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WELCOME BACK TO USM !
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For those obtained B- and
below….study smarter,
pleaseeeeeeee !
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
MACROECONOMICS
(ATW108)
Venue: DKV
Tute: TBA
Dr. Ema Izati bt Zull Kepili
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
24-3
AIM
MACRO  A+
LO
24-4
On TUTE
• Different approach
• Group presentation !!!
• So, get a group of 4-5 (I choose or u choose?)
• 2-3 groups will present the tute answers.
• I will point out which group will present in
which week.
LO
Chapter 24
An Introduction to
Macroeconomics
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
24-6LO
24-7LO
24-8LO
24-9
By the end of this class/sem, you
SHOULD be able to…
• LO1. Explain why economists focus on GDP, inflation, and
unemployment when assessing the health of the entire economy.
• LO2. Discuss why sustained increases in living standards are a
historically recent phenomenon.
• LO3. Identify why saving and investment are key factors in
promoting rising living standards.
• LO4. Describe why economists believe that shocks and sticky
prices are responsible for short-run fluctuations in output and
employment
• LO5. Characterize the degree to which various prices in the
economy are sticky.
LO
24-10
• Macro concerns with: long-run growth &
short-run fluctuations (in output &
employment)
• S/run = business cycle
• Closely related because they happen
simultaneously.
LO
24-11
Performance and Policy
• Business Cycle
• Recession
• (a period where output and living standards
decline)
• What is the opposite of recession?
• How to measure output?
• How to measure performance?
• How to evaluates how our economies are
operating?
LO1
24-12
GDP (Gross Domestic Product;
KDN)
LO
measures the value
of final goods and
services produced
within the borders of
a country during a
specific period of
time, usually a year
Nominal GDP
measures at their
current prices &
statistically
eliminating the price
changes that
occurred over time.
Per person output
24-13
Unemployment
• High rates of unemployment are undesirable
because they indicate that a large portion of
the workforce is not producing
• 4% is considered ok.
• Students = unemployed?
LO
24-14
Inflation
• High levels of inflation mean that it will cost
the average family more to purchase the same
goods and services.
• What is Malaysia’s inflation rate ?
• Opposite of inflation?
• Hyperinflation?
LO
24-15
As macroeconomists, you must
answer these questions…
• Can governments:
• Promote economic growth?
• Reduce severity of recession?
• Is monetary or fiscal policy more effective at
mitigating (reducing) recession?
• Is there a tradeoff between inflation and
unemployment?
• Is anticipated or unanticipated government
policy more effective?
LO1
24-16LO
24-17
Performance and Policy
• Output growth
• 2.7% per year 1995-2007
• U.S. unemployment rate
• 9.1 in 2011
• 17.9% in Greece, 3.5% in S. Korea, 9.3% in France, etc.
• U.S. inflation rate
• 3% in 2011
• 1.3% in Norway, 14% in Kenya, 21% in Argentina, etc.
LO1
24-18
Modern Economic Growth
• Refers to era post Industrial Revolution (using
technology/machines to produce)
• It has increased the std of living of a person.
• Prior to IR, country depends on traditional econ
(agri) with no advancement in machinery, therefore
no growth in living standards
• Modern economic growth
• Output per person rises
• Not experienced by all countries
• (Msia vs the Philippines vs Trinidad Tobago)
LO2
24-19
Global
Perspective
LO2
24-20
Savings and Investment
• Conventional wisdom: To be successful in the
future, you have to save today.
• Saving occurs when
• Current consumption < current output
• (Perbelanjaan mesti kurang dari hasil)
• Trade-off current for future consumption
• Investment occurs when
• resources are devoted to increasing future output
• Financial investment & Economic investment
• H/hold = source of savings
• Business = source of investorsLO3
24-21
What is the ultimate problem in
managing economics?
LO
24-22
What is the ultimate problem in
managing economics?
FUTURE
(nobody knows what
future holds)
LO
24-23
Uncertainty, Expectations, and
Shocks
• Future = uncertain = decisions on savings &
investment will also be uncertain.
• Shocks happen when unexpected situation occur,
therefore affect investment.
• Eg: War, drastic climate change, earthquake.
