Econ 211 Exam 2 - UNL

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89 Terms

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2 ways economic growth is measured

Nominal and real GDP

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Nominal GDP

often appear higher than real GDP, not adjusted for inflation (GDP17=P17 x Q17)

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Real GDP

adjusted for inflation (GDP17=P09 X Q17)

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GDP is reported..

Quarterly (Advanced, Premlim and final)

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Economic growth is measured as

a % change in real GDP on an annual basis (real GDP2 - real GDP 1 / real GDP 1) x 100

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another way to measure economic growth

change in real GDP per capita ( Per capita GDP2 - per capita GDP1 / pre capita GDP1) X 100

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Importance of economic growth

- lessens the burden of scarcity

- expand production possibilities

- more resources & incomes

- get more goods & services to meet unlimited wants

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Rule of 70

- how many years it will take for an economy to double

- divide average annual % rate of economic growth into 70 (70/1.0% = 70 years to double)

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Modern economic growth

After late 1770's, sustained and continual economic growth

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History of modern economic growth

before the late 1770's nations experienced limited/sporadic economic growth which lead to living standards not changing much from century to century

- living standards improved

-changes occur w/in less than a human lifetime

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Economic growth started when

- industrial revolution in 1776

- James Watt invented the steam engine which lead to new factories, mass production of goods, different forms of transportation, later was replaced by electric power and oil

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How can follower nations catch up to leader nations?

- Leader nations invent technology while follower nations adopt technology

- higher long-term growth rates for follower nations

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Institutional structures that promote growth (main 6)

- strong property rights

- patents & copyrights

- efficient financial institutions

- literacy & education

- free trade

- competitive market system

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other structures that promote growth (2)

- stable politcal system

- positive attitude towards work

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What factors contribute to economic growth over time?

- supply factors

- efficiency factors

- demand factors

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Supply factors for economic growth

- Natural resources

- human resources

- capital resources

- technology

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supply factors can

expand the economy's potential, takes effect in a long time period

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Daman factors for economic growth

-full employment of resources (no deficiency in total spending)

- takes effect in a short time period

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efficiency factor for economic growth

- productive efficiency (least-cost methods of production)

- allocative efficiency (resources allocated to their best use, production of goods most wanted by society)

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Efficiency is

a continual concern & takes time to be effective

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Change in real GDP depends on:

-Labor inputs (worker-hours)

-labor productivity

(worker-hours(H) X Labor productivity(P))

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worker-hours depends on:

average hours of work, size of work force

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Labor productivity

output divided by the # of units of labor input (output/input)

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how to increase real GDP

-more worker-hours

-more productivity

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factors that contribute to increased productivity

-technological advance (40%)

-quantity of capital (30%)

-education and training (15%)

-economies of scale (7.5%)

-improved resources allocation (7.5%)

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critics of growth

-environmental problems

-not solved human problems

-more obsolescence and insecurity

-not sustainable

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relationship between productivity growth and standard of living

increased productivity = increased standard of living

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supporters of growth

-higher standard of living

-more capable of handling human problems

-improved quantity of labor

-may help environment

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Business cycles

-peak: business activity reaches temporary max

-recession: period of decline in total output

-trough: production/output reaches lowest point

-expansion: output increases

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recession

last 6 months or more

-great depression: 43 months

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business cycle in long run

there will be an upward trend in economic growth

-increase in size of real GDP

-positive rate of economic growth

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business cycle in short run

there can be fluctuations in the economy

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what causes business cycles?

changing expectations that create shocks which lead to business cycles

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type of shocks that lead to business cycles

-irregular innovation/technological change

-unexpected changes in productivity

-uncertainty in political events

-uncertainty about monetary policy

-instability in financial institutions & markets

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Immediate cause

unexpected changes in total spending that leads to a demand shock

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what happens after a shock occurs?

