Macroeconomics and Economic Indicators
other indicators include:
+ real wages + disposable incomes + interest rates + export rates + job vacancies + world economic growht rates + business profitability + real GDP
microeconomic concepts
+ the price mechanism + market efficiency
macroeconomic concepts
+ total surplus + circular flow of income model + economic growth + business cycle + government policy mix
non-official indicators are often about...
1. consumer confidence 2. employment vacancies
6 examples of leading indicators
1. inventories 2. consumer confidence 3. business confidence 4. building approvals 5. bank credit (lending) 6. share prices
6 examples of coincidental indicators
1. retail sales 2. consumer spending 3. investment spending 4. building construction 5. manufacturing output 6. economic growth
3 examples of lagging indicators
1. unemployment 2. debt levels 3. bank deposits (savings)
example of a pro-cylical indicator
bank lending
leading indicators
change before the level of economic activity changes; they predict economic activity; are generally based on expectations/sentiment
official indicators
collated by government institutions such as the Australian Bureau of Statistics, Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics (ABARE), Australian Treasury, RBA
lagging indicators
don't show a change until after the level of economic activity has changed
counter-cyclical indicators
indicators move in the opposite direction to economic activity
pro-cyclical indicators
indicators move in the same direction as economic activity
coincidental indicators
move in line with the level of economic activity
economic indicators
pieces of information that can be used to describe the current state of the economy
non-official indicators
provided by banks and other associations such as Wespac Melbourne Institute
economic growth formula
real GDP x minus real GDP x-1 / real GDP x-1 * 100
microeconomics
studies the behaviour of individuals and sectors in the economy, looking at issues such as consumer behaviour or the mining industry
macroeconomics
sudies the performance of the economy as a whole; as well as policies used to imporve the performance of the economy; concerned with the total (agreegate) level of economic activity such as aggregate output and income
example of a counter-cyclical indicator
unemployment