• Demand shocks - unexpected changes in the
demand for goods and services
• Supply shocks - unexpected changes in the supply of
goods and services.
LO4
24-24
Uncertainty, Expectations, and
Shocks
• If prices of good are flexible, the market price is
adjustable to unexpected changes in demand.
• In s/run, production remains OK, sales OK,
unemployment OK.
• BUT, prices RARELY flexible. It normally FIXED (sticky
price).
• Thus, in order to ensure s/run economy does not
fluctuate much, business must ‘play’ around with sales,
technology, unemployment, or maintain inventory.
LO4
24-25
Demand Shocks
Cars per week
Price
DM
DL
DH
900
$40,000
$37,000
$35,000
Flexible Prices
LO4
24-26
Demand Shocks
Cars per week
DM
DL
DH
700 900 1150
$37,000
Fixed Prices
Price
LO4
24-27
Sticky Prices
LO5
Item Months
Coin-operated laundry
machines
46.4
Newspapers 29.9
Haircuts 25.5
Taxi fare 19.7
Veterinary services 14.9
Magazines 11.2
Computer software 5.5
Beer 4.3
Microwaves ovens 3.0
Milk 2.4
Electricity 1.8
Airline tickets 1.0
Gasoline 0.6
Source: Mark Bils and Peter J. Klenow, “Some Evidence on the Importance of Sticky Prices”, Journal of Political Economy,
October 2004, pp 947-985, Used with permission of The University of Chicago Press.
Flexi or sticky?
24-28
Sticky Prices
• Many prices are sticky in the short run
• Consumers prefer stable prices
• Firms want to avoid price wars
• All prices are flexible in the long run
• Firms adjust to unexpected, but permanent
changes in demand
LO5
24-29
Debating the Great Recession
• The Minksy Explanation: Euphoric Bubbles
• The Austrian Explanation: Excessively Low
Interest Rates
• The Stimulus Solution
• The Structural Solution

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Ema ATW108_24

  • 1. WELCOME BACK TO USM ! Big CONGRATS to those who obtained A, A-, B+ & B For those obtained B- and below….study smarter, pleaseeeeeeee ! McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
  • 2. MACROECONOMICS (ATW108) Venue: DKV Tute: TBA Dr. Ema Izati bt Zull Kepili McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
  • 4. 24-4 On TUTE • Different approach • Group presentation !!! • So, get a group of 4-5 (I choose or u choose?) • 2-3 groups will present the tute answers. • I will point out which group will present in which week. LO
  • 5. Chapter 24 An Introduction to Macroeconomics Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
  • 9. 24-9 By the end of this class/sem, you SHOULD be able to… • LO1. Explain why economists focus on GDP, inflation, and unemployment when assessing the health of the entire economy. • LO2. Discuss why sustained increases in living standards are a historically recent phenomenon. • LO3. Identify why saving and investment are key factors in promoting rising living standards. • LO4. Describe why economists believe that shocks and sticky prices are responsible for short-run fluctuations in output and employment • LO5. Characterize the degree to which various prices in the economy are sticky. LO
  • 10. 24-10 • Macro concerns with: long-run growth & short-run fluctuations (in output & employment) • S/run = business cycle • Closely related because they happen simultaneously. LO
  • 11. 24-11 Performance and Policy • Business Cycle • Recession • (a period where output and living standards decline) • What is the opposite of recession? • How to measure output? • How to measure performance? • How to evaluates how our economies are operating? LO1
  • 12. 24-12 GDP (Gross Domestic Product; KDN) LO measures the value of final goods and services produced within the borders of a country during a specific period of time, usually a year Nominal GDP measures at their current prices & statistically eliminating the price changes that occurred over time. Per person output
  • 13. 24-13 Unemployment • High rates of unemployment are undesirable because they indicate that a large portion of the workforce is not producing • 4% is considered ok. • Students = unemployed? LO
  • 14. 24-14 Inflation • High levels of inflation mean that it will cost the average family more to purchase the same goods and services. • What is Malaysia’s inflation rate ? • Opposite of inflation? • Hyperinflation? LO
