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Chapter 13: Macroeconomics

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Title: Chapter 13: Macroeconomics


1
Chapter 13 Macroeconomics
  • Measuring the Economys Performance

2
Section 1 National Income Accounting
  • National Income Accounting- overall output and
    income.
  • Measuring Gross domestic product- total dollar
    value of all final goods and services.
  • 2006 13 trillion
  • No double counting by only measuring final goods.
  • Only new goods.

3
Computing GDP and Net Domestic Product
  • Computing GDP- expenditures in 4 areas
  • Consumer sector
  • Investment sector
  • Government Sector
  • Net exports
  • Net Domestic Product (NDP)
  • GDP depreciation (value lost due to wear and
    tear of capital goods.

4
Measurements of Income (NI)
  • NI the sum of
  • 1. Wages and Salaries
  • 2. Income of self-employed individuals
  • 3. Rental income
  • 4. Corporate profits
  • 5. Interest on savings and investments
  • Personal Income (PI)- before taxes are paid.

5
Measurements of Income (NI)
  • Transfer payments added- Money from the
    government welfare, social security, food stamps
    etc.
  • Disposable Personal Income-Pi - taxes

6
Section 2 Correcting Statistics for Inflation
  • Inflation- The prolonged rise in general prices.
  • Purchasing power goes down.
  • Nations output might not change, GDP takes
    inflation into account.
  • Deflation- prolonged decline in prices
  • Rarely has happened in modern times.

7
Measures of Inflation
  • Consumer Price Index (CPI)- monthly measurement
    of a specific group of goods.
  • Market Basket- 80,000 specific goods and
    services.
  • Every 10 years the items are updated.
  • Choose a base year for comparison.
  • Producer Price Index (PPI)- Goods sold to
    producers mining, manufacturing, and farming

8
GDP Price Deflator
  • Converting current GDP to real GDP
  • Accounts for inflation
  • Divide by price deflator (Inflation amount)
  • Multiply by 100.
  • Real GDP can be compared to any other year.
  • Government uses 2000 as its base.

9
Section 3 Aggregate Demand and Supply
  • Macro-economics looks supply and demand of all
    goods and services together (Aggregate)
  • Aggregate Demand- total of all planned
    expenditures in the entire economy.
  • Slopes downward- Inflation less buying power.
    Deflation more buying power.
  • Exports rise as prices lower.

10
Aggregate Demand and Supply
  • Aggregate Supply- Real domestic output of
    producers based on rise and fall of the price
    level.
  • Equilibrium price means no inflation or
    deflation.
  • Change in Aggregate demand or supply will change
    the equilibrium price.

11
Section 4 Model of the Business Cycle
  • Business fluctuations- ups and downs of the
    economy.
  • Business cycle- changes in the level of total
    output, GDP.
  • Peak or boom- prosperity
  • Contraction- decline
  • Recession- six consecutive months of GDP decline

12
Model of the Business Cycle
  • Depression- millions out of work economy far
    below capacity.
  • Trough- lowest point.
  • Expansion or recovery- increase in economic
    activity.
  • Great depression- worst example, led to the idea
    war is good for the economy.
  • Standard of living did not rise.

13
Section 5 Causes and Indicators of Business
Fluctuations
  • Causes
  • Innovations
  • Business cuts back on capital investment when
    anticipating a downturn.
  • Government activities
  • Wars
  • Psychological effects

14
Economic Indicators
  • Statistics to measure variables in the economy.
  • Leading indicators
  • Coincidental indicators
  • Lagging indicators- clues to the duration of a
    business cycle.
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