Chapter 20 Introduction to macroeconomics - Home
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Transcript Chapter 20 Introduction to macroeconomics - Home
ECON 1211
Lecturer: Dr B. Nowbutsing
Topic 1: Introduction to Macroeconomics and
National Income Accounting
1. Macroeconomics
the study of the economy as a whole
it deals with broad aggregates
but uses the same style of thinking
about economic issues as in
microeconomics.
20.1
2.
Some key issues in
macroeconomics
Inflation
–
Unemployment
–
the rate of change of the general price level
a measure of the number of people looking for
work, but who are without jobs
Output
–
real gross national product (GNP) measures
total income of an economy
it is closely related to the economy's total output
20.2
3.
More key issues in
macroeconomics
Economic growth
–
increases in real GNP, an indication of
the expansion of the economy’s total
output
Macroeconomic policy
–
a variety of policy measures used by
the government to affect the overall
performance of the economy
20.3
4. Inflation in the UK, 1950-99
30
25
15
10
5
19
90
19
70
0
19
50
% p.a.
20
Source: Economic Trends Annual Supplement, Labour Market Trends
20.4
5.
Inflation in selected European
countries
Germany
France
Belgium
EU
Finland
UK
Spain
Italy
Portugal
Greece
0
1
2
3
4
5
% change 1998 compared with 1997
20.5
Inflation in UK, USA and
Germany
% p.a.
6.
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
1960-73
1973-81
UK
USA
1981-90
1990-98
Germany
20.6
7.
Unemployment in the UK,
1950-99
14
12
8
6
4
2
19
90
19
70
0
19
50
% p.a.
10
Source: Economic Trends Annual Supplement, Labour Market Trends
20.7
8.
Unemployment
in selected European countries
Germany
France
Belgium
EU
Finland
UK
Spain
Italy
Portugal
Greece
0
5
10
15
20
% unemployment (ILO measure) 1998
20.8
9.
Unemployment
in UK, USA and Germany
10
% p.a.
8
6
4
2
0
1960-73
1973-81
UK
USA
1981-90
1990-98
Germany
20.9
10. Economic growth
in UK, USA and Germany
5
% p.a.
4
3
2
1
0
1960-73
1973-81
UK
USA
1981-90
1990-98
Germany
20.10
11. Inflation Rate in Mauritius
20.11
12. Employment Rate in Mauritius
20.12
13. Economic Growth Rate in
Mauritius
20.13
14. An Overview of Circular Flow
The circular flow shows how real resources
and financial payments flow between firms
and households
Households: supply factor services to firms,
receive factor incomes from firms, buy output
from firms
Firms: use factors to make output, rent factor
services from households, sell output to
households
20.14
15. The circular flow of income,
expenditure and output (closed economy)
C
Households
Firms
Y
20.15
16. National Income Accounting
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – measures
the output made in the domestic economy,
regardless of who owns the production
inputs.
Transactions do not take place between a
single firm and a single household
Firms hire labour from households but buy
raw materials from other firms
To avoid double counting, we have to use
value added
20.16
16. National Income Accounting
Value added: firm’s output – firm’s input
goods used to make that output
Intermediate vs. final goods
Final goods are purchased by the ultimate
user.
Intermediate goods are partly-finished goods
that form inputs to a subsequent production
process that then uses them up
20.17
17. Investment and Saving
In the initial flow, there was no saving and
investment
A leakage from the circular flow is money no
longer recycled from households to firm
(saving)
An injection is money that flows to firms
without being cycled through households
(investment)
20.18
17. Investment and Saving
Three measures of GDP (income,
expenditure, output)
Y=C+S
Y: GDP; C: Consumption; S: Saving
Y=C+I
I: Investment
Thus, S = I
20.19
18. The circular flow of income,
expenditure and output
I
C
S
C+I
Households
Firms
Y
20.20
19. Government in the Circular
flow
Government raises revenue both through
direct taxes (Td) and indirect taxes (Te)
Government finance two kinds of
expenditures:
(1)
spending on goods and services, G, is
purchase by the government of physical `
goods and services including wages
(2)
Transfer payment, B, pensions and other
benefits
20.21
19. Government in the Circular
flow
Given B and Te, we must make a distinction between
Y and Yd such that Yd = Y+ B – Td,
Y=C+I+G
The above measures GDP at market prices
It we exclude indirect taxes, we get GDP at basic
prices, i.e.
Y = [C + I + G] – Te
S = (Y + B- Td) – C or Y = S + C + Td - B
20.22
19. Government in the Circular
flow
Given Y = [C + I + G] – Te and Y = S + C + Td - B
We get [C + I + G] – Te = Y = S + C + Td – B
This implies S + Td – Te = I + G + B
Left hand side is leakages from the circular flow
Right hand side is injections to the circular flow
The equation can be written as
S – I = G + B - Td – Te
Financial surplus in private sector can be offset by
a government deficit
20.23
19. Government in the circular
flow
I
C+I+G
C
S
G
Households
C + I + G - Te
Te
Government
Firms
B - Td
Y + B - Td
Y
20.24
20. Adding the foreign sector
To incorporate the foreign sector into the
circular flow
we must recognize that residents of a
country will buy imports from abroad
and that domestic firms will sell (export)
goods and services abroad.
Y = C + I + G + (X – Z) - Te
20.25
21. GDP and GNP
Gross domestic product (GDP)
–
measures the output produced by
factors of production located in the
domestic economy
Gross national product (GNP)
measures the total income earned by
domestic citizens
GNP = GDP + net income from abroad
–
20.26
22. Three measures of national
output
Expenditure
–
–
Income
–
–
the sum of expenditures in the economy
Y=C+I+G+X-Z
the sum of incomes paid for factor
services
wages, profits, etc.
Output
–
the sum of output (value added)
produced in the economy
20.27
23. National income accounting: a
summary
NYA
G
GNP
(and
GNI)
at
market
prices
I
X-Z
C
NYA
Deprec'n
Indirect
taxes
GDP
NNP
at
market at market National
prices prices income
Profits,
rents
Selfemployment
Wages
and
salaries
20.28
24. What GNP does and does not
measure
GNP is an aggregate measure (does not
consider distribution of income- Lorenz
Curve)
GNP is a combination of price and
quantity (inflation inflate GDP - distinguish
between real and nominal measurements)
GNP is not a comprehensive measure of
everything that contributes to economic
welfare
Population change should be considered
20.29