  • 15. 24-15 As macroeconomists, you must answer these questions… • Can governments: • Promote economic growth? • Reduce severity of recession? • Is monetary or fiscal policy more effective at mitigating (reducing) recession? • Is there a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment? • Is anticipated or unanticipated government policy more effective? LO1
  • 17. 24-17 Performance and Policy • Output growth • 2.7% per year 1995-2007 • U.S. unemployment rate • 9.1 in 2011 • 17.9% in Greece, 3.5% in S. Korea, 9.3% in France, etc. • U.S. inflation rate • 3% in 2011 • 1.3% in Norway, 14% in Kenya, 21% in Argentina, etc. LO1
  • 18. 24-18 Modern Economic Growth • Refers to era post Industrial Revolution (using technology/machines to produce) • It has increased the std of living of a person. • Prior to IR, country depends on traditional econ (agri) with no advancement in machinery, therefore no growth in living standards • Modern economic growth • Output per person rises • Not experienced by all countries • (Msia vs the Philippines vs Trinidad Tobago) LO2
  • 20. 24-20 Savings and Investment • Conventional wisdom: To be successful in the future, you have to save today. • Saving occurs when • Current consumption < current output • (Perbelanjaan mesti kurang dari hasil) • Trade-off current for future consumption • Investment occurs when • resources are devoted to increasing future output • Financial investment & Economic investment • H/hold = source of savings • Business = source of investorsLO3
  • 21. 24-21 What is the ultimate problem in managing economics? LO
  • 22. 24-22 What is the ultimate problem in managing economics? FUTURE (nobody knows what future holds) LO
  • 23. 24-23 Uncertainty, Expectations, and Shocks • Future = uncertain = decisions on savings & investment will also be uncertain. • Shocks happen when unexpected situation occur, therefore affect investment. • Eg: War, drastic climate change, earthquake. • Demand shocks - unexpected changes in the demand for goods and services • Supply shocks - unexpected changes in the supply of goods and services. LO4
  • 24. 24-24 Uncertainty, Expectations, and Shocks • If prices of good are flexible, the market price is adjustable to unexpected changes in demand. • In s/run, production remains OK, sales OK, unemployment OK. • BUT, prices RARELY flexible. It normally FIXED (sticky price). • Thus, in order to ensure s/run economy does not fluctuate much, business must ‘play’ around with sales, technology, unemployment, or maintain inventory. LO4
  • 25. 24-25 Demand Shocks Cars per week Price DM DL DH 900 $40,000 $37,000 $35,000 Flexible Prices LO4
  • 26. 24-26 Demand Shocks Cars per week DM DL DH 700 900 1150 $37,000 Fixed Prices Price LO4
  • 27. 24-27 Sticky Prices LO5 Item Months Coin-operated laundry machines 46.4 Newspapers 29.9 Haircuts 25.5 Taxi fare 19.7 Veterinary services 14.9 Magazines 11.2 Computer software 5.5 Beer 4.3 Microwaves ovens 3.0 Milk 2.4 Electricity 1.8 Airline tickets 1.0 Gasoline 0.6 Source: Mark Bils and Peter J. Klenow, “Some Evidence on the Importance of Sticky Prices”, Journal of Political Economy, October 2004, pp 947-985, Used with permission of The University of Chicago Press. Flexi or sticky?
  • 28. 24-28 Sticky Prices • Many prices are sticky in the short run • Consumers prefer stable prices • Firms want to avoid price wars • All prices are flexible in the long run • Firms adjust to unexpected, but permanent changes in demand LO5
  • 29. 24-29 Debating the Great Recession • The Minksy Explanation: Euphoric Bubbles • The Austrian Explanation: Excessively Low Interest Rates • The Stimulus Solution • The Structural Solution

Editor's Notes

  1. In this chapter, we investigate the basic variables that are used to evaluate the progress of an economy, including facts of the economy. We will examine the role of savings and investment in the growth of an economy and how uncertainty and demand and supply shocks impact the economy. When looking at demand shocks, we will compare outcomes based on flexible and sticky prices.
