Unit 2: Macro Measures 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Define Macroeconomics
Advertisements

MACRO ECONOMICS 1. Macroeconomics is the study of the large economy as a whole. It is the study of the big picture. Instead of analyzing one consumer,
Goal #2 Limit Unemployment.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Unit 2-2: Macro Measures 1.
How do we measure the health of our economy? ECONOMIC INDICATORS.
Unit 2: Macro Measures and International Trade 1.
Read the Wall Street Journal: Write down your answers. 1. Why is the unemployment rate misleading? 2. Is there a problem with so many men dropping out.
Unit 2: Macro Measures and International Trade 1.
Warm Up What does this cartoon mean?. Key Economic Concepts To be counted as employed, you must be working at least one hour a week You must be without.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy - Government effort to control the economy and maintain stable prices, full employment, and economic growth. Fiscal Policy.
UNEMPLOYMENT. Civilian Labor Force Total # of employed & unemployed persons, adjusted seasonally Oct 2006: 152,000,000.
Macro Measures and International Trade 1. 9_______ 10___________ 11_________ _____ Review 1.Define GDP? What are the four components? 2.What.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy - Government effort to control the economy and maintain stable prices, full employment, and economic growth. Fiscal Policy.
Unemployment 1. 9_______ 10___________ 11_________ _____ Review 1.Define GDP? What are the four components? 2.What is not included in GDP? Identify.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 DemandSupply Key Economic AssumptionsFlowModelGDPUnemployment.
Goal #2 Limit Unemployment 1. Three Types of Unemployment 2.
The Business Cycle and Unemployment
Unit 3: GDP, UNEMPLOYMENT & INFLATION 1. 1.Promote Economic Growth 2.Limit Unemployment 3.Keep Prices Stable (Limit Inflation) In this unit we will analyze.
How do we measure the health of our economy?
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Monday, September 24 Happy Monday! Let's go over the answers to the Real v. Nominal Activity from Friday. Your second set of Outside Work for Unit II is.
Unemployment.
What does this cartoon mean?
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
AP MACRO ECONOMICS MR. SUTHERLAND
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Go to b.socrative.com/login/student
Macro Measures and International Trade
THE BUSINESS CYCLE.
Kotrodimos AP Economics
Macro Measures and International Trade
How do we measure the health of our economy?
How do we measure the health of our economy?
Read the Wall Street Journal: Write down your answers.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Kotrodimos Economics MACRO ECONOMICS.
Goal #2 Limit Unemployment 1.
Review Session 2 - Chapters 6-8
Goal #2 Limit Unemployment 1.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Measuring Unemployment
END OF YEAR REVIEW FOR THE AP EXAM
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Unemployment.
MACRO ECONOMICS.
Employment and Unemployment
Macro Measures Unemployment
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
UNEMPLOYMENT.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1.
How do we measure the health of our economy?
Unemployment.
MACRO ECONOMICS.
Macro Measures and International Trade
Macro Measures and International Trade
Unit 2: Macro Measures 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
Macro Measures and International Trade
1.
How do we measure the health of our economy?
MACRO ECONOMICS.
Unemployment 1.
Unemployment and Okun’s Law
Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
MACRO ECONOMICS.
Presentation transcript:

Unit 2: Macro Measures 1

The total value of intermediate goods plus final goods GDP is equal to: The total value of all goods and services produced in an economy during a given period. C + I + G + Im The total value of intermediate goods plus final goods The dollar value of all final goods and services produced in the nation for a given period of time. None of the above 2. Which of the following is included in GDP? Changes to inventories intermediate goods Used goods Financial assets (stocks and bonds) Foreign-produced products 1.D 2.A

3. Which of the following is NOT included in GDP? Capital goods such as machinery imports The value of domestically produced services Government purchases of goods and services The construction of factories 4. Which of the following makes up the largest percentage of GDP measured by aggregate spending? Consumer spending Investment spending Government purchases of goods and services exports imports 3.B 4.A

