Macro exam, Macro HW questions, macro exam 2
The development of national income accounting
together with improvements made subsequently, stands as one of the fundamental contributions of economics during the twentieth century
GDP only includes goods and services that
transact in markets
Economists use the word "nominal" to refer to
a measure like GDP when prices and quantities have not been seperated out
Chain weighting produces
a more accurate portryal of how real GDP changes over time
intellectual property products
a new category of investment; includes R&D spending as well as expenditures on durable intangible goods like software, movies, books, and music
ratio scale
a plot where equally spaced tick marks on the vertical axis are labeled consecutively with numbers that exhibit a constant ratio
diminishing returns
a property of production and utility functions. In production, inputs are typically subject to diminishing returns. that is increasing a single input initially has a fairly large effect on output, but the effect diminishes as the quantity of the input grows
To some extent the trade deficit is caused by
a rise in consumption
costs of economic growth
environmental problems such as pollution, the depletion of natural resources, and global warming;
percentage change in nominal GDP
equals percentage change in price level + percentage change in real GDP
institutions
features of an economy that shape the allocation of resources, including property rights, the legal system, and the rules and regulations governing individual behavior
the standard replication argument
the justification for constant returns principle: if you double all the inputs of production you double the output
In Cobb-Douglas production functions generally
the marginal product of a factor is the product of the factor's exponent and the average amount that each unit of the factor produces
Gross domestic product
the market value of the final goods and services produced in an economy over a certain period; the key measure of the state of the economy
Paasche index
the method of computing the change in real GDP with the final price
Laspeyres index
the method of computing the change in real GDP with the initial prices
Marginal product of labor (MPL)
is the extra amount of output that is produced when one unit of labor is added, holding all the other inputs constant
A growth rate in some variable y
is the percentage change in that variable
human capital
is the stock of skills that individuals accumulate to make them more productive
macroeconomics
is the study of collections of people and firms and how their interactions through markets determine the overall economic activity in a country or region
general equilibrium
the situation in a market economy in which all markets clear at current prices and all interactions across markets are taken into account
value added
is computed by subtracting the value of intermediate products from the revenue generated by each producer
to calculate real GDP in each country
Use a common set of prices
GDP does not include
changes in environmental resources
It is only the purchases that directly involve new production that are properly recorded as GDP
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Macroeconomic approach it takes to studying questions:
1. Document the facts 2. Develop a model 3. Compare the predictions of the model with the original facts 4. Use the model to make other predictions that may eventually be tested
3 things that explain TFP differences
1. human capital 2. technology 3. institutions
output per person tends to be higher when
1. the productivity parameter is higher and 2. the amount of capital per person is higher
labor share is relatively constant over time at
2/3
output growth corresponds to a change in Y
3 ways that Y can change: 1. capital stock (K) changes 2. labor force (L) changes 3. ability to produce goods with given resources (K,L) changes
The growth rate of GDP
= growth rates of per capita GDP + growth rates of the population
Total GDP in an economy
= per capita GDP x the population
Nominal GDP
= price level x real GDP
Total production =
= total income = total spending
Economic profits
= total revenue - payments to all inputs are the above-normal returns associated with prices that exceed those that prevail under perfect competition
The health of a nation's people is
omitted from GDP
The Solow Growth Model
A model that is key to understanding the macroeconomy in the long run. The Solow model emphasizes the roles played by capital and labor in production.
so,
For every dollar of product sold there is a dollar of income earned
example of capital are
structures like a factory or office building and equipment like computers and machines
saving
The difference between income and consumption; the amount of disposable income not spent.
National income identity
Y= C + I + G + Nx
national income accounting explained
Y= GDP; C= consumption; I= investment; G= government purchases; NX= net exports (exports - imports)
constant returns to scale
a function exhibits it if doubling each input exactly doubles output - a very convenient assumption - consistent with "replication" argument - a firm can build an identical factory, have identical workers, and can exactly double production
resource constraint
a fundamental relationship in an economy that constrains how resources can be allocated
steady state
a situation in which all variables in a model are constant. In the Solow Model, the steady state is the long-run outcome of the model. if the economy starts away from the steady state, it gradually moves towards it
equilibrium
a situation in which the markets in a model clear; that is, supply equals demand
National income accounting provides
a systematic method for aggregating the production of cars, computers, health care, and music into a single measure of overall economic activity; it relates this measure of aggregate production to the total amount of income earned by every person in the economy and to all the spending that occurs
trade balance
another name for net exports; when the trade balance is negative, we say there is a trade deficit
inflation rate
another name for the percentage change in the price level
ideas
are instructions or recipes; include designs for making objects
Examples of an endogenous variable
are the level of the wage and the level of employment
indirect business taxes
are the smallest component of income and include sales and property taxes paid by the business sector
profit maximization
basic idea: - hire capital until the cost of last unit equals its benefit - hire labor until the cost of last worker equals its benefit
real GDP
can be computed by deflating the nominal GDP; that is by dividing by the price level
nominal GDP
can go up either because the price level has gone up or because real GDP has gone up
convergence
concept in the study of economic growth consisting of catch-up behavior
output per person
divide output by the number of workers - per capita= per person = per worker equals the productivity parameter times capital per person raised to the 1/3 power
The sum of real chain-weighted consumption, investment, government purchases, and net exports
does not generally equal real chain-weighted GDP
In general rich countries tend to have
higher price levels than poorer countries
idea diagram
ideas --> non rivalry --> increasing returns --> problems with pure competition
Rule of 70
if Yt grows at a rate of g percent per year, then the number of years it takes Yt to double is approximately 70/g
decreasing returns to scale
if the exponents summed to less than 1, doubling the inputs would less than double output
increasing returns to scale
if the exponents summed to more than 1, then doubling the inputs would more than double the amount of output produced
constant returns to scale
if we double the amount of input produced then we double the amount of output that is produced
objects
include most goods we are familiar with: land, cell phones, oil, jet planes, computers, pencils, and paper as well as capital and labor from the Solow Model
Economic growth benefits:
increases in life expectancy, reductions in infant mortality, higher incomes, an expansion in the range of goods and services available
model
is a mathematical representation of a hypothetical world that we use to study economic phenomena
a by-product of economic growth
is income equality
An implication of the Rule of 70
is that the time it takes for income to double depends only on the growth rate, not on the current level of income
real interest rate
is the amount a person can earn by saving one unit of output for a year, or equivalently the amount a person must pay to borrow one unit of output for a year
the marginal product of capital (MPK)
is the extra amount of output that is produced when one unit of capital is added, holding all the other inputs constant
investment
is the way a firm increases its stock of capital
net investment
it is investment minus depreciation
No double counting with GDP
it is only the final goods and services that are counted towards GDP
allocating resources
maximize profits - under perfect condition firm takes prices as given
potential output
measures the way per capita GDP would evolve if prices were completely flexible and resources were fully employed
Economists use the word "real" to refer
only to the actual quantity of goods and services
endogenous variable
outcome generated by the model operating on exogenous variables and parameters
Example of exogenous variable
population in the economy
GDP in an economy equals
production, expenditure, and income
government spending includes
purchases of good and services, but also "transfer" payments like Social Security and Medicare, and interest payments on any outstanding government debt
exogenous variable
refers to an input that is allowed to change over time, but in a way that is completely determined ahead of time by the model builder
parameter
refers to an input that is generally fixed over time, except when the model builder decides to experiment by changing it
capital
refers to the inputs into production other than labor that are not completely used up in the production process
trade deficits
result when one economy borrows from another
budget deficits
result when the government borrows money to finance its spending
as more labor is added, MPL falls
slope of the production function equals MPL
production function
tells us how much ice cream Y can be produced if L workers are combined with K machines
Comparisons of GDP based on exchange rates
tend to yield larger differences across countries than comparisons based on common prices
total factor productivity
the efficiency with which inputs are transformed into output
factor shares
the fractions of income paid to factors of production, such as 1/3 to capital and 2/3 to labor
returns to education
the increase in wages resulting from additional years. of education
development accounting
the practice of using an economic model to account for differences in per capita GDP across countries
GDP deflator
the price level that satisfies the formula for nominal GDP
The Great Divergence
the standards of living in countries and how they have diverged dramatically in the past three centuries
depreciation
the wear and tear; if we subtract out the depreciation from the GDP then we get the net domestic product
transition dynamics
this key property of the long-run model says that an economy that starts below its steady state (or its balanced growth path) will grow rapidly until it reaches its steady state. Growth slows down as the gap between the economy's position and the steady state shrinks
Chain weighting/Fisher index
to compute the chain weighted index of real GDP, first compute the Laspeyres and the Paasche indexes then calculate the average of the two growth rates
economic profits are zero
unless there is some market power by which firms charge prices above marginal cost
determining the rental rate
we have just seen that MPL=w - the same logic shows that MPK=r - diminishing returns to capital: MPK falls as K rises - the MPK curve is the firm's demand curve for renting capital - firms maximize profits by choosing K such that MPK=r