Chapter 14: Long-Run Consequences of Stabilization Policies
Monetary inflation: when prices increase due to oversupply of currency
Purchasing power decreases
Phillips curve: shows inverse relationship between inflation rate and unemployment
Use aggregate supply and demand curves
As AD curve shifts to the right → price level and unemployment increases
Rational expectations: theory that people learn to anticipate government policies that influence the economy, making the policies ineffective
Government intervention is unnecessary and not useful to stabilize economy
Umployment is temporary result of random shocks
Inflation: sustained increase to overall price level
High inflation for longer period of time → money growth
Deflation: sustained decrease overall price level
Budget deficit: federal government spending - tax collections
In one year
National debt: total amount of money that the federal government owes
At any given time
Ricardian Equivalency theory: deficit financing no different from tax financing
Deficit financing → people increase savings to repay debt at layer time
Crowding out: decrease in real investment due to higher interest rates from government purchases
Partial crowding out: if effect of crowded-out investments on RGP is likely smaller than inital increase in real GDP
Complete crowding out: if decrease in investment removes entire boost in real GDP from increased purchases
Economic growth: measured in terms of annual increases in real GDP or real GDP per capita
Reverend Thomas Malthus
Food would grow at arithmetic rate
Population would grow at geometric rate
Eventually, population will exceed available food supply
What are the sources of economic growth?
Increased investment in capital (human + physical)
Improvement in technology
Enhancing utilization of resources
Monetary inflation: when prices increase due to oversupply of currency
Purchasing power decreases
Phillips curve: shows inverse relationship between inflation rate and unemployment
Use aggregate supply and demand curves
As AD curve shifts to the right → price level and unemployment increases
Rational expectations: theory that people learn to anticipate government policies that influence the economy, making the policies ineffective
Government intervention is unnecessary and not useful to stabilize economy
Umployment is temporary result of random shocks
Inflation: sustained increase to overall price level
High inflation for longer period of time → money growth
Deflation: sustained decrease overall price level
Budget deficit: federal government spending - tax collections
In one year
National debt: total amount of money that the federal government owes
At any given time
Ricardian Equivalency theory: deficit financing no different from tax financing
Deficit financing → people increase savings to repay debt at layer time
Crowding out: decrease in real investment due to higher interest rates from government purchases
Partial crowding out: if effect of crowded-out investments on RGP is likely smaller than inital increase in real GDP
Complete crowding out: if decrease in investment removes entire boost in real GDP from increased purchases
Economic growth: measured in terms of annual increases in real GDP or real GDP per capita
Reverend Thomas Malthus
Food would grow at arithmetic rate
Population would grow at geometric rate
Eventually, population will exceed available food supply
What are the sources of economic growth?
Increased investment in capital (human + physical)
Improvement in technology
Enhancing utilization of resources