Monster Vocabulary AP Macroeconomics [All Units] (ABNER)

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164 Terms

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Change in Demand

Shift in Q(d) at each price

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Change in Supply

Shift in Q(s) at each price

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Demand Schedule

Table showing Q(d) at each price

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Factors of Production

Inputs used to produce goods/services - land, labor, management, and capital

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Land

Natural resources used in production

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Labor

Human effort used in production

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Capital

Equipment used to produce goods/services

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Management / Entrepreneurship

Organizing the production of resources (willing to take risk)

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Comparative Advantage

Ability to produce at a lower opportunity cost

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Capital Goods

Assets used to produce goods/services

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Substitute Goods

Goods that can replace each other

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Change in Quantity Demanded

Movement along the demand curve b/c price change

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Opportunity Cost

The cost you pay for a choice you make

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Production Possibilities Curve

Graph showing max output combinations given a certain amount of factors of production

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Determinants of Demand

Factors that can shift the demand curve - Change in: income, consumer attitude, population, substitute good's price, and complementary good's price (Put all 5)

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Law of Demand

As price goes up, Q(d) goes down. As price goes down, Q(d) goes up

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Consumer Goods

Goods purchased for personal consumption

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Complementary Goods

Goods used together

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Equilibrium Price

Price where Q(d) equals Q(s)

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Equilibrium Quantity

Where Q(s) and Q(d) are equal at a given price

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Surplus

Where Q(s) is greater than Q(d) at a given price

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Shortage

Where Q(d) is greater than Q(s) at a given price

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Price Ceiling

Government-set maximum price

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Price Floor

Government-set minimum price

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Law of Supply

As price goes up, Q(s) goes up. As price goes down, Q(s) goes down

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Determinants of Supply

Factors that can shift the supply curve - Change in: price of resources, # of producers, technology, government intervention, and future expectations

(Mr. Castile likes this answer. You can also include how these that fact that it makes a company's life easier or harder if you want)

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Change in Quantity Supplied

Movement along the supply curve b/c price change

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Terms of Trade

Agreed-to exchange of goods at a given ratio that benefits everybody

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Absolute Advantage

Ability to produce more than others

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Capital Accumulation

Increase in capital stock over time, which makes PPC shift outwards

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Rent

Income for property ownership

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Wages

Income for labor

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Interest

Income for borrowing capital

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Profit

Income for management

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Firm

Company

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Inputs

Resources used in making stuff (land, labor, capital, management)

-or-

Factors of Production

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GDP

Total value of all goods/services produced by a country in 1 year

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Expenditure Approach to Measuring GDP*

Measures GDP by totaling spending on final goods/services: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)

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Income Approach to Measuring GDP

Measures GDP by adding up all income earned in production: rent, wages, interest, profit

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Consumption

Household spending on goods/services

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Population

Total # of people in a country

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Working Age Population

# of people ages 16+

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Civilian Labor Force

# of people classified as either employed or unemployed (military/institutionalized excluded)

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Employed

People who have worked at least 1 hour in the last 2 weeks (includes part time and full time employment)

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Unemployed

People not classified as employed but available for work and have submitted a job application in the last 4 weeks

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Marginally Attached Worker

People available for work within the last 12 months not classified as employed or unemployed

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Discouraged Worker

People previously classified as unemployed who exited the civilian labor force without finding employment

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Labor Force Participation Rate*

(Civilian Labor Force / Working Age Population) * 100

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Actual Unemployment Rate*

(# of people classified as unemployed / Civilian Labor Force) * 100

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Frictional Unemployment

Voluntary job search and entry into the civilian labor force

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Structural Unemployment

Either a skill or geographic mismatch between individuals and available jobs

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Cyclical Unemployment

Joblessness caused by economic recession = Actual Unemployment Rate - NRU (Natural Rate of Unemployment)

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Natural Rate of Unemployment

Frictional rate of unemployment + Structural rate of unemployment. NRU occurs at full employment output

-or-

The absence of cyclical unemployment. NRU occurs at full employment output

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Investment

Spending by firms on new physical capital and inventories + spending by households on new construction of homes

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Government Spending

Spending by all levels of government on new capital goods, services, and infrastructure excluding transfer payments or interest payments on debt

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Consumer Price Index (CPI)*

A market basket approach to measuring inflation. It estimates inflation for the average urban consumer.

(current year market basket / base year market basket) * 100

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Price Level

The average price of goods/services in the economy = CPI/100

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Inflation

An increase in price level

-or-

A decrease in the purchasing power of money

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Inflation Rate*

The rate at which the price level is increasing = ((New CPI - Old CPI)/Old CPI)*100

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Disinflation

A decrease in the inflation rate

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Deflation

A decrease in the price level

-or-

A increase in the purchasing power of money

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Exports

Spending by the foreign sector on current year final domestic goods/services

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Imports

Current year spending by households, firms, and government on foreign produced goods (Both final and intermediate) and services

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Real Variables

Economic measures adjusted for inflation

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Nominal GDP

GDP measured at current market prices

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Real GDP*

Current year output at base year prices ; (Nominal GDP/GDP Deflator) * 100

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GDP Deflator*

An all inclusive price index used to deflate Nominal GDP (remove effect of inflation) to find Real GDP; GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP/Real GDP)*100

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Aggregate Demand (AD)

Total demand for all goods/services in an economy at a given price level

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Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)

Total goods/services firms produce in the short run (prices/wages are "sticky" and don’t adjust quickly)

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Long-run Aggregate Supply (LRAS)

Economy's maximum sustainable output when all resources (labor, capital) are fully employed (vertical line at "potential GDP")

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AD = C + I + G + (X-M)

AD = Consumer spending + Business investment + Government spending + (Exports – imports)

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Demand-Pull Inflation

Prices rise b/c AD exceeds SRAS (too much spending chasing too few goods)

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Cost-Push Inflation

Prices rise b/c higher production costs (e.g., oil prices) shifting SRAS left

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National Income

Total earnings from all resources (wages, rent, interest, profit) in an economy

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Scenario A

A situation where the economy is in a recession; there is an output "recessionary" gap [below full-employment]

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Scenario B

A situation where the SRAS, LRAS, and AD intersect; there is full-employment

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Scenario C

A situation where there is too much AD and the economy is overheating; there is an inflationary gap [above full-employment]

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Full-Employment Equilibrium

Economy produces at LRAS (no cyclical unemployment)

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Output Gap

Where actual GDP is less than potential GDP

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Inflationary Gap

Actual GDP > Potential GDP (overheating economy)

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Recessionary Gap

Actual GDP < Potential GDP

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Long-Run Equilibrium

Where the economy will recover from 'scenario A' via a decrease in wage expectations, which would increase SRAS and lead to more GDP and a decrease in PL

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U > NRU

Unemployment exceeds the natural rate (cyclical unemployment exists)

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U = NRU

Economy at full employment (only frictional/structural unemployment)

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U < NRU

Unemployment below natural rate (risk of inflation) [overheating]

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Tax Multiplier

-MPC/(1−MPC) → effect of tax changes on GDP

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Spending Multiplier

1/(1−MPC) → effect of spending on GDP

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Balanced Budget Multiplier

The effect on GDP when government spending and taxes change by the same amount

Ex: Government spending and taxes both increase by $10, it boosts GDP by $10

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Multiplier Effect

Initial spending trades hands with many people, subtracting how much is saved every time, leads to larger total GDP change

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Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)

(MPS) Fraction saved (MPS = 1 - MPC) [e.g., MPS = 0.2 → save 20¢ of each $1]

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Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)

(MPC) Fraction of extra income spent [e.g., MPC = 0.8 → spend 80¢ of each $1]

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Fiscal Policy

Government uses spending and taxes to influence AD

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Neoclassical Economic Theory

Laissez-faire focus on long-run supply-side growth (e.g., technology, education)

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Keynesian Economic Theory

Focuses on short-run demand-side fixes (e.g., stimulus during recessions) [In the long-run, we are dead]

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Long-Run "self-adjustment"

Economy returns to LRAS over time without government intervention b/c of lower wage expectations (prices/wages are "flexible" in the long-run)

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Automatic Stabilizers

Policies that counter recessions/inflation without new laws (e.g., unemployment benefits, progressive taxes)

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SRAS "Shifters"

Input costs (wages, oil), supply shocks, government regulations

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AD "Shifters"

Changes in C, I, G, (X-M) (e.g., consumer confidence, interest rates, government spending)

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Output (Y)

The amount of goods/services produced in the economy [Q(s) of the whole economy]

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Actual Output (Y) versus Potential Output (Yf)

Y: Real GDP produced now

Yf: Max GDP at full employment (LRAS)