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1.Gross domestic product 2.The business cycle 3.The U.S. economic record 4.Aggregate demand curve 5.Aggregate supply curve 6.Equilibrium GDP and price level
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John Maynard Keynes. The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, 1936. The macroeconomic problem: Persistent underutilization of resources or “poverty in the midst of plenty.”
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Stock variables are cumulated values measured at a specific point in time. Examples: Bank balances, debt, inventories. Flow variables are measured per unit point in time. Examples: Income (including profits), output.
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The market value of new goods and services produced within the nation’s border within one year. GDP is our basic measure of aggregate (total) economic activity
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Wave-like movement of aggregate economic activity over time. Business cycles are irregularly recurring A full cycle consists of an expansion and a contraction (recession).
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7 Hypothetical business cycles
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8 Annual percentage change, US real GDP since 1929
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9 US and UK annual growth rates in output are similar
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10 Aggregate demand curve Real GDP (trillions of 2000 dollars) 0246810121416 50 150 100 Price level (2000 = 100) AD The quantity of aggregate output demanded is inversely related to the price level, other things constant. This inverse relationship is reflected by the aggregate demand curve AD.
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Let M denote money balances and P is the price level. Real money balances (RB) are given by: As the price level rises, my money loses its buying power. Thus I will buy less.
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Real GDP Price Level 0 AS A curve representing the relationship between the economy’s price level and real GDP supplied per time period, other things constant.
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13 Aggregate Demand and Supply in 2006 Real GDP (trillions of 2000 dollars) 011.3 50 150 116.6 Price level (2000 = 100) AD AS The total output of the economy and its price level are determined at the intersection of the Ad and AS curves. This point reflects real GDP and the price level for 2006 using 2000 as the base year.
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14 The decrease in AD from 1929 to 1933 8.9 12.0 Price level (2000 = 100) AD 1929 AS Real GDP (billions of 2000 dollars) 0865 636 AD 1933 The Great Depression of the 1930s can be represented by the shift to the left of the AD curve, from AD 1929 to AD 1933. In the resulting depression, real GDP fell from $865 billion to $636 billion, and the price level dropped from 11.9 to 8.9, measured relative to a price level of 100 in the base year 2000.
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Word is a conflation of “stagnation” and “inflation.” Stagnation means stagnant or negative growth of output and jobs. Inflations means a sustained increase in the cost-of-living.
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Stagflation from 1973 to 1975 38.0 31.9 Price level (2000 = 100) AD AS 1973 Real GDP (trillions of 2000 dollars) 04.34 4.31 AS 1975 The stagflation of the mid-1970s can be represented as a leftward shift of the AS curve from AS 1973 to AS 1975. Aggregate output fell from $4.34 trillion in 1973 to $4.31 trillion in 1975, for a decline of about $30 billion (stagnation). The price level rose from 31.9 to 38.0, for a growth of 19% (inflation).
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17 Tracking US real GDP and price level since 1929
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