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Title: ECONOMICS%20why%20should%20we%20study%20it?


1
ECONOMICSwhy should we study it?
2
Economic development quality of life
  • Life expectancy is strongly correlated with
    economic activity (GDP per capita, based on PPP)
  • Using WDI data for 2004, the correlation
    coefficient between the life expectancy at birth
    and the GDP per capita, PPP method 0.63
  • The statistical relationship can be approximated
    by the following expression (click here for the
    source file)

This suggests that 1319 in GDP per capita
translates into 1 year difference in expected
lifespan
3
Economics
  • Defining Economics
  • Social Science
  • Unlimited Wants
  • Scarce Resources
  • Efficiency
  • What to Produce (allocative efficiency)
  • How to Produce (productive efficiency)
  • For Whom to Produce (allocative efficiency)

4
Economic Resources
  • Agricultural Economy (Feudalism)
  • Labor
  • Immigration, population growth
  • Land
  • Inclusive of natural resources
  • Industrialization (Capitalism)
  • Capital
  • Encouragement of saving and capital formation
    (IRA)
  • Advanced Industrialization and Post Industrial
  • Human Capital
  • Subsidized education
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Establishing favorable business environment

5
Economic systems
  • Capitalism
  • Socialism
  • Communism
  • These systems differ in the allocation of the
    ownership of productive resources
  • The differences in these systems can also be
    formulated in terms of how they address the
    fundamental questions (e.g. command economy
    versus market economy)
  • Feudalism
  • Mercantilism

6
Capitalism
  • Natural emergence
  • Adam Smiths invisible hand concept
  • Simplified role of the government
  • Institutional support for economic activity
  • Property rights laws
  • Stable political system
  • Well defined legal system
  • Transparent business regulations
  • System of checks and balances for govt officials

7
Socialism
  • Philosophical Foundation
  • Socialist Movement of the mid XIX century
  • Role of the government
  • Includes economic decisions in terms of
    allocation of resources and output, and possibly
    production

8
Modern Economies
  • Mixed system (capitalism socialism)
  • EU versus US versus RU versus China

General government final consumption expenditure ( of GDP) in 2001 General government final consumption expenditure ( of GDP) in 2001
Switzerland 13.31
China 13.69
United States 14.23
Russian Federation 14.32
Italy 18.47
Germany 19.06
France 23.27
Sweden 26.66
Source World Bank, WDI 2003
9
Unemployment rate comparison
Unemployment, total ( of total labor force), 2000 Unemployment, total ( of total labor force), 2000
Switzerland 2.7
China 3.1
United States 4.1
Sweden 5.1
Germany 8.1
France 10.0
Italy 10.8
Russian Federation 11.4
Source World Bank, WDI 2003
10
The Concept of Cost in Economics
  • Every undertaken activity has a foregone
    sacrifice associated with it
  • Opportunity Cost
  • The value of the next BEST (highest valued)
    alternative (the value of the sacrifice that
    would have become the next choice)
  • E.g. opportunity cost of this class
  • E.g. Opportunity cost of the Colanders book
    (relative price)
  • E.g. Opportunity cost of physical capital

11
The world of trade-offs
  • Budget Constraint and Relative Price
  • Production Possibilities Frontier

12
Gains from Trade
  • Specialization and increased output
  • Two-country two-product world
  • Absolute advantage principle
  • Why specialize in the production of something
    that is cheaper to purchase from abroad?
  • Comparative advantage principle
  • Specialize in the production of those products in
    which you have the lowest relative (opportunity)
    cost of production
  • Shape of PPF and lack of complete specialization
  • US trade data available on BEA website at
    http//www.bea.gov/bea/di/home/trade.htm

13
Trade ( of GDP) Trade ( of GDP)
2003

World 47.84
Upper middle income 68.53
Middle income 61.98
High income 45.29
Lower middle income 57.10
Low income 44.61
Sub-Saharan Africa 64.28
South Asia 33.33
Middle East North Africa 58.16
Latin America Caribbean 45.53
European Monetary Union 68.25
East Asia Pacific 74.17
United States 23.66

Definition
Trade is the sum of exports and imports of goods and services measured as a share of gross domestic product. Trade is the sum of exports and imports of goods and services measured as a share of gross domestic product.
For the US see BEA
14
Globalization and International Risks
  • Globalization economic integration
  • Trade
  • Investment
  • Labor mobility
  • Economic union (EU)
  • Globalization and spread of economic recessions

Correlation in economic growth (GDP growth rates
1990-2005) between the US and some of its major
trading partners)
  China Canada Mexico United States
China 1
Canada 0.038296 1
Mexico -0.21368 0.126047 1
United States 0.174459 0.759405 0.391163 1
15
Markets
  • Defining a market
  • Product definition (and competition)
  • Geographical boundaries (internet, shipping cost
    reduction globalization and outsourcing)
  • Market forces Buyers (demand) versus Sellers
    (supply)
  • Price and quantity as the outcome

16
demand
  • Quantity f (price, other factors)
  • Price and the Law of Demand
  • Other factors
  • Income (normal versus inferior)
  • Related in consumption goods
  • Substitutes
  • Complements
  • Expectations about the future
  • OTHER FACTORS

17
supply
  • Quantity f ( price, other factors)
  • Price and the Law of Supply
  • Other factors
  • Costs of Production (MC, and price as MB)
  • Goods related in production
  • Substitutes (agricultural products)
  • Note, identical to costs of production since is
    based on opportunity cost concept
  • Complements (like gold and silver)
  • Producer expectations of future prices
  • Other factors

18
Market equilibrium
  • Qs Qd
  • Shortage and surplus as unstable states and the
    stability property of the equilibrium
  • Market efficiency
  • Shifts in demand and supply
  • Is the equilibrium really efficient?
  • Productive and allocative efficiency

19
Market example ForEx
  • How can the US run a trade deficit consistently?
    Or, differently put, can one live on credit
    forever?

20
Does Dollar Matter?
21
Should We Be Concerned With The Fluctuating
Dollar?
  • TRADE and Currency Fluctuations
  • Price Changes
  • Standard of Living
  • Commodity Prices

Date USD per EURO USD Price of OIL Euro Price of OIL
March 1, 2002 0.8652 22.40 25.89
March 3, 2003 1.0835 35.88 33.11
March 1, 2004 1.2431 36.86 29.65
March 1, 2005 1.3189 51.68 39.18
change over the period 52.44 130.71 51.35
22
The ForEx market
  • Demand for the USD
  • US Exports
  • Goods
  • Services (tourism)
  • Foreign Investment into US
  • US Financial markets
  • Direct investment
  • Central Banks
  • Speculation
  • Supply of the USD
  • Imports to the US
  • Goods (trade)
  • Services (tourism)
  • US investment abroad
  • Foreign Financial Markets
  • Direct investment abroad
  • Central Banks
  • Speculation

23
The Interesting 90s
  • 1991-92 Collapse of the USSR Block, beginning of
    the Transitional Recession in Eastern Europe
  • 1994 Mexican Currency Crisis
  • 1991(2)-95 The Balkan Wars
  • 1998 Recession in Japan
  • 1997 (July) Beginning of the Asian Financial
    Crisis
  • 1998 major Rouble Crisis

US ECONOMY US ECONOMY US ECONOMY
  average rates average rates
  1992-2000 2001-2004
Real GDP 3.7 2.5
Gross Domestic Private Investment 8.7 1.8
Non-Residential Investment 9.1 0.2
24
The market for USD in the 90s
P of USD
Influx of investment stimulated Demand

D
S
Increase in imports stimulated Supply
Demand Effect Dominated (thus positively
effecting consumers standard of living)
25
The post 90s era
  • United Europe
  • 10 New Countries Entered the Union on May 1st of
    2004, bringing the total number of member states
    to 25, with combined population of over 430
    million (US population is 293 million).
  • Strong Growth in Russia and China
  • Emerging Economies of Brazil and India
  • Threat of Terrorism to the US
  • Continuous Growth in US Trade Deficit
  • More Recently, the French and Dutch Referendums
    on the EU Constitution

26
The BIG picture
  • Rise in Imports ? Increase in Supply ?
    Depreciation
  • Rise in Exports ? Increase in Demand ?
    Appreciation
  • Influx of Investment ? Increase in Demand ?
    Appreciation
  • Outflow of Investment ? Increase in Supply ?
    Depreciation
  • BALANCE OF PAYMENTS An Economys International
    Balance Sheet (www.bea.gov)

27
  • Demand for the dollar
  • different economic agents that purchase the
    dollar
  • Foreigners who wish to purchase US goods or
    services, foreign
  • tourists who wish to travel to the US (US
    exports)
  • Foreigners who wish to invest in the US (higher
    US interest rate, attractive US stock market
    returns)
  • Supply of the dollar
  • different economic agents that sell the dollar
  • US consumers/firms that want to purchase foreign
    goods or services, US tourists who wish to travel
    abroad (US imports)
  • US residents who wish to invest abroad (higher
    interest rates abroad, etc.)
  • The dollar will appreciate if demand exceeds
    supply at the current exchange rate. The increase
    in the demand creates a temporary shortage, but
    that shortage disappears due to the increase in
    the price. The price adjustment is the markets
    correction mechanism to the changing conditions.
  • Note that when you purchase a foreign made
    product, the cost of the production of that
    product is paid in foreign currency, hence
    somewhere between the production process and your
    purchase someone would have to convert your
    currency into that foreign currency in order to
    pay for the production.

28
Measuring Economic Activity
  • OUTPUT
  • EMPLOYMENT
  • INFLATION

29
  • Gross Domestic Product
  • the total market value of all final goods and
    services produced by factors of production
    located within a nations borders over a period
    of time (usually one year)
  • Gross National Product
  • the total market value of all final goods and
    services produced by factors of production owned
    by a nation over a period of time (usually one
    year)

30
Output
  • Measuring production
  • Time period
  • Final goods and services (value added)
  • Market prices
  • Defining an economy (geographical boundaries
    versus resource ownership)
  • Gross Domestic Product
  • Gross National Product
  • www.bea.gov Table 1.7.5
  • http//www.bea.gov/bea/dn/nipaweb/TableView.asp?Se
    lectedTable43FirstYear2003LastYear2005FreqQ
    tr

31
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32
GDP per capita in 2005 (using 2000 USD)
Greater than 9910 (2445, 9910) (1172,
2445) (430, 1172) less than 430 no data
available
33
The World Economy in 2004
Source WDI 2006, World Bank
34
2003 Health expenditures per capita (current USD) 2004 cases of TB per 100,000 2004 Internet Users per 1000 Life expectancy at birth Mobile phone subscribers per 1000 Infant mortality rate per 1000 PCs per 1000 people
World 587.79 139.47 139.93 67.32 279.34 54.09 129.77
Upper middle income 279.96 112.15 159.33 69.15 484.18 23.36 121.75
Middle income 116.29 113.63 91.83 70.22 293.61 30.02 60.86
High income 3449.40 17.11 544.93 78.74 771.72 6.12 574.14
Lower middle income 77.49 113.97 75.91 70.47 248.86 31.58 46.20
Low income 29.62 223.99 24.34 58.68 42.15 79.45 11.29
Sub-Saharan Africa 36.42 363.14 19.44 46.22 74.08 100.47 15.05
South Asia 23.78 177.21 26.14 63.41 41.31 66.41 12.14
Middle East North Africa 92.41 53.91 58.00 69.35 128.61 44.09 48.55
Latin America Caribbean 221.68 63.51 114.53 72.19 318.36 26.52 92.40
European Monetary Union 2552.10 13.00 443.22 79.38 904.19 4.11 420.84
East Asia Pacific 64.11 137.75 73.79 70.28 243.47 29.16 38.19
United States 5711.00 4.70 629.99 77.43 616.73 6.70 749.18
Correlation between life expectancy and the
standard of living as measured by the GDP per
capita (PPP) is positive 0.65, see the stats
table correlation between GDP per capita and
life expectancy is 0.57 (based on the 2005 data
from WDI of 2007
35
The planet Earth in the darkness of the night
Image source NASA (http//antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/
apod/ap001127.html)
36
Issues in GDP computation/comparison
  • Survey of economic activity
  • Self-employed/small businesses
  • Market prices and the government sector
  • Illegal activities
  • Underground economy (shadow sector)
  • Tax compliance
  • Defining legal vs illegal
  • Labor force participation/wages
  • Household vs market setting

37
Equivalence between expenditure and income
approaches in GDP computation
  • Circular flaw concept
  • Production of output creates income
  • Income finances consumption of output

Input markets
Wages, interest, profits
Labor, capital
Businesses
Households
prices
output
Output markets
38
Income output
  • GDP GNP NET FOREIGN INCOME
  • NI GNP depreciation indirect business taxes
  • PI NI - (Transfer payments from Govt, net
    non-business interest income) (Social Insurance
    tax, corporate retained earnings)
  • DI PI Personal Taxes
  • See Table 1.7.5 (www.bea.gov)

39
Income approach
  • Disposable Income (in 2004 8,646.9 billion )
  • Income that households actually receive
  • Available for consumption and saving
  • Personal Income (in 2004 9,689.6 billion )
  • Household income prior to personal taxes and
    transfers
  • PI DI Personal Taxes
  • National Income
  • Summation of factor payments
  • Employment compensation
  • Interest received from private business
  • Profits
  • Rental income
  • NI PI (Transfer payments from Govt, net
    non-business interest income) (Social Insurance
    tax, corporate retained earnings)
  • Gross National Product
  • GNP NI Dep.Allowance Indirect Business
    Taxes
  • GDP GNP - Net Foreign Income

40
Expenditures Approach
  • Personal Consumption
  • Goods
  • Durable
  • Non-durable
  • Services
  • Gross Private Domestic Investment
  • Fixed Investment
  • Non-residential
  • Structure
  • Equipment and software
  • Residential
  • Business
  • Government Spending (all levels)
  • Exports of goods and services
  • Imports of goods and services
  • http//www.bea.gov/bea/dn/nipaweb/TableView.asp?Se
    lectedTable35FirstYear2003LastYear2005FreqQ
    tr Table 1.5.5

41
employment
  • Labor force
  • Labor force participation rate
  • Unemployment
  • Unemployment rate
  • BLS www.bls.gov US statistics
  • Industry data ftp//ftp.bls.gov/pub/suppl/empsit.
    ceseeb3.txt
  • Categorizing unemployment
  • Cyclical
  • Structural
  • Seasonal
  • Frictional

42
More on unemployment
  • Accuracy of unemployment statistics
  • Discouraged worker phenomenon
  • Two surveys

Statistics for the US economy For March-July 2003
(seasonally adjusted). Source BLS
Discouraged Worker Phenomenon
43
Historical unemployment rate in the US
44
inflation
  • Rate of growth of the average of all prices
  • Average price weighted price
  • Weight represents relative importance of the good
  • Average price converted into index price index
  • Measuring inflation
  • Consumer Price Index (CPI)
  • www.bls.gov (http//www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.t
    01.htm)
  • Producer Price Index (PPI)
  • www.bls.gov

45
Real versus Nominal Measures
US Real and Nominal GDP. Source BEA
46
Costs of (unanticipated) Inflation
  • Menu Cost
  • Redistribution of Wealth
  • Changes in Standard of Living
  • Inflation and relative prices
  • High inflation tends to be more volatile
  • Increased Uncertainty in Forward Looking
    Financial Arraignments
  • Impact on the Exchange Rate (Purchasing Price
    Parity for internationally traded goods)

47
Growth in Real GDP
Recessions in Recent US history 2000-2001 QIII
00 QI01 QIII01 1990-1991 QIV90 QI91 19
81-1982 QIV81 QI82 (QIII82) 1980 QII
QIII 1974-1975 QIII74 QIV74 QI75
48
Real Business Cycle - US Real GDP 1974-2006
49
Unemployment Rate 1974-2006
Source BLS
50
Core Consumer Prices
Source BLS
51
The Business Cycle
  • Glut of goods and subsequent reduction in
    production

Real GDP (per capita)
time
Recession a period of two or more consecutive
quarters of decline in real output
52
Business Cycle
  • Relationship between Output, Employment, and
    Inflation
  • Causes of inflation
  • Natural unemployment
  • Other sources monetary policy, currency
    depreciation, decreases in the supply of
    resources oil .
  • Business Inventories and start of recession
  • Deflation in the costs of production
  • Foreign economy effect
  • Change in confidence

53
business cycle, unemployment and inflation
This slide merely provides you with
some definitions and a basic discussion (for your
reading)
  • Inflation and unemployment are related. Inflation
    will decline, and even deflation may begin when
    unemployment rate is above the natural rate of
    unemployment. In fact, the natural rate of
    unemployment is defined as the rate of
    unemployment at which the inflation rate remains
    constant. Another way of defining the natural
    rate of unemployment is to simply tie it to the
    level of real GDP. Natural rate of unemployment
    is the rate of unemployment that occurs when the
    real GDP is at its long term trend. Note that at
    the start of a recession the unemployment rate
    may still be above the natural rate of
    unemployment and hence the rate of inflation may
    continue to increase. Similarly, early in the
    recovery, unemployment rate remains higher than
    the natural rate of unemployment which may
    further reduce inflation.
  • Inflation is dependent on unemployment. If
    unemployment is high then there is little
    pressure on prices to go up, but if unemployment
    is low, then people can bid up prices because
    they have disposable incomes. There are some
    additional factors that can change inflation,
    including currency fluctuations, but that topic
    will be covered later in the semester when we get
    to the international finance section.

54
Can future be predicted? Magical art of
forecasting
  • Examples of Leading Indicators
  • Average work hours in manufacturing
  • Business inventories
  • New orders for non-defense capital goods
  • Sales tax receipts
  • Stock index (index futures)
  • Construction Employment
  • Residential permits
  • Examples of Coincident Indicators
  • Total Tax Receipts
  • Corporate Income Tax Receipts
  • Average weekly claims for unemployment insurance
  • Examples of Lagging Indicators
  • Unemployment Rate

55
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56
1994 Mexican currency crisis
1997 - Asian financial crisis
1998 Russian currency
crisis Recession in Japan Slow Growth in Europe
57
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58
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59
Average Growth Rates by Component, 1996-2000
8
4
60
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61
Growth in components of Real GDP,
2000-2003 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
62
Jobless Recovery
Seasonally adjusted US unemployment rate Source
BEA
63
Economy of Atlanta in the recession and jobless
recovery
Source BLS
64
A side-note Job recovery in Atlanta
65
Aggregate Framework
  • GDP C I G X M
  • Relationship between income (GDP), expenditures
    and saving
  • Y C S
  • Consumption function C a mpc (Y)
  • Autonomous versus induced expenditures
  • a f (wealth, expectations, real interest,
    subsistence needs..)
  • Incorporating income and non-income taxes into
    consumption function
  • Solving for the GDP
  • Multiplier and its role

66
Autonomous Expenditures Induced Expenditures
Independent of current income Autonomous Consumption Consumption that does not depend on current income but depends on other factors (like future income, confidence, subsistence needs) Domestic Investment Is not a function of current income, but may be a function of future income, expected profitability, relative profitability, interest rate Government Spending Function of policy, and hence should not be considered as induced spending Exports Exports tend to be a function of economic condition of the importing country. The wealthier it is, the more likely it is to purchase more Function of current income Induced Consumption Consumption that is driven by current income Imports note that imports do depend on the current income level. We will buy more of all goods, domestic or foreign in our incomes increase. Thus, it is an induced expenditure, but we will ignore this in our class and treat it as autonomous! There are also other factors (other than income) that influence imports relative prices, and hence the exchange rate, preferences)
67
More on the multiplier simple example
  • Consider the following case
  • The level of private consumption spending is 500
    million
  • The level of investment is 100 million
  • Current government spending is 100 million
  • Exports 100 million Imports 50 million
  • Given this information we can conclude that the
    level of the GDP is 750 million. Now imagine that
    the government wants to increase that level to
    800 million. What can the government do?
  • Natural conclusion is to increase the government
    spending by 50 million to close the gap between
    the actual and targeted GDP, but that actually is
    wrong. This ignores the multiplier effect. Assume
    that the MPC is 0.8, in other words, 80 of the
    marginal dollar earned is directed into
    consumption, and hence becomes an income to
    someone else. In this case, using the math from
    our previous slides, the multiplier is 1/0.25.
    Thus, an increase in government spending
    (autonomous expenditures component) will increase
    the GDP by 5 times the initial change through
    the multiplication effect. In this case, an
    increase in government spending of only 10
    million to 110 million would suffice.

68
More on the previous example
  • Now consider the example from the previous slide,
    but assume that the investment level declines by
    5 million what will the implication to the GDP
    will be and what should the government do?
  • Note that investment is an autonomous component,
    and hence its decline will create a
    multiplication effect. The total decline will be
    25 million, hence the GDP declines to 725 million
  • If the government selects to offset this change
    in investment spending through government
    spending, the change would have to be exactly
    equal to the drop in investment, i.e. 5 million.
    Note that although this policy will cure the
    recession caused by the investment decline, it
    will create another problem, the size of the
    government sector relative to the private sector
    has just increased

69
Further complication note this slide will not
appear on the exam
  • Now, lets introduce income taxes.
  • C a mpc (Y t Y)
  • Here t represents the income tax rate, the rest
    of the function is the same
  • The new multiplier is 1/(1-mpc1-t)
  • Note that income tax tends to reduce the
    multiplier effect as it increases the flow out of
    the consumption cycle.
  • Income taxes also present a second fiscal policy
    instrument change in taxes
  • More complications can be introduced into the
    model, but as you can see their introduction does
    not complicate the math of the model

70
Multiplier
  • Dollar spent on domestic consumption becomes an
    income of domestic workers/capital owners
  • Marginal propensity to consume fraction of the
    next dollar earned that will be directed into
    consumption
  • Multiplier 1 / marginal leakage rate from the
    consumption stream

71
Through the so called wealth effect, recent
stock market gains have tended to foster
increases in aggregate demand beyond the
increases in supply. It is this imbalance that
contains the potential seeds of rising
inflationary pressures that could undermine the
current expansion. Our goal is to extend the
expansion by containing its imbalances and
avoiding the very recession that would complete
the business cycle. -Alan Greenspan,
January 13, 2000
  • Extending the demand-supply framework to the
    economy as a whole Aggregate Demand Aggregate
    Supply Model

Last two US recessions Recession of 2001
Decline in the Aggregate Demand Recession of
2007-2010 Decline in the Aggregate Demand
72
Stock Market and the Wealth Effect
WFE - YTD Monthly
How do such fluctuations in wealth effect the
economy? Can the effects be modeled and
understood?
73
Aggregate Demand
  • Demand for domestically produced goods and
    services aggregate across all sectors of the
    economy (the demand for the Real GDP)
  • AD C I G x m
  • U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of Economic
    Analysis - Real GDP

74
Constructing AD
Framework
U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of Economic
Analysis - Price Level
75
Constructing AD continued
Slope
76
Determinants of ADfactors that shift AD
  • Anything (other than the price level) that will
    cause changes in the expenditure components of
    the GDP

77
Examples of Determinants of AD
78
  • Why do we have a jobless recovery today?
  • Need for non-residential investment in job
    creation
  • U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of Economic
    Analysis - GDP growth
  • How can you explain what is going on with the
    investment function?
  • How would you incorporate the minimum wage
    increase into the model at this point?

79
Supply Side
Profit Function of a small perfectly competitive
firm (self-employed) versus a large firm with
labor contracts.
Profit Price x Output Wage x Labor
What is the real wage? How does it change?
3
1
P10
2
P2
8 hr 16 output
4 hr 8 output
80
Inflation does not matter in the long run (do we
take into consideration the inflation rates of
the 70s and 80s in our decisions today?) In
the long term, recessionary pressure translates
into deflation In the short term CPI
inflation/deflation causes real output changes
81
Long-Run Aggregate Supply
  • Capacity Based
  • Full employment (cyclical zero)
  • Long Run Equilibrium
  • Corresponds to the expansion path in the business
    cycle
  • Shifts
  • Economic development

82
Short-Run Aggregate Supply
  • Fixed input prices
  • Short Run Equilibrium
  • Corresponds to the actual business cycle
  • We are always in the short run equilibrium
  • Shift factors
  • Changes in input costs
  • Changes in input productivities

83
Supply Driven Recession
  • The Oil Crisis of the 1970s
  • Supply side threat with the rising oil prices in
    2008
  • Supply driven recessions are induced by rising
    input costs or reduced productivity
  • Consequences
  • Stagflation
  • Correction
  • Time cures all
  • Will redistribute wealth shares of output value
    will shift between the input suppliers
  • Rising price of fuel and Deltas labor
    negotiations in 2007.
  • Government Stabilization Policy

84
Demand Driven Recession
  • Recession of 2001 pull back in investment
    spending
  • Recession of 2007-2010 pull back in
    investment/consumption spending
  • The recessions of 2001 and 2007-2010 underscore
    the importance of asset bubbles

The wealth effect of a bubble burst
WFE - YTD Monthly
Recessions can be contagious Canada tends to
follow the US business cycle 2000 2009
Correlation between the US and Canadian GDP is
0.55
Consequences Deflation
85
Real GDP growth rate in 2000 World Bank
Development Indicators 2003
Less than 0.6 -0.6 lt . lt 0.8 0.8 lt / lt2.1
2.1 lt . lt 4.2 Over 4.2 No data available
86
Real GDP growth rate in 2001 World Bank
Development Indicators 2003
Less than 0.6 -0.6 lt . lt 0.8 0.8 lt / lt2.1
2.1 lt . lt 4.2 Over 4.2 No data available
87
Overheating
  • Short-run equilibrium above the capacity level
  • Demand rise
  • