Macro chapter 18 and 19
Okun's rule of thumb
1 percentage point rise in the unemployment rate will tend to be associated with a 2 percent fall in output from its trend and vice versa.
supply shock
Any change in production costs that leads suppliers to change the prices they charge at any given level of output
financial shocks
Any changes in borrowing conditions that change the real interest rate at which people can borrow
Actual output
May fail to meet this potential as aggregate expenditure ebbs and flows
optimistic IS curve
Describes spending plans in good times when people are optimistic about their economic future
MP curve
Describes the real interest rate set by monetary policy and financial markets
Total Inflation
Expected inflation + Demand-pull inflation + Cost-push inflation
excess demand
When the quantity demanded at the prevailing price exceeds the quantity supplied
multiplier
a measure of how much GDP changes as a result of both the direct and indirect effects flowing from each extra dollar of spending
spending shock
change in aggregate expenditure at a given real interest rate and level of income
Lower interest rates boost
consumption. investment. government purchases net exports. This in turn boosts aggregate expenditure. An increase in aggregate expenditure increases GDP because businesses adjust output to meet demand so in equilibrium GDP = Aggregate expenditure This increases output gap
Equilibrium GDP
describes the level of GDP at the point of macroeconomic equilibrium Equilibrium: Y = AE
Potential GDP
economy's highest sustainable level of production and is determined by available inputs.
Philips curve
illustrates the link between the output gap and unexpected inflation
The risk-free rate
rises in response to monetary policy
wage-price spiral
the process by which rising wages cause higher prices, and higher prices cause higher wages
classical dichotomy
the theoretical separation of nominal and real variables
Aggregate expenditure
the total amount of goods and services that people want to buy across the whole economy AE = C + I + G + NX C: Consumption expenditure (private) I: Planned investment (no inventories) G: Government expenditure (inv. & cons.) NX: Net exports (Export -Imports)
three inflationary forces
1. inflation expectations. 2. demand-pull inflation. 3. supply shocks and cost push inflation. - These forces can be used to understand what drives inflation and how it responds to economic conditions.
The Phillips curve shifts in response to unexpected changes in
1. input prices. 2. productivity. 3. exchange rates.
Recessionary equilibrium
GDP is less than potential GDP
Fiscal policy
Government policy that attempts to manage the economy by controlling taxing and spending.
Demand-pull inflation
Inflation resulting from excess demand
IS curve
The IS curve shows that lower interest rates lead to higher real GDP and a more positive output gap
Output gap
The difference between actual and potential output, measured as a percentage of potential output
Unexpected inflation
The difference between inflation and inflation expectations
risk premium
The excess return required from an investment in a risky asset over that required from a risk-free investment. Rises if lending becomes riskier Real interest rate = Risk-free interest rate + Risk premium
real interest rate
The interest rate corrected for the effects of inflation. The real interest rate is the opportunity cost of spending money this year.
risk-free interest rate
The interest rate on a loan that involves no risk
potential output
The level of GDP at which all resources are fully employed. It is determined by the available supply of labor, human and physical capital, and technological progress
monetary policy
The process of setting interest rates in an effort to influence economic conditions
Inflation expectations
The rate at which average prices are anticipated to rise next year
IS curve axises
The real interest rate is on the vertical axis The output gap, which goes on the horizontal axis, measures output relative to potential GDP The IS curve is downward-sloping, because lower real interest rates boost aggregate expenditure, which leads to a higher level of GDP and, hence, a more positive output gap
Bust equilibrium
Where output declines to be less than potential output. Because this economic slump is an equilibrium, it will persist if nothing changes
Boom equilibrium
Where output is at potential, validating people's optimism
labor market Phillips curve
links unexpected inflation to the unemployment rate (rather than the output gap.)
Three methods for measuring inflation expectations
surveys of consumers. surveys and forecasts of economists. financial markets
Macroeconomic equilibrium
when the quantity of output that buyers collectively want to purchase is equal to the quantity of output that suppliers collectively produce. Y = C + I + G + NX
Cost-push inflation
when unexpected boosts to production costs push sellers to raise their prices. This leads to more inflation at any given level of the output gap and for any given level of inflation expectations