Econ Final
Benefits of international trade
1. Allows a country to specialize in Production 2. Allows a country to rise to a higher consumption level 3. increase world output 4. Allows a country to expand beyond its production possibilities frontier
Desirable Qualities of Money
1. Durable 2. Portable 3. Divisible 4. Acceptable or of Uniform Quality 5. Low Opportunity Cost 6. Relatively Stable Value
What 3 things happen when the government purchases government securities
1. Increases aggregate demand because it increases the amount of reserves in the banking system 2. Increases the money supply 3. Decreases the interest rate in the short run
Purpose of money (4 things)
1. Medium of Exchange 2. Unit of Account or Measure of Value 3. Money as a Store of Value 4. Money as a mean of Deffered payment
3 Major Methods that the FED uses to control the supply of money
1. Open Market Operations (most used) 2. Change reserve requirements 3. Change its discount rate
Required Reserve Ratio
The percentages of deposits a bank must hold
Percentage of the labor force that does not have jobs but is actively seeking one
Unemployment Rate
The average number of times per year each dollar is used to purchase final goods and services
Velocity
What does CPI stand for and what is it?
Consumer Price Index is a measure of the trend in prices of a market basket of consumable goods and services
The idea behind using active discretionary fiscal policy is to stabilize the economy by using planned budget deficits during economic ____________ and planned budget surpluses during economic ______________
Contractions; Expansions
Unemployment that results from short term fluctuations in the economy
Cyclical Unemployment
A sharp reduction in the economy's total output accompanied by high unemployment lasting for more than a year
Depression
a chain reaction of additional income and spending that results in total purchases that are greater than the initial increase in purchases
Mulitplier
The interest rate that is not adjusted for inflation
Nominal Interest Rate
As the US price level rises, what happens? why?
Overall output/production demanded goes down because people turn to foreign goods that are cheaper than American goods
Complementary Goods
Products that go well together (peanut butter and jelly)
Equation for Nominal Interest Rate
Real Interest Rate+Inflation Rate
The Amount by which actual output/production in the short run falls short of the economy's potential output
Recessionary/Contractionary Gap
Excess Reserves
Reserve levels above that required by the FED
Unemployment because of a job that is seasonal in nature
Seasonal Unemployment
Price Ceiling
Set the maximum price that a producer can legally charge for a good
Price Floor
Sets the minimum price that is the lowest a consumer can legally pay for a good (minimum wage)
related to occupational movement or mobility. occurs when workers lack the necessary skills required for jobs that are available or have particular skills that are no longer in demand
Structural Unemployment
Tariff
Tax on imported goods; bring about higher prices and revenues to domestic producers and lower revenues for foreign producers
Banks having trouble meeting the Federal Reserve Requirement can borrow funds directly from the Fed. The interest rate charged is called
The Discount Rate
The main effect of an increase in the amount of capital or an increase in new technology is
a rightward shift on the short run and long run aggregate supply curve
Market
a set of arrangements through which buyers and sellers carry out exchange at mutually agreeable terms
shortage
an excess quantity demanded that occurs when prices are less than the equilibrium price
Surplus
an excess quantity supplied that occurs when prices are higher than the equilibrium price
Money is
anything generally accepted as a payment for goods or repayment of debt
Commodity Money
anything that serves as both money and a commodity; money that has intrinsic value such as gold and silver
Long lags make active fiscal and monetary policy less effective because
by the time the impact of the policy actions are felt, the contraction or expansion it was meant to correct may be over
Transfer Payments
cash or in-kind benefits given to individuals as outright grants from the government (social security, unemployment benefits, welfare, food stamps)
a period in which unemployment is increasing and production/output is decreasing
contraction
M1
currency, including coins, held by the non banking public including checkable deposits, debit and checking accounts, and traveler's checks
An increase in the supply of money will ________ the interest rate and ___________investment spending
decrease; increase
Examples of Adverse supply shocks
drought, Government instability, Terrorist attacks
The price of one unit of a country's currency in terms of another country's currency
exchange rate
substitutes
if the price of one goes up (butter), the demand for the other (margarine) will increase
Beneficial Supply Shock
increase aggregate demand and shift SRAS curve rightward
Labor Productivity is important because...
it is the key to standard of living
Four Categories of Resources
land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship
scarcity
limited resources being unable to satisfy unlimited wants
The economy of the US is best describes as what kind of economic system
mixed
Credit cards are not __________, they are a __________, they are a means of postponing ______________
money; short term loan; cash payments
What causes the International demand of the US dollar to increase?
