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ECONOMICS, 5e Macroeconomic Measurements,
Roger Arnold CHAPTER 5 Macroeconomic Measurements, Part I: Prices and Unemployment
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Exhibit 1 Three Major Economic Goals
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MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES
Price Levels The economy's price level refers to a weighted average of the prices of its goods and services
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PRICE STABILITY INFLATION is an increase in the general price level over time DEFLATION is a decrease in the general price level over time
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INFLATION AND PURCHASING POWER
If prices on average rise a given income buys fewer goods and services. inflation decreases the purchasing power of the dollar.
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MEASURING THE PRICE LEVEL
Measures of the Price Level The consumer price index measures the average nominal prices of goods and services that a typical family living in an urban area buys
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Consumer Price Index The CPI is calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS, The representative group of goods chosen is called the Market Basket. To calculate the CPI we need the total dollar expenditure in the current year and the base year. The base year is a benchmark year that serves as that basis of comparison for prices in other years.
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CPI’s Basket
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Calculating the CPI CPI = (current expenditure/base expenditure) X 100
Current expenditure = the total dollar expenditure on market basket in current year Base expenditure = the total dollar expenditure on market basket in base year
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Exhibit 2 Computing the Consumer Price Index
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Inflation rate = {CPI (t) - CPI (t-1) } x 100 CPI (t-1)
THE INFLATION RATE Inflation rate = {CPI (t) - CPI (t-1) } x 100 CPI (t-1)
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US Inflation
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COMPUTE THE INFLATION RATE USING THE FOLLOWING:
CPI 1997 = 159.1 CPI 1996 = 156.9 formula ({CPI 97 - CPI 96} / CPI 96) X 100 / = 2.2/156.9 = .014 .014 X 100 = 1.4%
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USING THE CPI: REAL vs. NOMINAL INCOME
NOMINAL INCOME - money income measured in current period dollars
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USING THE CPI: REAL vs. NOMINAL INCOME
REAL INCOME - money income adjusted for changes in the price level real Y = nominal Y x 100 CPI (t)
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Are you keeping up with inflation?
Income in 2000 = $40,000 Income in 1999 = $35,000 CPI in 2000 = 120 CPI in 1999 = 100 Real income 1999 = 35,000/100 x 100 = $35,000 Real income 2000 = 40,000/120 x 100 = $33,334 Real income is falling $33,334 < $35,000
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MEASURING THE PRICE LEVEL
Other Measures of the Price Level The producer price index is a weighted average of the prices of inputs that producers buy to make final goods
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MEASURING THE PRICE LEVEL
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MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES
Price Levels The GDP price deflator equals nominal GDP divided by real GDP Nominal GDP measures the current dollar value of the economy Real GDP measures output valued at constant prices Nominal GDP = Real GDP X GDP price deflator Real GDP = Nominal GDP / GDP price deflator
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MEASURING THE PRICE LEVEL
Limitations of Price Indexes Index and other measures are imperfect and have limitations Ignores such things as changes in quality, technological advances, and other factors that alter results People substitute other goods when prices rise
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SUBSTITUTION BIAS To avoid a potential bias created by ignoring consumer substitutions the US moved to a CHAIN-WEIGHTED index in Dec. 1995
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Exhibit 5 Breakdown of the U.S. Population and the Labor Force
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
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EMPLOYED Worked at least 1 hour in a wage/salary paying position
Owned his/her own business Worked 15 hrs. per week in family business or farm as “unpaid” worker absent due to illness, strike, or vacation
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UNDEREMPLOYMENT Workers are classified as employed
If they worked as little as one hour for pay during the survey week and Even if they are over qualified for the work The reported rate of unemployment may be understated due to underemployment
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UNEMPLOYED Did not work in the survey week but willing and able to work and actively looked within the last 4 weeks. Laid off and waiting to be called back Waiting to report to a job within 30 days
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DISCOURAGED WORKERS people who have given up on the job search process
not considered unemployed because they are not actively searching for a job Cause the reported unemployment rate to understate the true unemployment problem because they are not included in the labor force
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Phantom Unemployed Those who claim to be unemployment, when in fact they are not May be due to qualify for unemployment benefits Cause the reported unemployment rate to overstate the true unemployment problem because they are not actively seeking work
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# people unemployed x 100 # people in labor force
THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE # people unemployed x 100 # people in labor force
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FIND THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
population is 100 million labor force is 50 million 45 million are employed
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UNEMPLOYMENT RATE U = 5m./50m. x 100 = 10%
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Types of Unemployment Frictional
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FRICTIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT
people moving between jobs or into the labor force.
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Types of Unemployment Frictional Structural
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STRUCTURAL UNEMPLOYMENT
skills and/or location of workers does not match available jobs
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Types of Unemployment Frictional Structural Natural
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NATURAL UNEMPLOYMENT a certain level of frictional and structural unemployment that is considered natural in a changing economy (usually 4-6.5%)
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U.S. Unemployment, Figure 6-1 on p Source of data: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics (via FRED, the Economic and Financial Database of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank.) Point out to students that the actual unemployment rate fluctuates considerably over the short run. These fluctuations will be the focus of chapters 9-13 later this semester. For this chapter, though, our goal is to understand the red line: the so-called “natural rate of unemployment.”
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FULL EMPLOYMENT The full employment rate is when unemployment is at its natural rate (not zero).
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Types of Unemployment Frictional Structural Natural Cyclical
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CYCLICAL UNEMPLOYMENT
unemployment due to downturns in overall economic activity (recessions) The difference between the existing unemployment rate and the natural unemployment rate
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U.S. Unemployment, Figure 6-1 on p Source of data: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics (via FRED, the Economic and Financial Database of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank.) Point out to students that the actual unemployment rate fluctuates considerably over the short run. These fluctuations will be the focus of chapters 9-13 later this semester. For this chapter, though, our goal is to understand the red line: the so-called “natural rate of unemployment.”
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