The total value of intermediate goods plus final goods GDP is equal to: The total value of all goods and services produced in an economy during a given period. C + I + G + Im The total value of intermediate goods plus final goods The dollar value of all final goods and services produced in the nation for a given period of time. None of the above 2. Which of the following is included in GDP? Changes to inventories intermediate goods Used goods Financial assets (stocks and bonds) Foreign-produced products 1.D 2.A

3. Which of the following is NOT included in GDP? Capital goods such as machinery imports The value of domestically produced services Government purchases of goods and services The construction of factories 4. Which of the following makes up the largest percentage of GDP measured by aggregate spending? Consumer spending Investment spending Government purchases of goods and services exports imports 3.B 4.A

Goal #2 Limit Unemployment 6

Why is a stay at home mom not unemployed? What is Unemployment? The Unemployment rate The percent of people in the labor force who want a job but are not working. Unemployment rate # unemployed # in labor force x 100 = Who is in the Labor Force? Above 16 years old Able and willing to work Not institutionalized (jails, hospitals) Not in military, in school full time, or retired Why is a stay at home mom not unemployed? 7

Three Types of Unemployment 8

#1. Frictional Unemployment 3 Types of Unemployment #1. Frictional Unemployment “Temporarily unemployed” or being between jobs. Individuals are qualified workers with transferable skills but they aren’t working. Examples: High school or college graduates looking for jobs. Individuals that were fired and are looking for a better job. You’re Fired! 9

3 Types of Unemployment Seasonal Unemployment This is a specific type of frictional unemployment which is due to time of year and the nature of the job. These jobs will come back Examples: Professional Santa Clause Impersonators Construction workers in Michigan 10

#2. Structural Unemployment 3 Types of Unemployment #2. Structural Unemployment Changes in the structure of the labor force make some skills obsolete. Workers DO NOT have transferable skills and these jobs will never come back. Workers must learn new skills to get a job. The permanent loss of these jobs is called “creative destruction.” (Why?) Examples: VCR repairmen Carriage makers 11

3 Types of Unemployment Technological Unemployment Type of structural unemployment where automation and machinery replace workers causing unemployment Examples: Auto assemblers fired as robots take over production Producers of Capital Goods (tractors) fire assemblers 12

#3 Cyclical Unemployment 3 Types of Unemployment #3 Cyclical Unemployment Unemployment that results from economic downturns (recessions). As demand for goods and services falls, demand for labor falls and workers are fired. Examples: Steel workers laid off during recessions. Restaurant owners fire waiters after months of poor sales due to recession. This sucks! 13

The Natural Rate of Unemployment Two of the three types of unemployment are unavoidable: Frictional unemployment Structural unemployment Together they make up the natural rate of unemployment (NRU). We are at full employment if we have only the natural rate of unemployment. This is the normal amount of unemployment that we SHOULD have. The number of jobs seekers equals the number of jobs vacancies. 14

Full employment means NO Cyclical unemployment! The Natural Rate of Unemployment Full employment means NO Cyclical unemployment! Economists generally agree that an unemployment rate of around 4 to 6 % is full employment. 4-6% Unemployment = NRU Currently the U.S. is at 4% Georgia is at 3.6% (Spalding County 4.7%) 15

The Natural Rate of Unemployment The natural rate in France and Germany is around 8–10%. Why? Some economists attribute the difference to more generous unemployment benefits in European countries In the U.S. unemployment benefits last for 6 months Unemployment benefits in some European countries are indefinite The generous benefits reduce incentives to search for a job Unemployment benefits in the U.S. are often extended to 9 months or 1 year during periods of high unemployment. 16

Criticisms of the Unemployment Rate What is wrong with the unemployment rate? It can misdiagnose the actual unemployment rate because of the following: Discouraged job seekers- Some people are no longer looking for a job because they have given up. Part-Time Workers- Someone who wants more shifts but can’t get them is still considered employed. Race/Age Inequalities- African American- 6.8% for January 2019 Teenagers- 12.9% for January 2019 Illegal Labor- Many people work under the table. 17

2006 Practice FRQ 18