Lecture 9: focusing on Macro Issues - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 9: focusing on Macro Issues

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Production expanded quickly in the United States during 1994/95/96. ... Modern macroeconomics emerged during the Great Depression. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 9: focusing on Macro Issues


1
Lecture 9 focusing on Macro Issues
  • Macro Questions
  • What are the facts
  • What is Real GDP?
  • Policy issues
  • Role of Government
  • Practice with EIA to illustrate
  • What will the exam cover?????

2
Overheating?
  • Production expanded quickly in the United States
    during 1994/95/96.
  • This rapid growth caused fear that the economy
    was overheating.
  • An overheated economy is prone to increasing
    inflation and a balance of payments deficit.
  • What, if anything, can be done?

3
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • Modern macroeconomics emerged during the Great
    Depression.
  • People began to doubt the free market economy.
  • John Maynard Keynes, in 1936, published The
    General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money.

4
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • Macroeconomic Problems
  • 1) Economic Growth
  • 2) Unemployment
  • 3) Inflation
  • 4) Deficits

5
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • Short-Term Versus Long-Term Goals
  • Keynes focused on the short-term primarily
  • He felt the depression was caused by insufficient
    private spending
  • Government should increase its spending

6
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • Short-Term Versus Long-Term Goals
  • Long-term consequences were virtually disregarded
  • In the long run, were all dead

7
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • Short-Term Versus Long-Term Goals
  • Today, macroeconomics is concerned with
  • Long-term economic growth and inflation
  • Short-term business fluctuations and unemployment

8
Origins and Issues of Macroeconomics
  • The Road Ahead
  • The focus of macroeconomics has shifted
  • Depression
  • Inflation of the 1970s
  • International economics of today

9
Economic Growth
  • Economic growth is the expansion of the economys
    production possibilities.
  • Measured by real gross domestic product (Real
    GDP)
  • The value of the total production of all the
    nations farms, factories, shops, and offices
    linked back to the prices of a single year (1992)

10
Economic Growth in theUnited States
  • The Growth of Potential GDP
  • When an economys labor, capital, land, and
    entrepreneurial ability are fully employed
  • Real GDP fluctuates around potential GDP
  • Growth slowed during the 1970s
  • Productivity growth slowdown

11
Economic Growth in theUnited States
12
Economic Growth in theUnited States
  • Fluctuations Around Potential GDP
  • The business cycle is the periodic but irregular
    up-and-down movement in production.

13
Economic Growth in theUnited States
  • Phases of the Business Cycle
  • Recession
  • Period during which real GDP decreases for two
    successive quarters
  • Expansion
  • Period during which real GDP increases

14
Economic Growth in theUnited States
  • Turning Points
  • Peak
  • Expansion ends, recession begins
  • Trough
  • Recession ends, expansion begins

15
The Most Recent U.S. Business Cycle
16
Long-Term Economic Growthin the United States
17
Economic Growth Aroundthe World
  • Real GDP per person
  • The growth rate of real GDP divided by the
    population is used to compare growth rates over
    time and across countries.

18
Economic Growth Aroundthe World
  • Growth rates in the U.S., Germany, and Japan have
    features that are distinct
  • Similar productivity growth slowdowns
  • Similar business cycles
  • Different long-term trends in potential GDP

19
Economic Growth inThree Large Economies
20
Growth Rates Around the World
21
Benefits and Costs ofEconomic Growth
  • Benefits
  • Expanded production possibilities
  • health care
  • medical research
  • space exploration
  • roads
  • environmental improvements (if resources are
    devoted to solving environmental problems)

22
Benefits and Costs ofEconomic Growth
  • Costs
  • 1) Foregone consumption
  • 2) Depletion of natural resources
  • 3) Increased pollution
  • 4) More frequent job and location changes
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