MACROECONOMICS
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Transcript MACROECONOMICS
MACROECONOMICS
Chapter 3
National Income: Where
It Comes From and
Where It Goes
Sources and Uses of GDP
How much GDP is produced by the firms
in an economy?
How the income is divided between labor
and capital owners?
Who buys the output of the economy?
How does the demand for goods and
services match the supply of goods and
services?
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How Much GDP?
Think of the whole economy as a
production function: Y=F(K,L)
In the LONG RUN, markets clear.
No unemployment in the factor markets.
The amount of K and L are thus determined.
The total amount of Y (GDP=Income) is
thus determined.
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Who Gets What?
In perfectly competitive factor markets, the
demand for an input is its marginal
product.
MPL = ΔY/ΔL
MPK = ΔY/ΔK
The supply of a factor was determined to
be K-bar and L-bar.
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Factor Shares
R
(MPK)P
K
W
Q of K
(MPL)P
L
Q of L
The demand for capital is the value of the marginal product of capital: P(MPK)
The demand for labor is the value of the marginal product of labor: P(MPL)
Explain equilibrium.
At equilibrium R = P(MPK) and W = P(MPL)
WL is labor’s share in $; RK is capital’s share in $
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Shares of Factors
If all the firms are operating in perfectly
competitive markets, then P=AC=MC and
economic profits (PQ-WL-RK) is zero.
PQ = WL + RK
Q = (W/P)L + (R/P)K
Y = (MPL)L + (MPK)K
Senator Paul Douglas noticed that (1920s)
the share of labor in the national income
remained constant through the years.
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Shares of Factors
What kind of a production function would
pay each factor their marginal products
and the marginal products would remain a
constant share of the total income?
MPL = α(Y/L)
MPK = (1-α)(Y/K)
Cobb-Douglas production function.
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Cobb-Douglas Production Function
It turns out that a function in the following form
fulfils the required condition.
Y AL K
K
L LK
Y
Y
Y
L
L
L
AK
1
L
1
AK
L
Y
L
1
L
Y
Y
Y
1
K
K
K
(1 ) AL K 1 1
1
(
1
)
AL
K
(1 )Y
K
K
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Properties of Cobb-Douglas
Constant returns to scale: zY=F(zL,zK)
Declining marginal products: negative 2nd
derivative
Y
K
Y
Y=F(L,K)
MPL
2b
2Y
b
Y
a
2a
L
L
L
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Who Buys the GDP?
Y C I G NX
C C (Y T )
I I (r )
For simplicity, let’s assume that NX=0
If labor and capital are fixed, Y is fixed.
So, the only variable that determines
how demand will match supply is r.
_
G G
_
T T
S S GOV S HH
S T G Y C T
S Y C G
Y C T S HH
S GOV T G
I S HH S GOV
But from Y = C + I + G
I=Y–C–G
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Circular Flow
Identify the arrows.
Domestic production (GDP) = Expenditures
Income = Expenditures
Savings = Investment
All equalities imply market clearing.
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Another View of Equilibrium
Expenditures
C+I+G
C=c(Y-T)
Y-bar
Y
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Equilibrium in the Financial Markets
r
GOV
S HH
S S
What happens if
government budget
has a deficit?
What happens if
investment demand rises?
What happens to
investment demand
during recessions?
I
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