BackCore Principles and Models in Macroeconomics: Study Notes
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Chapter 1: Economics – Foundations and Models
Key Economic Ideas
People are rational: Individuals and firms make decisions to maximize their benefit, weighing costs and benefits. Example: Apple sets iPhone prices to maximize profit, not randomly.
People respond to economic incentives: Changes in incentives alter behavior. Example: DNA databases for felons increase the likelihood of catching repeat offenders, deterring crime.
Optimal decisions are made at the margin: Most choices involve small adjustments, considering the additional benefit versus additional cost. Example: Deciding whether to study an extra hour or watch TV.
Scarcity and Trade-offs
Scarcity: Unlimited wants exceed limited resources, forcing choices.
Trade-off: Producing more of one good means producing less of another due to scarcity.
Efficiency vs. Equality
Efficiency: Maximizing total output (the economic "pie").
Equality: Fair distribution of output among individuals.
Types of Economies
Traditional: Based on customs and beliefs.
Command (Central): Government makes all economic decisions.
Market: Decisions made by households and firms through supply and demand.
Mixed: Combination of market forces and government intervention (e.g., U.S. economy).
Positive vs. Normative Analysis
Positive analysis: Describes "what is" (objective, testable).
Normative analysis: Describes "what ought to be" (subjective, value-based).
Role of Economic Models
Models simplify reality to analyze economic issues, based on rational behavior and maximizing well-being.
Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics
Microeconomics: Study of individual households, firms, and markets.
Macroeconomics: Study of the economy as a whole (inflation, unemployment, growth).
Chapter 2: Trade-offs, Comparative Advantage, and the Market System
Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)
Definition: Curve showing maximum attainable combinations of two goods with available resources and technology.
Efficiency: Points on the PPF are efficient; inside are inefficient; outside are infeasible.
Opportunity Cost
Producing more of one good requires giving up some of another. Example: Funding space exploration may mean less funding for cancer research.
Economic Growth
Ability to increase production of goods and services, shifting the PPF outward.
Comparative vs. Absolute Advantage
Comparative advantage: Lower opportunity cost in producing a good.
Absolute advantage: Ability to produce more with the same resources.
Trade is based on comparative advantage, not absolute advantage.
Gains from Trade and Specialization
Specialization and trade allow higher consumption and efficiency.
Market System and Circular Flow Diagram
Market: Group of buyers and sellers for a good/service.
Households: Provide factors of production (labor, capital, natural resources, entrepreneurship).
Firms: Purchase factors, produce goods/services.
Flow | Description |
|---|---|
1. Households → Firms | Provide factors of production |
2. Firms → Households | Provide goods and services |
3. Firms → Households | Pay for factors of production |
4. Households → Firms | Pay for goods and services |
Chapter 3: Where Prices Come From – Demand and Supply
Market Types
Perfectly competitive market: Many buyers/sellers, identical products, no barriers to entry.
Law of Demand
As price falls, quantity demanded rises (ceteris paribus); as price rises, quantity demanded falls.
Substitution effect: Consumers switch to cheaper alternatives.
Income effect: Lower prices increase purchasing power.
Law of Supply
As price rises, quantity supplied rises; as price falls, quantity supplied falls (holding other factors constant).
Supply and Demand Curves vs. Quantity Supplied/Demanded
Curves show the relationship for all prices; quantity supplied/demanded is at a specific price.
Factors Shifting Demand
Income (normal vs. inferior goods)
Prices of related goods (substitutes and complements)
Normal vs. Inferior Goods
Normal good: Demand increases as income rises (e.g., new clothes).
Inferior good: Demand increases as income falls (e.g., instant noodles).
Equilibrium
Where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded; determines market price and quantity.
Shifts and Double Shifts
Shifts in demand or supply curves change equilibrium price and quantity; double shifts require analyzing both effects.
Supply and Demand Schedules
Tables showing price-quantity relationships for supply or demand.
Chapter 8: Measuring Total Production and Income (GDP)
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Definition: Market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a period.
Only final goods are counted to avoid double counting.
GDP and Income
Total production equals total income; every dollar spent becomes income for someone (wages, rent, interest, profit).
Components of GDP
Component | Description |
|---|---|
Consumption (C) | Household spending on goods/services (durable, nondurable, services) |
Investment (I) | Spending on capital goods, inventories, and new housing |
Government Purchases (G) | Government spending on goods/services (excludes transfer payments) |
Net Exports (NX) | Exports minus imports |
Shortcomings of GDP
Excludes household production and underground economy.
Calculating GDP
Nominal GDP:
Real GDP:
GDP Deflator:
Inflation Rate:
Other Measures
Gross National Product (GNP): Production by a nation's citizens, including abroad.
National Income:
Personal Income: National income minus retained earnings plus government transfers and interest.
Disposable Personal Income: Income available after taxes.
Chapter 9: Unemployment and Inflation
Labor Force Segmentation
Employed: Currently working or temporarily absent.
Unemployed: Not working, available, and actively seeking work.
Not in labor force: Not working or seeking work.
Measuring Unemployment
Household Survey: Measures labor force status via self-report.
Establishment Survey: Measures payroll jobs, excludes self-employed.
Measure | Formula |
|---|---|
Unemployment Rate | |
Labor Force Participation Rate | |
Employment-Population Ratio |
Discouraged Workers
Available for work but not seeking due to lack of opportunities; not counted as unemployed.
Types of Unemployment
Frictional: Short-term, normal job search or seasonal.
Structural: Mismatch of skills and jobs, often long-term.
Cyclical: Due to economic downturns (recessions).
Full Employment and Natural Rate
Full employment: Only frictional and structural unemployment exist.
Natural Rate of Unemployment: Normal rate at full employment (about 4-5% in the U.S.).
Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Inflation
Steps to calculate CPI:
Choose a market basket of goods.
Find cost in base year.
Find cost in current year.
Compute:
Inflation Rate:
Indexation
Automatic adjustment of payments for inflation (e.g., Social Security, wages).
Shortcomings of CPI
Substitution bias, quality bias, new product bias, outlet bias; CPI may overstate inflation.
Nominal vs. Real Interest Rates
Nominal interest rate: Stated rate, not adjusted for inflation.
Real interest rate:
Chapter 10: Economic Growth, the Financial System, and Business Cycles
Long-Run Economic Growth
Measured by increases in real GDP per capita over time.
Growth Rate Calculations
Annual Growth Rate:
Constant Growth Rule:
Rule of 70:
Determinants of Growth
Labor productivity (output per hour), capital per worker, technological change, secure property rights.
Actual vs. Potential GDP
Actual GDP: Current real GDP.
Potential GDP: Output at normal capacity and employment.
Financial System
Connects savers and borrowers via financial markets (stocks, bonds) and intermediaries (banks, mutual funds).
Direct finance: Households buy securities directly from firms.
Indirect finance: Households deposit in banks, which lend to firms.
Savings and Investment Identity (Closed Economy)
From GDP:
Rearranged:
In a closed economy, savings equals investment ().
Market for Loanable Funds
Shows interaction of borrowers and lenders, determining real interest rate and quantity of funds loaned.
Movements along the curve are due to interest rate changes; shifts are due to changes in saving or investment behavior.
Crowding Out
Government borrowing increases demand for loanable funds, raising interest rates and reducing private investment.
Effects of Inflation
Unexpected inflation reduces the real value of savings.
Chapter 16: Fiscal Policy
Definition and Tools
Government use of spending and taxes to influence the economy.
Tools: Government purchases and taxes.
Automatic Stabilizers vs. Discretionary Policy
Automatic stabilizers: Built-in responses (e.g., unemployment benefits rise in recessions).
Discretionary policy: Deliberate government actions (e.g., stimulus checks).
Expansionary vs. Contractionary Policy
Expansionary: Increases spending or cuts taxes to boost economy (used in recessions).
Contractionary: Decreases spending or raises taxes to cool economy (used to fight inflation).
Government Budget Deficits and Crowding Out
Deficit: Spending exceeds tax revenue; government borrows, increasing demand for loanable funds and raising interest rates.
Crowding out: Higher interest rates reduce private investment.
Multipliers
Government Purchases Multiplier:
Tax Multiplier:
Balanced Budget Multiplier: Even with balanced budget, economy expands due to multiplier effects.
Interaction with Monetary Policy
Fiscal and monetary policy can be used together to stabilize the economy.
Chapter 17: Inflation, Unemployment, and Federal Reserve Policy
The Phillips Curve
Shows short-run inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment.
Short-run Phillips curve is downward sloping due to misjudged inflation by workers/firms.
Long-run Phillips curve is vertical at the natural rate of unemployment (potential GDP).
Structural Relationships
Stable relationships based on consumer and firm behavior, unchanged over time.
Natural Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU)
Unemployment rate when economy is at potential GDP; also called Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU).
Shifts in the Phillips Curve
Expectations of inflation can shift the short-run Phillips curve.
Real Wages and Inflation
Inflation affects real wages; as inflation rises, real wages may fall if nominal wages do not keep up.
Real Wage: