Thursday, April 2, 2015
Sunday, March 29, 2015
Unit 4
Money is any asset that can be used to purchase goods and services
3 uses of money:
1st use - medium of exchange. It is used to determine value
2nd use - unit of account. Used to compare prices.
3rd use - store a value. Keep in mind that some people choose to hide their money.
3 types of money:
Commodity money - has value within itself. 3 examples: salt, olive oil, and gold
Representative money - represents something of value. Ex. IOU
Fiat - money because the government says so. Consists of paper currency and coins
Currency is not the same thing as money.
6 characteristics of money:
1. Durability
2. Portability
3. Divisibility
4. Uniformity
5. Limited supply
6. Acceptability
Money supply - total value of financial assets available in the US economy
M1 Money
- liquid assets (easily to convert to cash). Coins, currency, checkable deposits/demand deposits, travelers checks
M2 Money
Not as liquid as M1 money
- saving account
- money market account
3 purposes of financial institutions
1. Store money
2. Save money
3. Loan money. 2 reasons to loan money: credit cards and mortgages
4 ways to save
1. Savings account
2. Checking account
3. Money market account
4. Certificate of deposit (CD)
Loans
Banks operate on a fractional reserve system which means they keep a fraction of the funds and loan out the rest
Interest Rates:
-principle: amount of money borrowed
-interest: price payed for the use of borrowed money
• simple interest: paid on the principle
I = (P x R x T)/100
I; simple interest
P; principal
R; interest rate
T; time
• compound interest: paid on the principle plus the accumulative interest.
5 types of financial institutions
1. Commercial bank
2. Savings and loan institutions
3. Mutual savings bank
4. Credit unions
5. Finance companies
Investment - redirecting resources; consume now for the future.
Financial assets - claims on property and income of borrower
Financial intermediaries - institution that channels funds from savers to borrowers. 3 purposes
1. Share risks through diversification. It is spreading out investment to reduce risk.
2. Provide information
3. Liquidity (returns) - money investor receives above and beyond the sum of money that was initially invested. The higher the risk; the higher the returns
Bonds you loan
Stocks you own
Bonds are loans, IOU, that represent debt that the government or a corporation must repay to an investor. They are generally low risk investment. There are 3 components
1. Coupon rate (interest rate that a bond issuer will pay to a bond holder)
2. Maturity (time at which payment to a bond holder is due)
3. PAR value (principle; amount an investor pays to purchase a bond)
Yield - annual rate of return on a bond of the bond were held to maturity
Time Value of Money
Is a dollar today worth more than a dollar tomorrow?
Why?
Opportunity cost and inflation
This is the reason for charging and paying interest
v = future value of money
p = present value of money
r = real interest rate (nominal rate - inflation rate) expressed as a decimal
n = years
k = number of times interest is credited per year
The simple interest formula
v = (1+R)^n * p
The compound interest formula
v = (1+ (r/k))^nk * p
The monetary equation of exchange
MV=PQ
M=money supply (M1 or M2)
V=money's velocity (M1 or M2)
P=price level (PL on the AS/AD diagram)
Q=real GDP (sometimes labeled Y on the AS/AD diagram)
Functions of FED
It issues paper currency
Sets reserve requirements and holds reserves of banks
It lends money to banks and charges them interest
They are a check clearing service banks
It acts as personal bank for the government
Supervises member banks
Controls the money supply in the economy
How do banks create money?
By lending out deposits that are used multiple times
Where do the loans come from?
From depositors who take cash and place it in their banks
How are the amounts of potential loans calculated?
