Transcript Document
Macroeconomic Goals and GDP
Measuring Broad Economic Goals
The goals of U.S. macroeconomic policies are
captured into two laws:
The Employment Act of 1946
Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978
(Humphrey-Hawkins Act)
Committed the federal government to maximize employment
and economic growth, and maintain a stable price level
Went further and committed the government to reach an
unemployment rate of 4 percent, to stabilize the price level with
a target inflation rate of zero percent, and to maintain steady
economic growth
Macroeconomic Goals: 1)Full Employment, 2)Price
Stability, 3)Economic Growth
1) Full Employment
Exists when most individuals who are
willing to work at the prevailing wages in
the economy are employed (natural level
of unemployment)
Unemployment
Frictional unemployment
Structural unemployment
Cyclical unemployment
2) Price Stability
Exists when the average level of prices in
the economy is neither increasing or
decreasing
Price Instability
Inflation
Deflation
3) Economic Growth
Measuring Employment
Labor Force= People at work (employed)
+ people actively looking for work
(unemployed) (16+)
LFPR= # in labor force/adult population * 100
UR= # of unemployed/Labor Force
Measuring Price Changes
Consumer Price Index (CPI)= weighted cost of
base-period items in current-year prices/
weighted cost of base-period items in base-year
prices * 100
Price change= change in CPI/ beginning CPI *
100
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
GDP= C (consumption spending) +I (investment
spending) +G (government spending) + NX (net
exports: exports-imports)
Only final retail price of new good or service
No purely financial transactions
Real GDP vs. Nominal GDP
Real GDP in Year 1= (nominal GDP* 100)/ Price
Index
Output Growth= (real GDP in Year 2 – real GDP
in Year 1)/ real GDP in Year 1 * 100
Inflation
Cost-push inflation: inflation created when an
increase in the cost of production (wages or raw
materials) shifts the short-run AS curve to the
left; tends to push prices up while reducing the
level of real GDP at the same time (stagflation)
Demand-pull inflation: inflation that follows
from an increase in aggregate demand, which
will cause equilibrium real GDP (Y) to increase
and the equilibrium price level (P) to increase.
Inflation
Anticipated inflation- built in and
expected to occur
Unanticipated inflation- not expected or
unforeseen
Boot-leather costs/ menu costs
Fishers= Nominal interest rate=real
interest rate + inflation
Real interest rate= nominal - inflation