Macroeconomics Ch. 5-8
Money Market
(Financial Market) Households purchase stocks and bonds from firms. Whole world borrows and lends to the money market. Borrowing: governments sign treasury bonds, notes or bills as promises. Firms issue corporate bonds.
Structural Unemployment
portion of unemployment that is due to changes in the structure of the economy that result in a significant loss of jobs in certain industries.
Frictional Unemployment
portion of unemployment that is due to the normal turnover in the labor market; used to denote short-run job/skill matching problems.
Unemployment Rate
ratio of number of people employed to the total number of people in the labor force. (Unemployed/employed+unemployed)
Business Cycle
recurring fluctuations in economic activity consisting of recession and recovery and growth and decline
GNP
total market value of all goods/services produced within a given period by factors of production owned by a country's citizens, regardless of where the output is produced.
Discouraged-Worker Effect
decline in the measured unemployment rate that results when people who want to work but cannot find jobs grow discouraged and stop looking, thus dropping out of the ranks of the unemployed and the labor force
Labor Market
Firms and governments purchase labor from households.
GDP Deflator
GDP Price Index (Nominal GDP)/(Real GDP) x 100 Under-estimates inflation because the basket of goods is always changing, prices of capital goods is included, does not include imported goods.
Inflation
increase in overall price level - does not necessarily reduce ones purchasing power
Value Added
the difference between the value of goods as they leave a stage of production and the cost of the goods as they entered that stage.
NIPA (National Income and Product Accounts)
Data collected and published by the government describing the various components of national income and output in the economy.
Real Interest Rate
Difference between the interest rate on a loan and the inflation rates.
Calculating GDP
Expenditure Approach: measures the total amount spent on all final goods and services during a given period. (C+I+G+(ex-im)) Income Approach: measures the income -- wages, rents, interest, and profits-- received by all factors of production in producing final goods and services.
GNI (Gross National Income)
GNP converted into dollars using an average of currency exchange rates of inflation.
Fiscal Policy
Government policies concerning taxes and spending.
Net Investment
Gross investment minus depreciation.
Goods-and-Services Market
Household and governments purchase good/services from firms and firms purchase goods/services from each other.
Monetary Policy
The tools used by the Federal Reserve to control the quantity of money, which in turn affects interest rates.
GDP
The total market value of all final goods and services produced within a given period by factors of production located in a country. GDP= Final sales+change in business inventories. - Real GDP=values the production of goods and services at constant prices. P(base year) x Q(current year) - Nominal GDP=values the production of goods and services at current prices. P(current year) x Q(current year) * does not count transactions in which money or goods changes hands but in which no new goods and services are produced.
Cyclical Unemployment
increase in unemployment that occurs during recessions/depressions (business cycle)
Labor Force
The number of people employed plus the number of unemployed.
Natural Unemployment
5% unemployment - structural/frictional (cannot fix) - can only change cyclical
Deflation
A decrease in the overall price level.
Recession
A period during which aggregate output declines. Conventionally, a period in which aggregate output declines for two consecutive quarters.
Hyperinflation
A period of very rapid increases in the overall price level.
Not in the Labor Force
A person who is not looking for work because he or she does not want a job or has given up.
Stagflation
A situation of both high inflation and high unemployment.
Employed
Any person 16 years or older who works for pay for at least an hour a week, who works without pay for 15 or more hours per week, who has a job but is temporarily absent with or without pay.
Labor Force Participation Rate
Labor Force/Population
CPI (Consumer Price Index)
Measure of the average prices paid by urban consumers for a fixed market basket of consumer goods/services. (Cost of basket @ current prices)/(Cost of basket @ base prices) x 100 Doesn't allow consumers to consider substitutes, does not consider producers, includes prices of imported goods.
Three Major Macroeconomic Concerns
Output growth, Unemployment, Inflation and deflation
Unemployed
Person 16 years or older who is available for work but is not working, and has made efforts to find work in the previous 4 weeks.
Sticky Prices
Prices that do not always adjust rapidly to maintain equality between quantity supplied and quantity demanded.
Keynesian Economics
Theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes, stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms - focuses on aggregate demand.
Unemployment
Unemployment rate: Unemployed/labor force. Unemployment implies that the aggregate labor market is not in equilibrium.
Seasonal Unemployment
Unemployment that arises because of seasonal weather patterns
Interest Rate
a fixed quantity or charge for borrowed money, generally a percentage of the amount borrowed. The interest rate of a given loan reflects the length of the loan and the perceived risk to the lender. Movement reflects conditions of financial market.
Depression
a long-term economic state characterized by unemployment and low prices and low levels of trade and investment - long term recession