Using their bank balance sheet, or T-accounts that consists of assets and liabilities for banks
Right side of the T-account sheet
1= demand deposits (DD) or checkable deposits
• cash deposits from the public
• they are liabilities because they belong to depositors
2= owners equity (stock shares)
• there are values of stocks held by the public ownership of bank shares
• if demand deposits come from someone's cash holdings, then DD is already part of money supply
• if the demand deposit comes in from the purchase of bonds (by the FED) then this creates new cash and therefore creates new Money Supply (M-1)
Bank Assets (left side of the T account sheet)
#1= required reserves (RR)
• these are the percentages of demand deposits that must be held in the vault so that some depositors have access to their money. Requirement can vary, but AP usually uses 5%, 10%, or 20% for easy calculations
#2= excess reserves (ER)
• these are the source of new loans. These amune are applied to the monetary multiplier/reserve Multiploer (DD=RR plus ER)
#3= bank property holdings (building and fixtures)
#4 = securities (federal bonds)
• these are bonds purchases by the bank, or new bonds sold to the bank by the Federal Reserve. These bonds can be purchased from the bank, turned into cash that immediately becomes available as "excess reserves"
#5= customer loans
• this can be amounts held by banks from previous transactions, owed to the bank by prior customers
Creating Money (using excess reserves)
• banks want to create profits. They generate profit by leading the excess reserves and collecting interest. Since each loan will go out into customer's business' accounts, more loans are created in decreasing amounts (because of reserve requirement). A rough estimate of the number of loan pints created by any first loan is the "money multiplier"
• money multiplier: checkable despisers multiplier, reserve multiplier, loan multiplier
• the formula: 1 divided by the reserve requirement (ratio)
RR=10%= 1/.1= monetary multiplier of 10
Excess reserves are multiplied by the multiplier to create new loans for the entire banking system and this create new money supply
Bank Balance Sheet
•assets and liabilities in a T account
Liabilities
•DD and Owner's Equity (stock shares)
Assets
•RR, ER, Bank Property, Securities, Loans
Assets must equal liabilities
•DD=RR + ER
Money is created through Moneyary Multiplier
• ER x 1/RR (multiplier) = new loans through the naming system
The money supply is affected
•cash from citizens becomes a DD, but does not change the money supply; the ER from this cash becomes an "immediate" loan amount
•ER x multiplier become new loans and do change the money supply
•the fed buying bonds crates new loans and changes the money supply
•if the fed buys bonds on the open market, this also becomes a new DD amount; if the Fed guys bonds from accounts already held by a particular bank, then the amount only becomes new excess reserves
•finally, bond "prices" move opposite to the changes in interest rates
-higher interest rates wil push bond prices downward (less money supply)
-lower interest rates will push bond prices upward (more money supply)
Type 1: calculate the initial change in excess reserves. (AKA the amount a single bank can loan from the initial deposit)
Type 2: calculate the change in loans in the banking system.
Type 3: Calculate the change in the money supply (sometimes type 2 and type 3 will have the same result i.e. No fed involvement)
Type 4: calculate the change in demand deposits
Creating a Bank
•Transaction #1
Vault cash: cash held by the bank
•Transaction #2
Acquiring propert and equipment
•Transction #3
Commercial bank functions
-accepting deposits
-making loans
•Transaction #4
Depositing reserves in a Federal Reserve bank
-required reserves
-reserve ratio
Reserve Ratio = (commercial bank's required reserves)/(commercial bank's checkable-deposit liabilities)
•transaction #5
Assumed the bank's deposits all cash on reserve at the Fed
Excess Reserves = Actual Reserves - Required Reserves
Required Reserves = checkable deposits x reserved ratio
Factors that weaken the effectiveness of the deposit multiplier:
1.) If banks fail to loan out all their excess reserves
2.) If bank customers take their loans in cash rather than in new checking deposits, it creates a cash or currency drain
Demand for money has an inverse relationship between nominal interest rates and the quantity of money demanded
MD/DM increases while IR decreases
MD/DM decreases while IR increases
Loanable Funds Market
•the market where savers and borrowers exchange funds (Qlf) at the real rate of interest (r%)
•the demand for loanable funds, or borrowing comes from households, firms, government and the foreign sector. The demand for loanable funds is in fact the supply of bonds.
•the supply of loanable funds, or savings comes from households, firms, government and the foreign sector. The supply of loanable funds is also the demand for bonds.
Changes in the Demand for Loanable Funds
•remember that demand for loanable funds = borrowing (I.e. Supply bonds)
•more borrowing = more demand for loanable funds (shift right)
•less borrowing = less demand for loanable funds (shift left)
•Examples
- government deficit spending = more borrowing = more demand for loanable funds
(Dlf) right r% increase
Less investment demand = less borrowing = less demand for loanable funds
(Dlf) left r% decrease
Changes in the supply of Loanable Finds
•remember that supply of loanable funds = saving (I.e. Demand for bonds)
•more saving = more supply of loanable funds (right)
•less saving = less supply of loanable funds (left)
•examples
- government budget surplus = more saving = more supply of loanable funds. Slf right r% decrease
- decrease in consumers' MPS = less saving = less supply of loan-able funds
Money & Banking / Monetary Policy
Video 1
Types of Money
1. Commodity Money is a good that functions as money. It is the most primitive.
2. Representative Money is the thing you're using as money that represents another metal. The major drawback of this is that when the value of the metal changes, the value of the currency changes as well.
3. Fiat Money is money that is not backed by precious metal. Money that must be accepted for transaction that is backed by the word of government.
Functions of Money
1. Medium of exchange is using money to buy things.
2. Store of value is putting money away and expecting it to be stable.
3. Unit of account is its price implies its worth. Doesn't always imply quality.
Video 2
People will tend to borrow more for transactions and hold assets when the interest rate is low. The supply of money is vertical in the money market because it does not vary based on the interest rate as opposed to the demand of money because the supply of money is set up by the Fed. When you increase demand, you put pressure on interest rate. To counteract interest rates from increasing during a recession, the Fed can increase the money supply. The Fed always try to stabilize the interest rate because if it is not stable, then you cannot predict level of investment consumer spending and manipulate aggregate demand.
Video 3
Reserve Requirement is the total amount the bank is required to hold. It can be in a vault or held by the Fed. This was one of the problems that led to the Great Depression because banks would not lend out money for people because they were scared to go under the reserve requirement.
Discount Rate is the interest rate at which banks can borrow money from the Fed.
Buy/Sell Bonds/Securities is if the Fed buys the bond, the public gets money and the other way around.
Open Market Operations is the entity of the Fed that makes decisions about selling and buying bonds
Federal Funds Rate is the rate at which banks borrow money from each other. When the Fed buys bonds, it puts downward pressure on the Federal Funds Rate and the other way around.
Expansionary (easy money)
Lowers Reserve Requirement is the money that suddenly becomes excess reserves.
Lowers Discount Rate
Buys Bonds/Securities
Contractionary (tight money)
Raises Reserve Requirement is the excess reserves that are turned into required reserves.
Raises Discount Rate
Sells Bonds/Securities
Video 4
The supply of loan-able funds comes from the amount of money people have in banks. The more money people save, the more money banks have to loan out and create more money. It is a leakage, but helps the banks. Showing the government's deficit spending, the government has to be demanding money in order to spend the money. When you increase the demand for money, you increase the demand for loan-able funds. The other way to show an increase in interest in the loan-able funds graph is to decrease supply because when the government demands money, which is decreasing the supply of the nation's supply of funds.
Video 5
Making loans is how banks create money.
Money Multiplier is 1/ (Required Reserve/Reserve Ratio).
Multiple Deposit Expansion is when you add up all the potential loans, you get the money you multiply with the money multiplier and the initial amount of loans. It does not guarantee that you get that much because we're making the assumption that in this process, there are no excess reserves left. If the bank holds excess reserves, it will reduce your total. When you're asked how much "additional" money, you would subtract your initial amount.
Video 6
The majority of debt of the United States is held within the country. When the government is running a deficit, it borrows money from the money market. There will also be an increase in demand for loan-able funds. In the AD/AS graph, this will increase Aggregate Demand which will increase the price level. The Fisher Effect says that an increase in interest rate has to be equal to the increase in inflation. It is a 1 to 1 direct ratio.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Unit 3
Aggregate Demand (AD)
- shows the amount of real GDP that the private, public and foreign sector collectively desire to purchase at each possible price level
- the relationship between the price level and the level of real GDP is inverse
Three Reasons AD is downward sloping
1. Real Balances Effect
- When the price level is high, households and businesses cannot afford to purchase as much output
- When the price level is low, households and businesses can afford to purchase more output.
2. Interest - Rate Effect
- A higher price level increases the interest rate which tends to discourage investment
- A lower price level decreases the interest rate which tends to encourage investment
3. Foreign
- A higher price level increases the foreign demand for relatively cheaper imports
- A lower price level increases the foreign demand for relatively cheaper U.S. exports
Shifts in Aggregate Demand (AD)
- there are two parts to a shift in AD: 1. a change in C, Ig, G, and/or Xn 2. A multiplier effect that producers a greater change than the original change in the 4 components
- Increases in AD = AD -->
- Decreases in AD = AD <--
Increase in Aggregate Demand
Decrease in Aggregate Demand
Consumption
- Consumer wealth
- More wealth = more spending (AD shifts -->)
- Less wealth = less spending (AD shifts <--)
- Consumer Expectations
- Positive expectations = more spending (AD shifts -->)
- Negative expectations = less spending (AD shifts <--)
- Household Indebtedness
- Less debt = more spending (AD shifts -->)
- More debt = less spending (AD shifts <--)
- Taxes
- Less taxes = more spending (AD shifts -->)
- More taxes = less spending (AD shifts <--)
Gross Private Domestic Investment
Investment spending is sensitive to:
- The Real Interest Rate
- Lower Real Interest Rate = More Investment (AD -->)
- Higher Real Interest Rate = Less Investment (AD <--)
- Expected Returns
- Higher expected returns = more investment (AD -->)
- Lower expected returns = less investment (AD <--)
- Expected returns are influenced by: Expectation of future profitability, Technology, and Degree of Excess Capacity (Existing Stock of Capital)
Government Spending
- More Gov't spending (AD -->)
- Less Gov't spending (AD <--)
Net Exports
Net Exports are sensitive to:
- Exchange Rates (international value of $)
- Strong $ = more imports & fewer exports (AD <--)
- Weak $ = fewer imports & more exports (AD -->)
- Relative Income
- Strong Foreign Economies = More exports (AD -->)
- Weak Foreign Economies = Less exports (AD <--)
Aggregate Supply
The level of real GDPR that firms will produce at each price level (PL) Real GDP - Real Output
Long - Run v. Short - Run
Long - Run
- period of time where input prices are completely flexible and adjust to changes in the price level
- the level of the Real GDP supplied is independent of the price level
Short - Run
- period of time where input prices are sticky and do not adjust to changes in the price level
- in the short run, the level of Real GDP supplied is directly related to the price level
Long - Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS)
- the long-run aggregate supply or LRAS marks the level of full employment in the economy (analogous to PPC)
- because input prices are completely flexible in the long-run, changes in the price level do not change firms' real profits and therefore do not change firms' level of output. this means that the LRAS is vertical at the economy's level of full employment
Short - Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)
- because input prices are sticky in the short-run, the SRAS is upward sloping
Changes in SRAS
increase -->
decrease <--
- the key to understand shifts in SRAS is per unit production cost Per unit production cost = total input cost/ total output
Determinants of SRAS
- Input Prices
- Productivity
- Legal-Institution Environment
Input Prices
- Domestic Resource Prices
- wages (75% of all business costs)
- cost of capital
- Raw materials (commodity prices)
- Foreign Resource Prices
- Strong $ = lower foreign resource prices
- weak $ = higher foreign resource prices
- Market Power
- Monopolies and cartels that control resources control the price of those resources
- Increases in Resource prices = SRAS <--
- Decrease in Resource prices = SRAS -->
Productivity
-Productivity = total output/total inputs
- More productivity = lower unit production cost (SRAS -->)
- Lower productivity = higher unit production cost (SRAS <--)
Legal Institution Environment
- Taxes and subsidies
- Taxes ($ to gov't) to business increases per unit production cost (SRAS <--)
- Subsidies ($ from gov't) to business reduces per unit production cost (SRAS -->)
- Gov't Regulation creates a cost of compliance (SRAS <--)
- Deregulation reduces compliance costs (SRAS -->)
Full Employment equilibrium exists where AD intersects SRAS & LRAS at the same point
Recessionary Gap - a recessionary gap exists when equilibrium occurs below full employment output
AD is decreasing during a recessionary gap
Inflationary Gap - an inflationary gap exists when equilibrium occurs beyond full employment out put
Expected Rates of Return
- How does business make investment decisions?
- cost/benefit Analysis
- How does business determine the benefits?
- Expected rate of return
- How does business count the cost?
- interest costs
- How does business determine the amount of investment they undertake?
- compare expected rate of return to interest cost
- If expected return > interest cost, then invest
- If expected return < interest cost, then do not invest
Real (r%) v. Nominal (i%)
- What's the difference?
- Nominal is the observable rate of interest
- Real subtracts out inflation and is only known ex post facto
- How do you compete the real interest rate (r%)?
- r% = i% - pi%
- What then, determines the cost of an investment decision?
- the real interest rate (r%)
Investment Demand Curve
- What is the shape of the investment demand curve?
- Downward sloping
- Why?
- When interest rates are high, fewer investment are profitable
Shifts in Investment Demand (ID)
- Cost of Production
- Lower costs shift ID -->
- higher costs shift ID <--
- Business Tax
- Lower business taxes shift ID -->
- Higher business taxes shift ID <--
- Technological Change
- New technology shifts ID -->
- Lack of technological change shifts ID <--
- Stock of Capital
- If an economy is low on capital, then ID -->
- If an economy has much capital, then ID <--
- Expectations
- Positive Expectations shifts ID -->
- Negative Expectations shifts ID <--
LRAS curve represents a point on an economies production possibilities curve
always vertical, always stable at full employment
LRAS doesn't change as the price level changes
only things that can shift LRAS:
- change in resources
- change in technology
- economic growth
whatever shifts production possibility outward is the same thing that shifts LRAS
3 Schools of Economics
Disposal Income (DI)
- Income after taxes or Net Income
- DI = Gross Income - Taxes
2 Choices
- with disposal income, households can either
- consume (spend money on goods and services)
- save (not spend money on goods and services)
Consumption
- household spending
- the ability to consume is constrained by
- the amount of disposal income
- the propensity to save
- Do households consume if DI = 0?
- Autonomous consumption
- Dissaving
- APC = C/DI = % DI that is spent
Spending
- household NOT spending
- the ability to save is constrained by
- the amount of disposable income
- the propensity to consume
- DO household save if DI = 0?
- No
- APS = S/DI = % DI that is not spent
MPC & MPS
- Marginal Propensity to Consume
- change in C/change in DI
- % of every extra dollar earned that is spent
- Marginal Propensity to Save
- change in S/change in DI
- % of energy extra dollar earned that is saved
MPC + MPS = 1 1 - MPC = MPS
APC & APS
APC + APS = 1
1 - APC = APS
1 - APS = APC
APC > 1 : Dissaving
-AP : Dissaving
The Spending Multiplier Effect
- AN initial change in (C, Ig, G, Xn) causes a larger change in aggregate spending, or Aggregate Demand (AD)
- Multiplier = Change in AD/change in spending
-Multiplier = change in AD/change in C, Ig, G, or Xn
- expenditures and income flow continuously which sets off a spending increase in the economy
Calculating the Spending Multiplier
- the spending multiplier can be calculated from the MPC or the MPS
- Multiplier = 1/1-MPC or the MPS
- Multipliers are (+) when there is an increase in spending & (-) when there is a decrease
Tax Multiplier
- When the gov't taxes, the multiplier works in reverse
-Why?
- Because there is now more money in the circular flow
Fiscal Policy
2 options
- Taxes- gov't can increase or decrease taxes
- Spending- gov't can increase or decrease spending
Fiscal policy is enacted to promote our nation's economic goals: full employment, price stability, economic growth
- Discretionary Fiscal Policy (action)
- Expansionary Fiscal Policy - think deficit
- Contractionary Fiscal Policy - think surplus
- No - Discretionary Fiscal Policy (no action)
Discretionary v. Automatic Fiscal Policies
Discretionary
- Increasing or decreasing gov't spending and/or taxes in order to return the economy to full employment. Discretionary policy makers doing fiscal policy in response to an economic problem
Automatic
- Unemployment compensation + marginal tax rates are examples of automatic policies that help mitigate the effects of recession and inflation. Automatic fiscal policy takes place without policy makers having to respond to current economic problems.
Contractionary vs. Expansionary Fiscal Policy
- Contractionary Fiscal Policy- policy designed to decrease AD - strategy for controlling inflation, increase gov't spending, decrease taxes
- Expansionary Fiscal Policy - policy designed to increase AD - strategy for increasing GDP, combating a recession & reducing unemployment, decrease gov't spending, increase taxes
Automatic or Built - In Stabilizers
- Anything that increases the gov'ts budget deficit during a recession that increases its budget surplus during inflation without requiring explicit action by policy makers.
- Economic Importance:
- Taxes reduce spending & AD
- Reductions in spending are desirable when economy is moving toward inflation
- increase in spending are desirable when economy is heading toward recession
Progressive Tax System
- Average tax rate (tax return/GDP) rises w/ GDP
Proportional Tax System
- Average Tax rate remains constant as GDP changes
Regressive Tax System
- Average tax rate falls w/GDP
Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt
- Balanced Budget
- Revenues = Expenditures
- Budget Deficit
- Revenues < Expenditures
- Budget Surplus
- Revenues > Expenditures
- Gov't Debt
- Sum of all deficits - sum of all surpluses
- Gov't must borrow money when it runs a budget deficit
- Gov't borrows money through tax
Monday, February 9, 2015
Unit 2
GDP:
total dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders within a given year. (Nike is an example of something included in GDP)
What is included in GDP?
C + Ig + G + Xn
C - consumption takes up 67% of eceonomy. This includes final goods and services.
Ig - gross private domestic investment
1. Factory equipment maintenance
2. New factory equipment
3. Construction o housing
4. Unsold inventory of products built within a year
G- government spending (government is buying weapons, FBISD buying new schools)
Xn - net export is exports minus imports (imports are not included)
What is not included?
1. Used or second hand goods
2. Intermediate goods - goods and services that are purchased for resale or for further processing or manufacturing
3. Non market activities (volunteer work, babysitting, chores, illegal drug sales)
4. Financial transactions (stocks, bonds, real estate. GDP only counts production)
5. Gifts or transfer payments (social security, welfare payments, scholarship, Christmas gift)
GNP:
A measure of what its citizens produced and whether they produced these within its borders
National Income Accounting:
Economists collect statistics on production, income, investment, and savings.
Expenditure Approach:
Adding up the market value of all domestic expenditures made on final goods and services in a single year.
C + Ig + G + Xn = GDP
Income Approach:
Adding up all the income earned by households and firms in a single year.
Wages - compensation from employees, or salaries
Rents - from tenants to landlord, from leases payments that corporations pay for the use of space.
Interest - money paid by private businesses to the suppliers of loans used to purchase capital. (savings account, corporate bond)
Profit - Can be seen as:
1. Corporate income taxes
2. Dividends
3. Undistributed corporate profits
W + R + I + P + Statistical Adjustments
Nominal GDP:
Value of output produced in current prices it can increase from year to year if either output or price increase
Real GDP:
Value of output produced in base year or constant prices. It is adjusted for inflation
It can increase from year to year only if output increases
Price x Quantity
Base year is always the earlier year
Price Index - a measure of inflation by tracking changes in a market basket of goods compared with the base year.
Price market basket of goods in current year/price of market basket goods in base year x 100
Equations:
Budget = Gov't purchases of goods and services + Gov't transfer payments - Gov't tax and fee collection
Trade = Exports - Imports
GNP = GDP + Net Foreign factor income (use expenditure approach for GDP)
Net National Product (NNP) = GNP - Depreciation
Net Domestic Product (NDP) = GDP - Depreciation
National Income = GDP - Indirect Business Taxes - Depreciation - Net Foreign factor payments or Compensation of employees + Rental income + Interest income + Proprietor's income + Corporate profits
GDP Deflator:
a price index used to adjust from nominal GDP to real GDP.
Nominal GDP/Real GDP x 100
In the base year, GDP deflator is equal to 100
For years after the base year, GDP deflator is greater than 100
For years before the base year, GDP deflator is less than 100
Inflation Rate:
It measures the percentage increases in the price level over time. It offers a key indicator of the economy's health.
Deflation - a decline in the general price level
Disinflation - occurs when the inflation rate declines
Consumer Price Index (CPI):
It measures inflation by tracking the yearly price of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services. It indicates changes in price level and cost of living.
Solving inflation problems
1. Finding inflation rate using market basket data
Current year market basket value - base year market basket value / base year market basket value x 100
2. Finding inflation rate using price indexes
Current year price index - base year price index / base year price index x 100
3. Estimating inflation using the rule of 70
Rule of 70
used to calculate the number of years it will take for the price level to double at any given rate of inflation
Rule of 70 - years needed to double inflation = 70 / annual inflation rate
4. Determining real wages - real wages = nominal wages / price level x 100
5. Finding real interest rates, Real Interest Rate = nominal interest rate - inflation rate - premium
The cost of borrowing or lending money that is adjusted for inflation. Always expressed as a percentage
Nominal interest rate - unadjusted cost of borrowing or lending money
Causes of Inflation:
Anticipated inflation
Unanticipated inflation
Helped by inflation
Borrowers - debt will be repaid with cheaper dollars than those that were loaned out
Hurt by inflation
Fixed income - grant, scholarship
Savers - those who save money
Lenders/Creditors
Unemployment:
the number of unemployed / number of unemployed + number of employed x 100
4-5% is ideal unemployment rate
Not in the labor force:
Kids
Military personnel
Mentally insane
Incarcerated or in prison
Retired
Stay at home parents
Full time students
Discouraged workers
Types of unemployment:
1. Frictional - people who are "between jobs" they choose new opportunities, new choices, new lifestyles, new educational levels
2. Structural - technology changing, it is associated with a lack of skills or a declining industry
3. Seasonal - you are waiting for the right season to go to work (construction workers,, life guards)
4. Cyclical - unemployment that occurs due to a swing in the economy. Bad for individuals and societies
Full Employment:
occurs when there is no cyclical unemployment present in the economy
This is when the economy is working at its best potential
Natural rate of unemployment (NRU)
4-5% rate
Why is it bad?
1. Not enough consumption (GDP)
2. Too much poverty
3. Too much government assistance
Why is unemployment good?
1. There is less pressure to raise wages
2. There are more workers available for future expansions
Okun's Law:
for every 1% of unemployment above the NRU, causes a 2% decline in real GDP.
total dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders within a given year. (Nike is an example of something included in GDP)
What is included in GDP?
C + Ig + G + Xn
C - consumption takes up 67% of eceonomy. This includes final goods and services.
Ig - gross private domestic investment
1. Factory equipment maintenance
2. New factory equipment
3. Construction o housing
4. Unsold inventory of products built within a year
G- government spending (government is buying weapons, FBISD buying new schools)
Xn - net export is exports minus imports (imports are not included)
What is not included?
1. Used or second hand goods
2. Intermediate goods - goods and services that are purchased for resale or for further processing or manufacturing
3. Non market activities (volunteer work, babysitting, chores, illegal drug sales)
4. Financial transactions (stocks, bonds, real estate. GDP only counts production)
5. Gifts or transfer payments (social security, welfare payments, scholarship, Christmas gift)
GNP:
A measure of what its citizens produced and whether they produced these within its borders
National Income Accounting:
Economists collect statistics on production, income, investment, and savings.
Expenditure Approach:
Adding up the market value of all domestic expenditures made on final goods and services in a single year.
C + Ig + G + Xn = GDP
Income Approach:
Adding up all the income earned by households and firms in a single year.
Wages - compensation from employees, or salaries
Rents - from tenants to landlord, from leases payments that corporations pay for the use of space.
Interest - money paid by private businesses to the suppliers of loans used to purchase capital. (savings account, corporate bond)
Profit - Can be seen as:
1. Corporate income taxes
2. Dividends
3. Undistributed corporate profits
W + R + I + P + Statistical Adjustments
Nominal GDP:
Value of output produced in current prices it can increase from year to year if either output or price increase
Real GDP:
Value of output produced in base year or constant prices. It is adjusted for inflation
It can increase from year to year only if output increases
Price x Quantity
Base year is always the earlier year
Price Index - a measure of inflation by tracking changes in a market basket of goods compared with the base year.
Price market basket of goods in current year/price of market basket goods in base year x 100
Equations:
Budget = Gov't purchases of goods and services + Gov't transfer payments - Gov't tax and fee collection
Trade = Exports - Imports
GNP = GDP + Net Foreign factor income (use expenditure approach for GDP)
Net National Product (NNP) = GNP - Depreciation
Net Domestic Product (NDP) = GDP - Depreciation
National Income = GDP - Indirect Business Taxes - Depreciation - Net Foreign factor payments or Compensation of employees + Rental income + Interest income + Proprietor's income + Corporate profits
GDP Deflator:
a price index used to adjust from nominal GDP to real GDP.
Nominal GDP/Real GDP x 100
In the base year, GDP deflator is equal to 100
For years after the base year, GDP deflator is greater than 100
For years before the base year, GDP deflator is less than 100
Inflation Rate:
It measures the percentage increases in the price level over time. It offers a key indicator of the economy's health.
Deflation - a decline in the general price level
Disinflation - occurs when the inflation rate declines
Consumer Price Index (CPI):
It measures inflation by tracking the yearly price of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services. It indicates changes in price level and cost of living.
Solving inflation problems
1. Finding inflation rate using market basket data
Current year market basket value - base year market basket value / base year market basket value x 100
2. Finding inflation rate using price indexes
Current year price index - base year price index / base year price index x 100
3. Estimating inflation using the rule of 70
Rule of 70
used to calculate the number of years it will take for the price level to double at any given rate of inflation
Rule of 70 - years needed to double inflation = 70 / annual inflation rate
4. Determining real wages - real wages = nominal wages / price level x 100
5. Finding real interest rates, Real Interest Rate = nominal interest rate - inflation rate - premium
The cost of borrowing or lending money that is adjusted for inflation. Always expressed as a percentage
Nominal interest rate - unadjusted cost of borrowing or lending money
Causes of Inflation:
Anticipated inflation
Unanticipated inflation
Helped by inflation
Borrowers - debt will be repaid with cheaper dollars than those that were loaned out
Hurt by inflation
Fixed income - grant, scholarship
Savers - those who save money
Lenders/Creditors
Unemployment:
the number of unemployed / number of unemployed + number of employed x 100
4-5% is ideal unemployment rate
Not in the labor force:
Kids
Military personnel
Mentally insane
Incarcerated or in prison
Retired
Stay at home parents
Full time students
Discouraged workers
Types of unemployment:
1. Frictional - people who are "between jobs" they choose new opportunities, new choices, new lifestyles, new educational levels
2. Structural - technology changing, it is associated with a lack of skills or a declining industry
3. Seasonal - you are waiting for the right season to go to work (construction workers,, life guards)
4. Cyclical - unemployment that occurs due to a swing in the economy. Bad for individuals and societies
Full Employment:
occurs when there is no cyclical unemployment present in the economy
This is when the economy is working at its best potential
Natural rate of unemployment (NRU)
4-5% rate
Why is it bad?
