Economics 2 Professor Christina Romer Spring 2016 Professor David - - PDF document

economics 2 professor christina romer spring 2016
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

Economics 2 Professor Christina Romer Spring 2016 Professor David - - PDF document

Economics 2 Professor Christina Romer Spring 2016 Professor David Romer LECTURE 17 MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND ISSUES March 17, 2016 I. M ACROECONOMICS VERSUS M ICROECONOMICS II. R EAL GDP A. Definition B. Nominal GDP and real GDP C. A little


slide-1
SLIDE 1

Economics 2 Professor Christina Romer Spring 2016 Professor David Romer LECTURE 17 MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND ISSUES March 17, 2016 I. MACROECONOMICS VERSUS MICROECONOMICS

  • II. REAL GDP
  • A. Definition
  • B. Nominal GDP and real GDP
  • C. A little about measuring GDP
  • D. Facts
  • 1. Strong upward trend
  • 2. Huge differences across countries
  • 3. Short-run fluctuations
  • III. UNEMPLOYMENT
  • A. Measurement
  • B. Facts
  • 1. The normal unemployment rate is not zero
  • 2. Fluctuations in unemployment are negatively correlated with real GDP

growth

  • IV. INFLATION
  • A. Measurement
  • B. Facts
  • C. Why do we care about inflation?
  • D. Adjusting for price changes
  • E. Unmeasured quality changes
  • V. OVERVIEW OF MACRO FRAMEWORK
slide-2
SLIDE 2

LECTURE 17

Macroeconomic Variables and Issues

March 17, 2016

Economics 2 Christina Romer Spring 2016 David Romer

slide-3
SLIDE 3

Announcements

  • Problem Set 4 is being distributed:
  • Due Thursday, March 31st.
  • Same ground rules apply.
  • There will be a problem set work session on

Tuesday, March 29th, 5–7 p.m. in 648 Evans Hall.

slide-4
SLIDE 4

Announcements (continued)

  • Research reading for Tuesday, March 29 (by

William Nordhaus):

  • Read only the assigned pages.
  • Read for approach and findings; think about

relevance for the measurement of inflation and growth in standards of living.

slide-5
SLIDE 5
  • I. MACROECONOMICS VERSUS MICROECONOMICS
slide-6
SLIDE 6

Macroeconomics

  • Definition:
  • The study of the aggregate economy.
  • Concerned with:
  • Total output.
  • Aggregate price level and inflation.
  • The unemployment rate.
  • The overall level of interest rates; the

exchange rate; overall exports and imports.

slide-7
SLIDE 7
  • II. REAL GDP
slide-8
SLIDE 8

Real Gross Domestic Product (Real GDP)

  • The market value of the final goods and services

newly produced in a country during some period

  • f time, adjusted for price changes.
slide-9
SLIDE 9

Nominal GDP

  • Nominal GDP: The market value of the final goods

and services newly produced in a country during some period of time, not adjusted for price changes.

  • Thus, for the United States, it is measured in dollars.
  • Example: Nominal GDP in 2015 = ∑ P

i,2015 • Qi,2015, i

where i represents each possible good in the economy (and ∑ is the symbol for a sum).

  • Note that we use 2015 prices in computing 2015

nominal GDP, 2014 prices in computing 2014 nominal GDP, ….

slide-10
SLIDE 10

Calculating Real GDP

  • Choose a base year (for example, 2009), and

always use prices from the base year to multiply the quantities.

  • Example: If 2009 is the base year:

2015 real GDP = ∑ P

i,2009 • Qi,2015. i

  • That is, if 2009 is the base year, 2015 real GDP is

the answer to the question, “How much would all the final goods and services newly produced in the United States in 2015 have been worth at 2009 prices?”

slide-11
SLIDE 11

Growth Rate of Real GDP

  • The percentage change in real GDP from one year

to the next.

slide-12
SLIDE 12

A Little about Measuring GDP

  • Key points:
  • Final goods and services.
  • Newly produced.
  • Within the country.
slide-13
SLIDE 13

3 Approaches to Measuring GDP

  • Expenditure: Use market prices and the quantities of

final goods.

