a peak value after recession end, ⬇ as expansion
gets underway
2. Not included:
• Discouraged searchers(A person who currently is neither working nor looking for
work)
• Long-term future starts(Someone with a job that starts more than four weeks in the
future is classi ed as not in the labour force)
• Involuntary part-timers(Part-time workers who would like full-time jobs)
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Employment Rate
• the percentage of people of working age who have jobs
Frictional Unemployment:
• The unemployment that arises from the normal labour turnover - from people entering and
leaving the labour force and from the ongoing creation and destruction of jobs
• a permanent and healthy phenomenon in a dynamic, growing economy
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Structural Unemployment:
• arises when changes in technology or international competition change the skills needed
• usually lasts longer than frictional unemployment
Cyclical Unemployment
• higher-than-normal unemployment at a business cycle trough and the lower-than-normal
unemployment at a business cycle peak
• Laid off when recession and rehired when expansion
Natural Unemployment
• Unemployment rate equals the natural unemployment rate when full-employment.
• Equals to “Frictions unemployment + Structural unemployment” when there is no cyclical
• Natural unemployment rate = Natural unemployment/Labour Force
• Important Factors:
• The age distribution of the population: An economy with a young population has a
large number of new job seekers and has a high level of frictional unemployment.
(Aging population has low level of frictional unemployment)
• The scale of structural change: technology change
• The real wage rate
• Unemployment bene ts
Full Employment:
• Unemployment Rate = Natural Unemployment Rate
• unemployment rate = natural unemployment rate & real GDP = potential GDP => output gap =
0
• Unemployment rate < natural unemployment rate => real GDP > potential GDP & output gap
>0
• Unemployment rate > natural unemployment rate => real GDP < potential GDP & output gap
<0
Output Gap:
• real GDP uctuates around potential GDP. The gap between real GDP and potential GDP is
called the “Output gap”
• As the output gap uctuates over the business cycle, the unemployment rate uctuates around
the natural unemployment rate.
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In ation:
• persistently rising price level
• Real GDP rises above potential GDP and the unemployment rate falls below the natural rate
for temporary
De ation:
• persistently falling price level, in ation rate is negative
• Businesses and households that are in debt (borrowers) are worse off and they cut their
spending. A fall in total spending brings a recession and rising unemployment
In ation Rate
Biased CPI:
• New goods bias: high tech puts an upward bias into the CPI and In ation Rate
• Quality change bias: better quality => higher price
• Commodity substitution bias: people will choose substitution when the price is high
• Outlet substitution bias: different discount in different stores
Consequence of Bias: The bias in the CPI distorts private contracts and increases government
outlays.
GDP De ator:
• GDP de ator is an index of the prices of all the items included in GDP and is the ratio of
nominal GDP to real GDP
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Core In ation: the in ation rate excluding volatile elements, attempts to do just that and reveal
the underlying in ation trend.
Standard of Living = Real GDP Per Person(per capita real GDP) = Real GDP/
Population
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The growth rate of potential GDP measures the pace of expansion of production possibilities and
smoothes out the business cycle uctuations in the growth rate of real GDP
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Real GDP:
• Produce by labour, capital, land, and entrepreneurship
• Qty of real GDP produced by productivity of factors of production
Potential GDP = Real GDP when full-employment => labour market equilibrium
The demand for labour is the relationship between the quantity of labour demanded and the real
wage rate.
Real Wage Rate = Money Wage Rate/ Price Level => if ⬇ labour demand ⬆ , if ⬆
labour supply ⬆
Potential GDP per hour o labour, which is potential GDP divided by labour hours.
Wealth(Net Worth):
• Householders or rms: owns - owes
• Financial Institutions: lent - borrowed
National Wealth(in the end of year) = National Wealth(Start in the year) + saving(in the
year) => saving = income - consumption expenditure
Capital Gains: Wealth increases when the market value of assets rises
Make Real GDP⬆ : Saving & wealth => investment & capital
(transferred into)
Financial Institutions:
• a rm that operates on both sides of the markets for nancial capital
• borrower in one market and a lender in another
1. Household saving
2. Government budget surplus
3. Borrowing from the rest of the world
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Y: Households’ income, C: spent on consumption goods and services, S: saved, T: paid in net
taxes
Y=C+S+T
Y=C+I+G+X-M
I+G+X=S+T+M
I = S + (T - G) + (M - X)
Net Taxes: taxes paid to government - cash transfer received from government
Investment I is nanced by household saving S.
Government budget surplus (T - G).
Browsing from the rest of the world (M - X).
Sum of private saving S.
Government saving (T - G).
National Saving => S + (T - G)
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Loanable Funds Markets: aggregate of all individual nancial markets, stable in long run
Interest Rate is High => quantity of supply is high, quantity of demand is low
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Loanable Market:
• Firms expect earn increase, demand shift rightward=> real interest rate and quantity
of supply ⬆
• Saving increase, Supply shift rightward => real interest rate⬇ , investment⬆
Crowding-Out Effect: The tendency for a government budget de cit to raise the real
interest rate and decrease investment
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Ricardo-Barro Effect: private supply of loanable funds increases to match the quantity
of loanable funds demanded by the government=> budget de cit has no effect on either
the real interest rate or investment
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