1. Not enough consumption (GDP)
2. Too much poverty
3. Too much government assistance
Why is unemployment good?
1. There is less pressure to raise wages
2. There are more workers available for future expansions
Okun's Law:
for every 1% of unemployment above the NRU, causes a 2% decline in real GDP.
Monday, January 19, 2015
Supply and Demand
Demand:
The quantities that people are willing and able to buy at various demanded.
The Law of Demand - an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded
Demand Schedule and Demand Curve - displays the relationship of price and quantity demanded
Increase in demand - shift to the right
Decrease in demand - shift to the left
What causes a "change in quantity"?
change in price
What causes a "change in demand"?
Supply:
The quantities that producers or sellers are willing and able to produce or sell at various prices
Law of Supply - There is a direct relationship between price and quantity supply (price increases, quantity increases)
Supply Schedule and Supply Curve
What causes "change in supply"?
change in price
What causes a "change in supply"?
The quantities that people are willing and able to buy at various demanded.
The Law of Demand - an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded
Demand Schedule and Demand Curve - displays the relationship of price and quantity demanded
Increase in demand - shift to the right
Decrease in demand - shift to the left
What causes a "change in quantity"?
change in price
What causes a "change in demand"?
- change in buyer's taste (advertising)
- change in the number of buyers (population)
- change in income A. Normal goods - gods that buyers buy more of when their income rises. B. Inferior goods - goods that buyers buy less of when their income rises.
- change in the price of related goods. A. Substitute goods - goods that serve roughly the same purpose to buyers (Coca - Cola and Pepsi) B. Complimentary goods - goods that are often consumed together (fries and ketchup)
- change in expectations - the future
Supply:
The quantities that producers or sellers are willing and able to produce or sell at various prices
Law of Supply - There is a direct relationship between price and quantity supply (price increases, quantity increases)
Supply Schedule and Supply Curve
What causes "change in supply"?
change in price
What causes a "change in supply"?
- change in weather
- change in technology
- change in taxes or subsidies
- change in cost of production
- change in number of sellers
- change in expectations
Elasticity of Demand
Elasticity of Demand:
Tells how drastically buyers will cut back or increase their demand for a good when the prices rise or fall.
Elastic Demand - When demand will change greatly given a small change in price Wants (ticket prices for movies increase then we are lead to find alternative ways) More than one
Inelastic Demand - Your demand for a product will not change regardless of price Needs (gasoline, salt, medicine) Less than one
Uni elastic Demand - Equal to one
Tells how drastically buyers will cut back or increase their demand for a good when the prices rise or fall.
Elastic Demand - When demand will change greatly given a small change in price Wants (ticket prices for movies increase then we are lead to find alternative ways) More than one
Inelastic Demand - Your demand for a product will not change regardless of price Needs (gasoline, salt, medicine) Less than one
Uni elastic Demand - Equal to one
- New quantity - old quantity/old quantity
- New price - old price/old price
- PED
Equilibrium:
The point at which the supply curve and demand curve intersect. This point they meet at shows that the resources are being used efficiently.
Shortage - QD>QS
Surplus - QS>QD
Price Ceiling:
Government imposed limit on how high you can be charged.
Price Floor:
Government price control on how low a price can be charged for a product.
Total Revenue - Price x Quantity
Marginal Revenue - Additional income from selling an additional unit of a good
Fixed Cost - A cost that does not change no matter how much is produced (rent, mortgage)
Variable Cost - cost that changes and fluctuctuates (water bill - how much you use)
Marginal Cost - New total cost - old total cost spend the cost, revenue is what you bring in
Total Cost - TFC + TVC = TC
Average Total Fixed Cost - AFC + AVC
Average Fixed Cost - TFC/Quantity
Average Variable Cost - TVC/Quantity
Total Variable Cost - Quantity x AVC
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