Measuring the Economy - Jefferson Forest High School
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Transcript Measuring the Economy - Jefferson Forest High School
Students will identify gross domestic product.
Students will describe the relationship between
GDP and the business cycle
Students will explain how the unemployment
rate is determined
Students will analyze how the inflation rate is
determined
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - The market
value of all final goods and services produced
annually in a country. Measures the nation’s
total economic output
Includes
Dollar Value
Consumers + Government + Business + Net Exports
Total of the selling prices
Final Goods and Services
Products in the form sold to consumers
Not in an intermediate form
Products produced within a country’s borders
Includes products produced by a foreign owned
company that produces the product in the US
Produced in a calendar year – Jan1 – Dec 31 of a
given year
GDP counts only new production and excludes
the following:
Second hand transactions
Sales of used cars
Sales or homes constructed years ago
Any other sales of previously produced products
GDP counts only new production and excludes
the following:
Transfer payments
Welfare
Social security
Veterans benefits
Unemployment compensation
All these are considered nonproductive from an
economics standpoint
GDP counts only new production and excludes
the following:
Stock Market transactions
Represent only the exchange of ownership are not
new production
Nonmarket Activities
Excludes unpaid activities
Homemakers
Child-rearing
Home repairs
It would be impossible to place dollar values on these
activities
GDP counts only new production and excludes
the following:
Underground activities
Illegal gambling
Stolen cars
Illegal drug sales
Under-the table or off-the-book transactions
Business Cycle – the rise and fall of economic
activity through period of expansion and
recession
Reflects the ups and downs of the nation’s real GDP
(GDP adjusted for changes in prices over time)
Real GDP falling
Recession
Real GDP rising
Recovery (expansion)
Unemployment Rate – the percentage of the
civilian labor force that is actively seeking work
but is not employed
Identifying the US Labor Force
Starts with the total US population 16 years or older
Do not count those that are institutionalized(prison)
or in the military – they are subtracted out
Leaves us with the total civilian noninstitutionalized
population (16 years and older)
Identifying the US Labor Force
Within the noninstitutionalized population (16 years
+) we have
Nonlabor force
Fulltime students
Parents who stay home to raise children
Retirees
Discouraged workers – have tried to get jobs in past, but
have given up
Total Labor force – those who are willing and able
to work
Employed
Unemployed – want to work, but are unable to get a job
Employed – people who have jobs
Unemployed – people age 16 or older actively
looking for a job but have not found one
Does not include underemployed
Working in a job the individual is overqualified for
Working part time when full time is desired
National Unemployment Rate
Percentage of the US labor force that is unemployed
How rate is determined
60,000 households selected to be representative of
the US population (sample of population)
Each month the US government interview persons
in the sample group to determine what percentage
are unemployed
Computation
Unemployment Rate = Unemployed ÷ Civilian Labor Force
X 100
Recession
Recession
Inflation – the increase in the average price
level for goods and services in the economy
With inflation, money loses purchasing power
Example – If inflation is 5%, a $100 item you
purchase this year will cost $105 next year
Measuring Inflation
Measured by the US government – Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS)
Measuring Inflation
Measurement tool used is the Consumer Price Index
(CPI)
Uses a list of goods and services (called a market
basket) that are commonly bought by consumers
Contains thousands of specific items that represent what
average urban households purchase
Each month the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
update the prices of items in the basket and
calculate its cost that month
Using a consistent group of goods and services
makes it possible to see how prices are changing
over time
CPI Market Basket Categories
Food and beverages – items purchased at the
grocery store
Housing – house prices, rentals
Apparel – clothing, shoes, etc.
Transportation
Medical care
Recreation – goods, events
Education and communication
Other
Inflation Rate
Changes in the overall price of the CPI market basket
Shows the percentage increase in the average price
of the economy’s goods and services
Occasionally may show periods of deflation – a
period of decreasing prices
Is due to demand being sluggish and occurs when
consumer spending is declining due to fear,
pessimism, or reduced income
The rise and fall of economic activity through periods of
expansion and recession is known as the __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
business cycle
percentage change
unemployment rate
consumer price index
The rise and fall of economic activity through periods of
expansion and recession is known as the __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
business cycle
percentage change
unemployment rate
consumer price index
People age 16 years or older who are working in a job for
which they are overqualified for are said to be __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
underemployed
full time student
nonlabor force
retired
People age 16 years or older who are working in a job for
which they are overqualified for are said to be __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
underemployed
full time student
nonlabor force
retired
The percentage increase in the average price of the
economy’s goods and services is known as __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
Market basket
Price index
Deflation rate
Inflation rate
The percentage increase in the average price of the
economy’s goods and services is known as __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
Market basket
Price index
Deflation rate
Inflation rate
The percentage increase in the average price of the
economy’s goods and services is known as __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
Price index
Dollar value
Business cycle
Market basket
The percentage increase in the average price of the
economy’s goods and services is known as __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
Price index
Dollar value
Business cycle
Market basket
When the country’s GDP falls, the economy experiences a
__________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
peak
trough
recovery
recession
When the country’s GDP falls, the economy experiences a
__________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
peak
trough
recovery
recession