Bus-530, Economic Conditions Analysis: Course Teacher: Dr. Tamgid Ahmed Chowdhury Associate Professor, Sbe
Bus-530, Economic Conditions Analysis: Course Teacher: Dr. Tamgid Ahmed Chowdhury Associate Professor, Sbe
ANALYSIS
COURSE TEACHER:
D R . TA M G I D A H M E D C H O W D H U R Y
A S S O C I AT E P R O F E S S O R , S B E
ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES
Usually measures the change in one Capture effect in one variable (endogenous)
variable (endogenous) with respect to when many other related variables
another by considering all other variables (exogenous) change.
(exogenous) as constant. Such as, Qd = 60 -10P + 2Y
Such as, Qd = 60 -10P
Key concepts: Demand, supply, consumer Key concepts: National income, GDP,
behavior, producer behavior inflation, unemployment rate, economic
growth, monetary and fiscal policy, trade.
INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS
• Diagrammatic difference between micro and macroeconomics: Transition
Microeconomics Macroeconomics
PRICES: FLEXIBLE VS. STICKY
• The economy’s behavior depends partly on whether prices are sticky or
flexible:
– If prices sticky (short run),
demand may not equal supply, which explains:
• unemployment (excess supply of labor)
• why firms cannot always sell all the goods
they produce
– If prices flexible (long run), markets clear and economy behaves very
differently
What macroeconomic issues have been in the news recently? Can you
name few of them?
Labor
Households Firms
Goods
Expenditure
($)
CAUTIONS ABOUT COMPUTING GDP
• Value of used goods should not be included in the GDP calculation. You are
buying a second hand car by paying 5 Lacs Taka. The actual value of the brand
new car was 20 Lacs. If you add the value of second hand car, the total value of
the car will be 20 + 5 = 25 Lacks. This is overestimation.
• Value of inventory should be added and will be considered as ‘Investment’.
• Intermediate goods and their value addition should not be added in the
calculation. This will create Double Counting of GDP (refer to next slide).
• Value of Housing services are hard to compute and add in the GDP.
• Value of goods traded in underground economy can’t be measured and added.
VALUE ADDED
• A firm’s value added is the value of its output minus the value of the intermediate
goods
the firm used to produce that output.
– A farmer grows a bushel of wheat
and sells it to a miller for $1.00.
– The miller turns the wheat into flour
and sells it to a baker for $3.00.
– The baker uses the flour to make a loaf of
bread and sells it to an engineer for $6.00.
– The engineer eats the bread.
Compute & compare value added at each stage of production and GDP
NOMINAL GDP VS REAL GDP
• Nominal GDP is the value of goods and services produced during a given year valued at the
prices that prevailed in that same year. This is also referred to as ‘money GDP.
• Real GDP: Value of Goods and services produced in a year measured using a ‘base year’ or
constant price.
• Important note: In nominal GDP, price and quantity both change in different years. But in real
GDP, quantity changes in different years but price remains same (price of base year called
constant price)
Try this example to distinguish between them:
Year QuantityNominal
Mkt.GDP 2015: 100 × 500 = 500
Price
2015 100 Nominal GDP5 2014: 80 × 4 = 320
2014 80 GDP growth 4 rate = 56.25% (really !!!!!!)
Now assume that constant price is 3 Taka. Real GDP 2015 = 300 and Real GDP 2014 = 240
Real GDP growth rate = 25%
REAL VS NOMINAL GDP: CASE BANGLADESH
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
Nominal GDP 915 1055 1198 1343 1515
Real GDP 646 688 729 774 824
2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
Growth Nominal GDP 15.30 13.55 12.10 12.81
Growth Real GDP 6.50 5.96 6.17 6.46
Nominal GDP Real GDP Growth Nominal GDP Growth Real GDP
PRACTICE PROBLEM
Nominal GDP
GDP deflator = 100
Real GDP
PRACTICE PROBLEM (CONTINUES…)
GDP Inflation
Nom. GDP Real GDP
deflator rate
Use your previous answers to compute the GDP deflator in each year.
Use GDP deflator to compute the inflation rate from 2006 to 2007, and
from 2007 to 2008.
ANSWER TO THE PROBLEM
– The new method of calculating real GDP, which is called the chain-
weighted output index method, uses the prices of each pair of adjacent
years to calculate the real GDP growth rate, so no one year’s prices matter
more than any other year’s.
CHAIN-WEIGHTED MEASURE OF REAL GDP
– Step 1: Value last year’s production and this year’s production at last year’s
prices and then calculate the growth rate of this number from last year to
this year. (in short: Real GDP by taking last year as base year)
– Step 2: Value last year’s production and this year’s production at this year’s
prices and then calculate the growth rate of this number from last year to
this year. (in short: Real GDP by taking this year as base year)
– Step 3: Calculate the average of the two growth rates. This average growth
rate is the estimate of the growth rate of real GDP from last year to this
year.
– Step 4: Repeat steps 1, 2, and 3 for each pair of adjacent years to link real
GDP back to the base year.
PRACTICE EXAMPLE
2006 2007 2008
P Q P Q P Q
good A $30 900 $31 1,000 $36 1,050
• Step-1: Real GDP of 2008 at 2007 constant price is: (1050 × 31) + (205 × 102) = 53460
Real GDP of 2007 at 2007 constant price is: (1000 × 31) + (200 × 102) = 51400
GDP growth rate = 4.00
• Step-2: Real GDP of 2008 at 2008 constant price is: (1050 × 36) + (205 × 100) = 58300
Real GDP of 2007 at 2008 constant price is: (1000 × 36) + (200 × 100) = 56000
GDP growth rate = 4.10
• Step-3: Average growth rate = 4.05
PRACTICE PROBLEM
Item Quantity Price
• Assume 2011 is the base
year. Calculate real GDP in 2011
2013 using the Apple 100 $1.00
Rice 20 $5.00
1. Base year prices method 2012
2. Chain-weighted output Apple 160 $0.50
index method Rice 22 $22.50
• Round up/down all figures 2013
up to 2 decimal points.
Apple 180 $1.50
Rice 25 $26.00
NATIONAL INCOME IDENTITY: GDP
CALCULATION BY EXPENDITURE METHOD
Y = C + I + G + NX
aggregate
value of expenditure
total output
COMPONENTS OF EXPENDITURE METHOD
• Consumption (C): The value of all goods and services bought by households. Includes:
durable goods last a long time ex: cars, home appliances ; nondurable goods last a short
time ex: food, clothing; services work done for consumers ex: dry cleaning, air travel.
• Investment (I): Spending on [the factor of production] capital or Spending on goods
bought for future use includes: business fixed investment such as Spending on plant and
equipment that firms will use to produce other goods & services; residential fixed
investment such as Spending on housing units by consumers and landlords; inventory
investment such as the change in the value of all firms’ inventories.
• Government expenditure (G): includes all government spending on goods and
services.. excludes transfer payments (e.g., unemployment insurance payments), because
they do not represent spending on goods and services.
• Net export (NX): The value of total exports (EX) minus the value of total imports (IM).
GDP CALCULATION IN EXPENDITURE
METHOD: CASE BANGLADESH
OTHER MEASURES OF INCOME
• Gross National Product (GNP): GNP measures the total income earned by nationals (residents
of a nation) of a country.
GNP = GDP + Net Factor Income (NFI)
NFI = Factor payment from abroad – Factors payment to abroad
GNP = GDP + (Factor payment from abroad – Factors payment to abroad)
An example: Assume GDP of Bangladesh is 100. A Bangladeshi resident owns an apartment in
Sydney. Rental value of that apartment is 10.
In this case: 10 rental value is included in the GDP of Australia. But as this 10 is factor payment to
Bangladesh, this 10 is added in our GNP as Factor payment from abroad but the same 10 will be
deducted from GNP of Australia as factor payment to Bangladesh.
Net National Product (NNP): NNP is measured by subtracting depreciation (the amount that
wears out during a year from structures, equipment, and so on) from GNP. Thus,
NNP = GNP- Deprecation
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. In your country, which would you want to be bigger, GDP, or GNP? Why?
2. Consider whether each of the following events is likely to increase or
decrease real GDP. Do you think economic wellbeing will change in the
same direction like real GDP? Why or why not:
a) A flood in Bangladesh affects the production of agricultural crops negatively.
b) Labor unrest in RMG sector caused strike for a week.
c) Bangladesh Government reduces the price of lubricants.
d) Bangladesh Government reduces the minimum taxable income to 150, 000
Taka which was initially 250,000 Taka.
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX (CPI):
MEASURING THE COST OF LIVING
• A measure of the overall level of prices (Published by the BBS)
• Uses:
– tracks changes in the typical household’s cost of living
– adjusts many contracts for inflation (“COLAs”)
– allows comparisons of Taka amounts over time
How do they calculate CPI
-- Survey consumers to determine composition of the typical consumer’s “basket” of goods.
-- Every month, collect data on prices of all items in the basket; compute cost of basket
-- CPI in any month equals: Cost of basket in that month
100
Cost of basket in base period
CPI CALCULATION • Assume base year is 2006
• Cost of the basket in 2008 MP = (1050
× 36) + (205 × 100) = 58300
• Cost of the basket in 2007 MP= (1050
× 31) + (205 ×102) = 53460
2006 2007 2008 Similarly,
P Q P Q P Q • Cost of the basket in 2006 MP = (1050
good A $30 $31 $36 1,050 × 30) + (205 × 100) = 52000
CPI for 2007 = (53460/5200) * 100
good B $100 $102 $100 205
=102.80
CPI for 2008 = (58300/52000) * 100
=112.1