-fall in profits

-reduced employment

-cut back production

-fall in incomes

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inventory in short-run

helps firms adjust to demand shocks

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inventory in long-run

changes do not work

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"sticky" prices

when in the short-run and prices are mostly fixed or "sticky" b/c of

-consumers prefer stable prices

-firms want to avoid price wars

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effects on durable goods

more effect

-less consumer spending on durables (cars)

-less business investment

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effects on nondurables

less effect

-spending holds up better (food, clothing)

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effects on services

less effect on basic services

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Measuring unemployment

BLS measures it

unemployment rate= unemployed/labor force X 100

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total population and labor force

-under 16 and/or institutionalized

-not in labor force

-employed (labor force)

-unemployed (labor force)

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problems of unemployment rate

-underestimates unemployment

-involuntary part-time workers who want to work full time

-"discouraged" workers who are no longer looking for work

-leads to a declining participation rate

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types of unemployment

-frictional

-structural

-cyclical

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frictional unemployment

search & wait for new job

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structural unemployment

change in composition of work force

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cyclical unemployment

downturn in the business cycle

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"full employment"

= frictional + structural unemployment

"natural rate of unemployment"

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Okun's law

for every 1% the unemployment rate differs from its national rate, a 2% gap is generated between potential & actual GDP (difference X 2)

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real GDP Gap

-if unemployment rate= natural rate then potential real GDP = actual real GDP

-if unemployment rate > natural rate then potential real GDP > actual real GDP

-if unemployment rate < natural rate then potential real GDP < actual real GDP

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noneconomic costs

-career effects

-health effects

-family effects

-social effects

-political effects

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duration of unemployment

mean: 24 weeks

median: 11 weeks

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Inflation

the increase in the general level of prices over some time period

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consumer price index (CPI)

measures price changes in a fixed market basket

of goods & services

- Q is fixed, P varies with a base period of 100.00

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CPI of 115 means

something that used to cost $100 now costs $115, price increased by 15%

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calculating % change in prices

= index 2 - index 1 / index 1 X 100 (=inflation rate)

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what makes CPI less volatile

removing food & energy prices

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nominal income

income in current $ (real income + inflation rate)

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real income

income in base year $ (nominal income - inflation rate)

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converting nominal to real income

#1- express price index in 100ths for each year (240.9/100=2.409)

#2 divid nominal income by price index for each year (80,000/2.409=33209)

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redistributive effects on inflation

-unanticipated inflation

-anticipated inflation

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unanticipated inflation

hurst fixed income receivers, savers & lenders

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anticipated inflaiton

helps borrowers and flexible income people

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demand-pull inflation

excess demand for goods & services given supplies

-"too much $ chasing too few goods"

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output effects of demand-pull inflation

-may not be harmful if mild

-gives flexibility to the economic system

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cost-push inflation

increase in cost of production from wages and resources, reduces profits and amount firms supple

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output effect of cost-push inflation

-reduces output

-reduces income

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hyperinflation

-demand-pull inflation is the extreme

-excess $ supply

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output effect of hyperinflation

-inflationary expectations create a fear factor

-wastes time & resources trying to protect purchasing power

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aggregate demand (AD)

shows the amount of goods and services which will be purchased at each possible price level

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reasons for downsloping AD curve

-real balances effect

-interest rate effect

foreign purchase effect

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real balance effect

higher price level decreases the real value of financial assets

-decreases household wealth & consumer spending

-decreases real GDP

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interest rate effect

higher price level increases the nominal interest rate

-decreases consumer spending on interest-sensitive products and business investment

-decreases real GDP

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foreign purchases effecr

higher price level decreases net export spending

-decreases spending on US exports and increases spending on US imports

-decreases real GDP

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major AD shifts factors

-consumer spending (C)

-investment spending ( Ig)

-government spending( G)

-net export spending (Xn)

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ALL AD factors

-consumer wealth

-consumer expectations

-household indebtedness

-personal taxes

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investment spending

-real interest rates

-expected returns (profits)

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Net export spending

-national income abroad

-exchange

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change in consumer spending that increases AD

-consumer wealth (increases so AD increases)

-consumer expectations (positive so AD increases)

-household borrowing (increases so AD increases)

-personal taxes ( decreases so AD increases)

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change in investment spending that increases AD

-real interest rate decreases

-expected returns (profit) increases

-technology improves

-excess capacity decreases

-gov. spending increases

-national income abroad increases

-exchange rates dollar depreciates

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Net export

exports-imports

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Aggregate supply

shows amount of goods and services (real output) which will be produced at each possible price level

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immediate short-run for AS

horizontal

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short-run for AS

upsloping (main focus)

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long-run for AS

vertical

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PUPC

input price/productivity = input price/ (output/input) = (input x input price)/(output) = total input cost / output

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Effects that increase AS

-domestic resource prices decreases

-prices of imported resources decreases

-productivity increases

-business taxes decrease

-business subsidies increase

-Gov. regulations decrease