Macro Exam #1
3 Things Needed for a Firm to Supply Good/Service
1. Has the resources/tech to produce 2. Can profit 3. Has definite plan to produce and sell
Issues with market value
1. Home production not accounted for 2. Under group economy goes unrecorded 3. Government provided services 4. Imputations like owners equivalent rent
Causes of shift in demand curve
1. Price of related goods 2. Expected future prices 3. Income Gain 4. Expected future income and credit 5. Population 6. Preferences
2 Economic Questions
1. What is produced? How? For whom? 2. When are private and social interest aligned?
Shortcomings of GDP/Capita
1. country depletes natural resources 2. Pollution decreases well being 3. Value of leisure (family time) not counted -median for income distribution might be a better stat due to highly skewed income variation
Investment in GDP
13-20% Investments Business and residential and includes depreciation
Government Purchases in GDP
15-20% government employee salaries, military equipment, roads, public buildings Does not include transfers like social security or unemployment
Average Income
GDP per Capita US 77,000
Land
Gifts of nature
Supply
Given a price, sellers will be interested in selling a given quantity of a good or service.
Inflation Rate Formula
(change in price index/initial price index) x100
Income Approach Rule of Thumb
2/3 GDP is labor income, 1/3 capital income Major debate for the last decade about rising capital shares and inequality.
Net Exports in GDP
3% (Exports - Imports)
Consumption in GDP
66% Durables (cars/houses), non-durable (food), services (university courses)
Choices
A choice is a trade off People make rational choices by comparison marginal benefits and costs Choices respond to incentives
The "How"
A production technology is used to combine factors of production, using the as inputs to obtain goods and services as outputs
Movement Along Supple Curve
A rise in price increases quantity supplied (reverse for decrease)
Paretos def of efficiency
A situation is efficient if it is impossible to make one person better off without making at least one other person worse off
PPF Steep
As the PPF gets steeper the cardinal costs is increasing (more variability between each move)
Source of GDP
Bureau of Economic Analysis and US Census
Conspicuous consumptions
Buying specific things to display wealth.
Momentum in finance
Buying stocks that have gone up already
Efficiency is necessary but not sufficient for desirability
Can be very unequal: if one person gets a fortune and everyone else subsistence income
Scarcity
Can't have everything we want, so we have to give something up.
Factors of the "How"
Capital, Labor, Land, Entrepreneurship
Increases in Inventories
Considered investments
Market Value
Contribution to GDP measured by price.
Gains from trade
Countries have different PPF due to different resources, the differences create comparative advantages and gains from trade.
Demand curve
Demand on graph
Positive
Describes how things are with no judgement (Econ Q 1)
Demand graph
Downward slope
Private and social interests
Efficiency
Price between 2 opportunity costs
Efficient
Change in Supply Curve Factors
Factors in production Price of related goods Expected future prices Number of suppliers Technological advances State of nature
Entrepreneurship
Find business opportunities, organize factors Human capital makes workers more skilled and productive through formal education, on job training, and health
Markets can promote efficient outcomes
Firms have incentives to produce high quality goods in cost effective way. Prices steer consumers to satisfy their wants by buying cheap (abundant) rather than expensive goods (scarce).
GNP Equation
GDP + NFP
The "What"
Goods and services are produced in the economy. The purpose of production is to satisfy human wants and needs.
Income = Expenditure
Goods and services are values at the price which they are sold.
Newly Produced
Goods made years ago but sold one do not count toward current GDP only earnings of intermediaries in the transactions if any count towards current GDP
Giffen Goods
Goods that are exceptions to the law of demand where at very low prices, with consumers on low incomes and dependent upon the good for survival, as price rises, then so does demand.
Lorenz Curve
Graph showing how much the actual distribution of income differs from an equal distribution Lens bending off of 45* line (the bigger the lens the closer Gini is to 1)
GNP
Gross National Product - the sum of all goods and services produced in a nation in a year
Positioning in marketing
High price may be seem not consumers as quality
Constant Marginal Cost
Horizontal supply curve
Pareto Improvement
Improvement is a change that benefits at least one person and hurts none (only possible when situation is inefficient)
NFP
Income earned by Americans overseas minus income earned by foreigners in US
Change at the Same Time (Opposite Direction)
Increase demand and decrease supply = increase in price, quantity ambiguous Decrease demand and increase supply = decrease in price, quantity ambiguous
Change at Same Time (Same Direction)
Increase in both = increase in equilibrium quantity, price ambiguous Decrease in both = decrease in equilibrium quantity, price ambiguous
Equilibrium Effect of Changes in Demand
Increase in demand shifts demand curve to the right Shortage at original price
Equilibrium Effect of Changed in Supply
Increase in supply shifts curve to the right Surplus at original price (price falls and quantity increases)
Intermediate Goods
Inputs in production of other goods
Consumer Problem
Is choosing what to buy to best satisfy those wants within budget
Opportunity cost formula
Loss / gain
Capital Goods
Machinery help produce other goods but are final because they last for years
Nominal GDP Grows
May mean quantity or price increases (or both) Even in GDP rises if there is enough inflation real GDP may fall.
Nominal Variables
Measured in monetary units
Market forces can lead to inefficient outcomes
Monopolies: an only seller can restrict supply to make product artificially scarce and charge higher prices Externalities: pollution, global warming, etc. are a cost to those in society that are not paid by the polluter
Demand
Most customers have more wants than they can satisfy with their means
Autarky
No trade, closed economy
Real GDP formula
Nominal GDP/GDP Deflator (Price index) x 100
PPF Graph
On line is efficient, those below are inefficient, above is unofficial.
Efficient Allocation of Resources
On the PPF at where the marginal benefit = marginal cost Efficient production plan
Normative
Opinion or judgement base on positive (Econ Q 2)
Law of Demand
Other things equal, as price falls, the quantity demanded rises, and as price rises, the quantity demanded falls
Law of Supply
Other things equal, the higher the price of the good, the greater the quantity supplied.
Market Equilibrium
Price that quantity demanded = quantity supplied Quantity is the quantity bought and sold at equilibrium price
Incomplete Information Effect on Demand
Prices are as signals
Substitution Effect
Relative price of good rises, people seek substitutes and demand goes down.
Not a part of supply
Resale Exemption: Durables (cars and houses)
Movement on Demand Curve
Rise in price decreases quantity demanded (movement up the curve) fall in price increases quantity demanded (movement down curve)
Demand Schedule
Shoes the relationship between the quantity demanded and the price
Price is too Low
Shortage: people want to buy more than is supplied Upward pressure on prices
Rawls: a theory of justice
Society x is more just than society y id a person would prefer to enter x from a veil of ignorance (not knowing what position they were born into)
Micro
Studies and choices by individuals and businesses and how choices interact in markets and influence governments. Can identify who the players are
Macro
Studies of performance of national and global economies. Don't know all of the players and how they are going to react, but still have to run the economy.
GDP Equations
Sum of added values (revenue from sales - cost of intermediate goods) Sum of final sales Salaries + profits (pre-tax)
Price is too High
Surplus: people want to buy less than is supplied Downward pressure on price
Production Possibilities Frontier
The boundary between those combinations of goods and services that can be produced and those that cannot.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
The total market value of all newly produced final goods and services made in one country one year. Measures total economic output.
Production = Income
The total value of production is the sum of everyone's income.
Labor
Time, effort, human capital makes labor more skilled (education and experience)
Capital
Tools, instruments machines, and buildings used in production
Econ Definition
Trying to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means
Supply on a graph
Upward sloping: -producers will supply a good if can cover marginal cost -marginal cost is increasing due to overtime/fixed factors
Fundamental Identity of National Accounting Equation
Value produced (Y) = spending consumption (C) + Investment (I) + Government purchases (G) + Net exports (NX) Y = C + I + G + NX NX = exports - imports
Real Variables
Variables measured by physical units
Unique Item
Vertical supply curve
Consumer Demand
What the consumer will buy given income, prices, and other relevant factors.
Opportunity Cost
What we could have instead
The "Who"
Whoever buys them 1. Land earns rent 2. Labor earns wages 3. Capital earns interest 4. Entrepreneurship earns profit
Marginal benefit
Willingness to pay
Gini Index
a mathematical formula that measures the amount of economic inequality in a society If all earn the same Gini = 0, the more inequality the closer Gini = 1
Supply Schedule
a table that shows the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied
Demand
entire relationship between the price of good and quantity demanded demanded of good
Econ Origin
oikonomos "managing the household"
comparative advantage
the ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer
Income effect
the change in consumption that results when a price increase causes real income to decline
Fundamental Identity of National Accounting
total production = total income = total expenditure