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The three sources of economic growth are resources, technology, and institutions
Rotunda Principle III
If an economy grows at x% a year, it will take 70/x years for it to double in size
Rule of 70
First economic growth model by Solow; production is a function of resources, specifically capital
Solow I
GDP(Y) = F(labor, capital, natural resources)
Aggregate production function of Solow I
Diminishing Marginal Product
Assumption of Solow I
Steady State, Convergence
Implications of Solow I
When a macroeconomy has no new net investment; growth stops occurring from capital
Steady State
Per capita GDPs across nations equalize as nations approach steady state; all nations to same level of wealth
Convergence
Rich countries became richer, but poor countries stayed poor
Main issue with Solow I
Incorporates technology into the original Solow function to explain continued economic growth in rich nations
Solow II
Y = A*F(Land, Labor, Capital)
Aggregate production function of Solow II
Technological advancements are exogenous, or completely random
Assumption of Solow II
Poor nations can grow economically through aid of capital resources with latest technology
Policy Implications of Solow II
Aid projects failed!
Problem with Solow II
Incorporates the role of institutions as incentives for economic growth
Modern Growth Theory
Y = A*F(Land, Labor, Capital, Institutions)
Aggregate production function of MGT
Significant practices, relationships, or organizations in a society
Institutions
Harm: Corruption, High Taxes, Political Instability
Help: Efficient Taxes, Stable Money and Prices, Private Property Rights, Rule of Law, International Trade/Fund Flows
Institutions that affect economic growth
Total demand for all final goods and services in an economy
Aggregate Demand
Total supply of all final goods and services in and economy
Aggregate Supply
AD = C + I + G + NX
AD Equation
Wealth Effect, Interest Rate Effect, International Trade Effect
Why does the AD curve slope downward?
Change in quantity of aggregate demand that results from wealth changes due to price-level changes
Wealth Effect
If price levels rise, you can afford less and thus demand less
Wealth Effect Example
When a change in price level leads to a change in interest rates and therefore in the quantity of aggregate demanded
Interest Rate Effect
When price levels fall, people save less, leading to supply in the loanable funds market shifting left and increasing the interest rate, lowering quantity invested and thus aggregate demand
Interest Rate Effect Example
When a change in price level leads to a change in quantity of net exports demanded
International Trade Effect
When price levels for American vehicles go up, people are incentivized to buy foreign cars, leading to exports falling and imports rising
International Trade Effect Example
Consumption: Change in real wealth (+), Expected future income (+)
Investment: Business Firm Confidence (+), Interest Rates (-), Quantity of Money (+)
Government Spending (+)
Net Exports: Foreign Income (+), Value of the dollar (+)
Shift Factors in Aggregate Demand
Period of time in which all prices can sufficiently adjust
Long Run
Period of time in which some prices are sticky
Short Run
Money Illusion and Long-Term Contracts
Why are some prices sticky?
Same factors that affect economic growth: resources, technology, and institutions
Shifts in Long-Run Aggregate Supply
Sitcky input prices, money illusion, menu costs
Why does the SRAS slope up?
Changes in input prices (+), Supply Shocks (±)
Shifts in SRAS
Temporary exogenous events that change production costs
Supply shocks
Where LRAS = SRAS = AD, or Y = C + I + G + NX
AD-AS Equilibrium
“If prices don’t adjust, output must”
Jackson’s quote
Short-term economic downturn; results in decline in Real GDP Growth and increase in unemployment
Recession
Drop in AD leads to deflation, more unemployment, and lower real GDP (Y < Y*)
AD Induced recession
Drop in SRAS/LRAS leads to inflation, higher unemployment, and lower real GDP (Y < Y*)
AS Induced Recession
Severe drop in AD (caused by decrease in real wealth (stock market crash), expectations in reaction to the crash, and misguided macroeconomic policy)
Why did the Great Depression Happen?
Comprises of US government’s budgeting tools (spending and taxes) to influence macroeconomy
Fiscal Policy
Involves adjusting money supply to influence macroeconomy
Monetary Policy
Reduction of Money Supply, not supporting failing small banks (more money supply shrinking, reducing AD)
ME Policy of Great Depression
Decrease in AD (Fall in real wealth, decline in expected future income), Decline in LRAS (malfunctioning LFM due to real estate crash, Dodd-Frank Act)
Why did Great Recession Happen?
Put regulations on financial institutions, led to reduction in LRAS due to constraints
Dodd-Frank Act
Supply Shock (pandemic, decrease in SRAS), Decrease in AD (Real wealth fell, reduced expected future income)
Why did the Coronavirus Recession happen?
Stresses importance of AS and that economy can adjust on its own; prices are flexible, economy inherently stable/full employment, government intervention not needed (No SRAS Curve)
Classical Economics
Stresses AD and that economy is unstable/cyclical unemployement, needs government intervention; some prices are sticky
Keynesian Economics
Stresses importance of LRAS, SRAS, and AD
Modern Synthesis
part of budget that includes spending and transfer payments
Government Outlays
Go to ongoing programs like Social Security/Medicare, MUST be paid by law
Mandatory Outlays
Spending that is adjustable during budget process
Discretionary Outlays
Government retirement funding program
Social Security
Mandated federal program that funds health care for seniors
Medicare
Not enough population base to pay tax for elders to dissave
Funding Problem for SS/Medicare
Raise retirement age, Adjust benefits for inflation, Means-test for benefits (decrease to wealthier recipients), Grow Population
Solution to funding problem
Income Tax, Social Insurance Tax
Sources of Government Tax Revenue
those with higher incomes pay a larger portion of their income in taxes
Progressive Income Tax System
Tax rate paid on next dollar of income
Marginal Tax Rate
outlays higher than revenues; government must borrow funds which leads to debt
Budget Deficit
revenues higher that outlays
Budget Surplus
total of all accumulated and unpaid budget deficits
Debt
National Debt / GDP (expressed in decimal form)
Debt to GDP Ratio
Highest: 1945
Lowest: 1931 (GD)
When were marginal tax rates the highest?
They went up
What happened to Income tax rates during the GD
1998-2001
When did the US have a Budget Surplus?
% change in nominal growth - % change in price levels - % population change
Economic Growth Equation
Fall in value of a resource over time; destroyer of capital stock
Depreciation
Short Run: u increases, P and Y decrease
Long Run: u and Y don’t change, P goes down
What happens in the AD-AS model after an AD shift left in the short/long run?
AD Shifted down massively
Great Depression Graph
AD and LRAS both shifted left
Great Recession Graph
Small AD shift and Big SRAS shift left, P increases
Covid Recession Graph