more US goods are exported and sold abroad
Examples of "Investment"
new residential construction, new factories, new machinery, inventories
Gresham's Law
people tend to trade away inferior goods while keeping the best for themselves
In the long run, an increase in aggregate demand will cause an increase in the _________ and no change in output at ________
price level; equilibrium
marginal
small change or that little extra unit
Adverse supply shocks
sudden, unexpected events that reduce aggregate supply, SRAS shifts leftward
Equilibrium
the condition in the market when the plans of buyers match those of sellers (demand=supply)
Physical Capital
the equipment and structures used to produce goods and services (Office Buildings, Tools, Machines, Factories)
Marginal Propensity to Consume
the fractional change in extra income that is spent on consumption
Intermediate good
the goods and services that are used to produce other goods and services
Two goods are called substitutes if:
the increase in price of one results in the increase in demand for the other
Law of demand
the lower the price of a good, the greater the quantity demanded
law of supply
the lower the price of a good, the smaller the quantity supplied
Human Capital
the productive knowledge, education, and skill people receive, from education and on-the-job training
Aggregate Supply curve
the relationship between the total quantity of final goods and services that suppliers are willing and able to produce and the overall price level
Economics is defined as
the study of how individuals decide to use their scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants
Macroeconomics
the study of the behavior and performance of the total economy. It includes price levels, economic growth, unemployment, and economic fluctuations
Definition of GDP
total market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a year
Opportunity Cost
value of best alternative not chosen
What Law is this? As the price of flat screen TV's increase, producers are willing and able to supply greater quantities of this product.
The Law of Supply
Law of comparative advantage
when a firm or individual has the lowest opportunity cost in producing a good, then they should specialize in producing this good
Budget Deficit
when government spending exceeds tax revenues
The ease with which one asset can be converted into another asset or goods and services
Liquidity
The floating exchange rate adjusts in response to what?
Market Forces
The FDIC ensures that our bank deposits are safe up to $_____________
100,000
Equation For GDP and meanings of Symbols
C+I+G+(X-M); C=Consumer Purchases, I=Investments, G=Government Purchases, X=Exports, M=Imports
DI=__+__
C;S
How are lenders affected by increase in interest rates? borrowers?
Lenders are rewarded with higher interest income; borrowers have to pay more interests expense
What is an Inventory
A Producer's stock of finished and in process goods
The amount by which quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied is what?
A Shortage
Examples of Beneficial Supply Shocks
Abundant Harvests, Discoveries of natural resources, Technological Breakthroughs, Sudden changes in the economic system that promote more production
the quantity of final goods and services demanded at different price levels in a given time period
Aggregate Demand
What effect would an increase in income have on demand?
An increase in demand (shift to the right)
What is the effect of an increase in consumer income on the equilibrium price and quantity supplied?
An increase in demand, an increase in equilibrium price, and an increase in quantity supplied
Price Level
Average level of prices in the economy
Summarizes the transactions that occur between individuals, firms, and governments of one country and individuals, firms, and governments of another
Balance of Payments
Reserve Requirement
Banks are required to keep on hand a quantity of cash or reserve accounts with the Federal Reserve or in their own vaults equal to a prescribed proportion of their checkable deposits
income households have available to spend or to save after paying taxes and receiving transfer payments
Disposable Personal Income
On a graph the demand curve slopes which direction?
Downward
occurs when a foreign country sells its products at a price level below their costs or below the price of goods sold on the domestic market
Dumping
Interest Rate Banks charge one another for overnight or short term borrowing
Federal Funds Rate
The use of government purchases, taxes, and transfer payments to alter GDP and the price level
Fiscal Policy
the temporary unemployment that results from the search time that occurs when people are searching for suitable jobs and firms are looking for suitable workers
Frictional Unemployment
Three Major Economic Goals
Full Employment, Maintaining prices at a stable level, and achieving a high rate of economic growth
Certain economic activities that signal forthcoming changes in the economy
Leading Economic Indicators
Crowding Out
Government borrowing drives up interest rates and crowds out interest sensitive private investment needs
GDP stands for
Gross Domestic Product
An increase in the economy's average price level is called
Inflation
The amount by which output/production in the short run exceeds the economy's potential output
Inflationary/Expansionary Gap
What is the most unstable category of GDP
Investment
One reason for US Budget Deficits
It is more politically popular to increase spending than it is to increase taxes to pay for the spending
National debt is..
The total of all Budget Deficits
What are the two ways GDP can be measured
Total spending or Total Income
Budget Surplus
When tax revenues are greater than government spending
Underemployed
Workers who are overqualified for their jobs or work fewer hours than they want