  • Can divide into consumption (C), investment (I),

government purchases (G), and net exports (NX).

  • Production (value added): follow goods through each

stage of production.

  • Income: Income from producing new goods and

services within the country.

  • Can divide into labor income and capital income.
slide-14
SLIDE 14

Real GDP in the United States, 1950–2015

Source: FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data); data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-15
SLIDE 15

Real GDP per Capita in the U.S., 1950–2015

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-16
SLIDE 16

GDP per Capita over Time and Regions

Source: Bloom and Sachs, “Geography, Demography, and Economic Growth in Africa.”

slide-17
SLIDE 17

U.S. Real GDP, 2004–2011

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-18
SLIDE 18

U.S. Real GDP, 1929–1940

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-19
SLIDE 19

U.S. Real GDP, 2011–2015

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-20
SLIDE 20
  • III. UNEMPLOYMENT
slide-21
SLIDE 21

Definitions

  • Employed: The number of people who are

working.

  • Unemployed: The number of people who are not

working and who are actively looking for work.

  • Labor force: Employed + unemployed.
  • Unemployment rate:

u = Unemployed Labor force • 100.

slide-22
SLIDE 22

The U.S. Unemployment Rate, 1948–2016

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Labor Statistics.

slide-23
SLIDE 23

The Natural Rate of Unemployment

  • The economy’s normal or usual unemployment

rate.

  • The natural rate of unemployment is more than

zero.

slide-24
SLIDE 24

Real GDP Growth (Percent, Red) and Change in the

  • Unemp. Rate (Percentage Points, Blue), 1961–2015

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis and Bureau of Labor Statistics.

slide-25
SLIDE 25
  • IV. INFLATION
slide-26
SLIDE 26

Definitions

  • Consumer price index:

CPIt = Price of market basket in year t Price of market basket in base year • 100.

  • Inflation: The percent change in a price index.

Example: the inflation rate from 2014 to 2015 is: π2015 = P

2015 − P 2014

P

2014

  • 100.
  • Deflation: A negative rate of inflation.
slide-27
SLIDE 27

U.S. Inflation (Percent Change in the Price Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures), 1953–2015

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-28
SLIDE 28

Price Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures, 1929–1937

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note: The graph shows a measure of prices, not inflation. Thus, a decline corresponds to deflation.

slide-29
SLIDE 29

Adjusting Variables for Price Changes

  • What would $X in Year A be equivalent to in terms of

Year B dollars? $X P

B

P

A

, where PA and PB are the price index in year A and year B.

  • Example: What was Richard Nixon’s final salary

equivalent to in today’s dollars?

  • His salary was $200,000; the CPI in August 1974

was 45; the CPI now is 237.7. Thus: $200,000 237.7 45.0 = $1,056,000.

slide-30
SLIDE 30
  • V. OVERVIEW OF MACRO FRAMEWORK
slide-31
SLIDE 31

Determinants of the Long-Run Trend

  • Potential Output:

The amount of output (real GDP) that the economy can produce when using its resources at normal rates.

  • Key resources:
  • Labor
  • Capital
  • Technology
slide-32
SLIDE 32

Determinants of Short-Run Fluctuations

  • Aggregate demand:

The total demand for final goods and services.

  • Key features of the short-run model:
  • In the short run, output depends on aggregate

demand.

  • Developments in the private sector, monetary

policy, and fiscal policy all affect aggregate demand.

  • The level of output relative to potential affects

inflation, which in turn affects aggregate demand through monetary policy.

slide-33
SLIDE 33

International Macroeconomics

  • Interactions between aggregate economies.
  • Key issues:
  • Exchange rates
  • The trade deficit or surplus
slide-34
SLIDE 34

Real Broad Effective Exchange Rate for the U.S., 1994–2016

Source: FRED; data from Bank of International Settlements.

slide-35
SLIDE 35

Net Exports as a Share of GDP, 1975–2015

Source: FRED; data from Bureau of Economic Analysis.

slide-36
SLIDE 36

The Federal Funds Rate, 1954–2016

Source: FRED; data from Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.