Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGloria Watkins Modified over 9 years ago
1
Unit-2 Macro Review GDP, Unemployment, Inflation
2
Circular Flow of a closed Economy Spending Goods and services bought Goods and services bought Revenue Goods and services sold Goods and services sold Labor, land, capital & entrepreneurship Labor, land, capital & entrepreneurship Income = Flow of inputs and outputs = Flow of dollars Factors of production Factors of production Wages, rent, and profit Wages, rent, and profit FIRMS HOUSEHOLDS FACTOR Market FACTOR MARKET PRODUCT MARKET PRODUCT MARKET
3
BUSINESS CYCLE : rate of GDP Growth
4
GDP growth by quarter 1 st quarter 2012 +2.2% All 2011 +1.7%
5
GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) Calculating GDP: What Counts? Only NEW & FINAL goods Domestic Products What does not Count? Used goods International products Financial transactions Non-market transactions Gov’t Transfers (i.e. welfare, social security) GDP does not measure: mix of goods, quality of products, quality of life, leisure time Business Investment, Consumer/Business Construction, & Change in Inventories. (new houses count as investment!)
6
GDP = C + I + G + NX GDP = Aggregate Demand (AD) (all spending or all income) All Spending = All Income: Y = C + I + G + (X-M) 2 Ways to measure GDP or Labor Wages Land Rent Capital Interest Entrep. Profit Talent
7
4-Types of Unemployment Structural –Skills do not match demand for labor Cyclical –too low a level of GDP (recession) Frictional –Temporarily between Jobs Seasonal –Based on time of year Natural Rate of Employment (or full employment) Allows for some Frictional & Structural Where: Cyclical = zero Seasonal “factored out”
8
In theory, if actual inflation = expected inflation, people have time to adjust for it. (less harmful) Expected Inflation Actual Inflation Nominal Interest Rate = Real Interest Rate + Expected Inflation versus COLA = cost of living adjustment
9
GDP Deflator vs CPI GDP deflator – prices of all goods/services produced domestically CPI index – prices of a market basket of goods & services –(including international goods) Substitution Bias New goods Quality changes What should be in basket? CPI Index: 1990 100 2000 115 Called Base year
10
Practice Test #2 Questions #1 - #20
11
Multiple Choice Answers 1D 2C 3C 4D 5B 6A 7E 8B 9A 10C 11B 12D 13C 14A 15B 16D 17A 18A 19A 20A
12
2-Types of Inflation Demand-Pull Inflation: –Too many dollars chasing too few goods –Example: printing money Cost-Push Inflation –↑ cost of factors of production –example: price of oil or labor rises rapidly
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.