Transcript Ch 05
Ch 5: Macroeconomic
Measurements, Part I
Prices & Unemployment
James R. Russell, Ph.D., Professor of Economics & Management, Oral Roberts University
©2005 Thomson Business & Professional Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning
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Measuring Prices
Price Level: A weighted average of the
prices of all goods and services.
Price Index: A measure of the price level.
Consumer Price Index (CPI): A widely
cited index for the price level; the weighted
average of prices of a specific set of goods
and services purchased by a typical
household.
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Consumer Price Index
We use a base year to calculate the
CPI.
The CPI is equal to the total dollar
expenditure in the current year for the
market basket divided by the total
dollar expenditure in the base year for
the market basket.
This result is then multiplied by 100.
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Exhibit 1: Computing the Consumer
Price Index
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Exhibit 2: CPI, 1959-2003
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Calculating the Percentage Change
in Prices (as measured by the CPI)
Over One Year or Several Years
Percentage difference in the CPI from
one year to any other year =
(CPI later year – CPI earlier year) X 100
__________________________________________________________________________________
CPI earlier year
Inflation: an increase in the price
level.
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Are You Beating (CPI) Inflation
or is Inflation Beating You?
Nominal Income: the current-dollar
amount of a person’s income.
Real Income: nominal income
adjusted for price changes.
Real Income (in base year prices)
= [(Nominal Income)/CPI]x100
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How Is The CPI Used?
The CPI is used as:
An
economic indicator
To find the real value of an
economic variable
To adjust certain income
payments
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Substitute Bias in Fixed
Weight Measures
A fixed weight price assumes the
same items are bought
A substitute bias is introduced when
one good is substituted for another.
As a result of the substitution bias,
fixed weight measures can overstate
the “cost of living”
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Other Measures
The Chain-Weighted
Price Index corrects
for the substitution bias
found in fixed weight
measures.
The GDP Deflator or
GDP Implicit Price
Deflator is based on all
goods and services
within an economy.
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Converting Dollars from
One Year to Another
Take your price, income, or salary that
you want to compare. Choose the
current year and the year to compare to.
Complete this formula:
Salary
current year
= (CPI current year / CPI
x Income earlier year
earlier year)
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Self-Test
Explain how the CPI is calculated.
If the CPI in one year is 132.5, and is 143.6
the following year, what is the inflation rate?
In year 1, your annual income is $45,000
and the CPI is 143.6; in year 2, your annual
income is $51,232 and the CPI is 150.7.
Has your real income risen, fallen, or
remained constant? Explain your answer.
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UNEMPLOYMENT
Civilian Non-Institutional Population
(Potentially Employed)
– 16 years of age or older
– not in the armed services
– not institutionalized.
A person is considered Employed if
– did any work for pay or profit during the survey
reference week
– worked at least 15 hours per week as an unpaid
worker in a family-operated enterprise
– was temporarily absent from work due to illness,
vacation, strike, bad weather, industrial dispute, or
various personal reasons.
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Exhibit 3: Breakdown of the
U.S. Population and the Labor
Force
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Unemployment
A person is Unemployed if:
They do not have a job, have made
specific active efforts to find a job during
the prior 4 weeks, and were available for
work.
They were not working and were waiting
to be called back to a job from which
they had been temporarily laid off.
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The Unemployment and
Employment Rates
Unemployment Rate: Number of Unemployed
Persons divided by the Civilian Labor Force
Employment Rate: Number of Employed Persons
divided by the Civilian Non-institutionalized
Population.
Labor Force Participation Rate: Civilian Labor
Force divided by the Civilian Non-institutionalized
Population.
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Classifying the
Unemployed
Job Loser: was employed in the civilian labor
force, was either fired or laid off.
Job Leaver: was employed in the civilian labor
force, quit his or her job.
Reentrant: was employed, hasn’t been for a
period of time and is currently reentering the
labor force.
New Entrant: has never held a full time job
for two weeks or longer, but is now looking.
Unemployed Persons = Job Losers+ Job
Leavers +Reentrants + New Entrants
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Discouraged Workers
A person who gives up looking for a
job, for whatever reason, is no longer
considered part of the unemployment
rate.
The unemployed worker gets counted
and the discouraged worker does not.
Does this give us a good count of the
“true unemployment problem” today?
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Types of Unemployment
Frictional Unemployment: unemployment
due to the natural “frictions” of the economy,
which is caused by changing market conditions
and is represented by qualified individuals with
transferable skills who change jobs.
Structural Unemployment: unemployment
due to structural changes in the economy that
eliminate some jobs and create others for
which the unemployed are unqualified.
Natural Unemployment Rate: The sum of
the Frictional Unemployment Rate and the
Structural Unemployment Rate.
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Full Employment?
Full Employment: when the
unemployment rate is equal to
the natural unemployment rate.
Cyclical Unemployment
Rate: the difference between
the unemployment rate and the
natural unemployment rate.
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Self-Test
What is the major difference between
a person who is frictionally
unemployed and one who is
structurally unemployed?
If the cyclical unemployment rate is
positive, what does this imply?
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Coming Up (Ch. 6):
Macroeconomic Measurements,
Part II: GDP and Real GDP
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