  2. Fluctuations in output and employment are often referred to as the business cycle. A recession is a period where output and living standards decline; what precisely occurred in 2007 until 2009, what has come to be called the Great Recession. There are many different measures used by economists to evaluate how economies operate and how their performances might be improved. Chief among these are real GDP, unemployment, and inflation. Real GDP (gross domestic product) measures the value of final goods and services produced within the borders of a country during a specific period of time, usually a year. Real GDP is calculated by taking nominal GDP, which measures the dollar value of the goods and services at their current prices, and statistically eliminating the price changes that have occurred over time. Unemployment is another important measure. High rates of unemployment are undesirable because they indicate that a large portion of the workforce is not producing. Inflation, the third measure, looks at the increases in the overall level of prices. High levels of inflation mean that it will cost the average family more to purchase the same goods and services.
  3. Macroeconomic models are used to clarify many important questions about the power and limits of government economic policy. The answers to these questions are critical because countries experience vastly different economic results at different times. The models help explain why large differences occur and how government policies can influence rates of growth, unemployment, and inflation.
  4. These rates reflect the performance of the economy in the United States. When compared with other countries during the same period, we see vastly different results.
  5. The Industrial Revolution created a major shift in economic growth. Output began to rise much faster than population growth, leading to ever-increasing living standards in the industrialized countries. In countries that were not industrialized but rather still relied on agricultural industries, the growth rates tended to be much slower. This led to great differences today in the living standards of countries.
  6. This Global Perspective demonstrates the disparity of GDP that exists in the world today. The citizens of the richest nations have a standard of living more than 50 times higher than the citizens of the poorest countries. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, this gap was much narrower as countries were more equal.
  7. At the heart of economic growth is the principle that to raise standards of living over time, an economy must devote some of its current output to increasing future output. This requires both saving and investment. Saving occurs when current consumption is less than current output, and investment occurs when resources are devoted to increasing future output. While households are the principal source of savings, businesses are the principal economic investors. The savings of households are collected by banks and other financial institutions which lend the funds to businesses who can invest it in equipment, factories, and other capital goods.
  8. No one knows what the future holds. This uncertainty complicates decisions about savings and investments. Shocks occur when unexpected situations occur. Economies are exposed to both demand shocks and supply shocks. Demand shocks are unexpected changes in the demand for goods and services, while supply shocks involve unexpected changes in the supply of goods and services. These shocks can be caused by many factors.
  9. If prices are flexible, the market price will be able to adjust to unexpected changes in demand. There would be no short-run fluctuations in output, production levels would remain constant, and unemployment levels would remain the same. In reality, many prices are inflexible and not able to change rapidly in response to unexpected demand changes. Since the price cannot change, businesses must pursue other avenues such as changing production to match the demand. They may store inventory to help with unexpected surges in demand, but this is very costly.
  10. In this graph, we see that under flexible prices, production will stay the same and demand will shift in response to the demand shock. Price is able to adjust either up or down depending on if there is a positive or negative demand shock.
  11. In this graph, we see what happens when prices are not flexible. Since the price is fixed, the shift in the demand curve causes a change in the units supplied at that price level. When the demand shifts downward, the economy will suffer as firms that make the goods will cut production, lay off workers, and cause falling GDP and rising unemployment.
  12. Not all prices are sticky or slow to change. Many commodities such as corn, oil, and natural gas feature extremely flexible prices and can literally react in seconds to changes in supply and demand. Prices for final goods and services consumed by people tend to be quite sticky. The degree of the stickiness can be measured by looking at the length of time between the change in the market and the price changes in goods and services. This table illustrates the stickiness of some common goods and services.
  13. In the long run view, all prices are flexible and price stickiness will moderate. Even if a firm must make short run adjustments to adapt to shocks, in the long run it does not have to stick with that policy.
  14. Economists disagreed vigorously about the causes of the Great Recession and the best ways to speed a recovery. Hyman Minksy believed that severe recessions are often preceded by asset-price bubbles—periods during which euphoria and debt-fueled speculation cause the price of one or more financial assets to irrationally skyrocket before collapsing down to more realistic levels. Economists of the so-called Austrian School also blame bubbles for severe recessions, but they put the blame for bubbles not on euphoria but on government actions that they say keep interest rates too low. Regarding solutions, the opinion in favor of government stimulus was the most commonly held view among economists and the government in fact did push interest rates very low while also massively increasing government spending. Other economists believed that the economy needed a structural adjustment. They wanted the government to mostly hang back, let inefficient firms go bankrupt, and allow the invisible hand to reallocate resources.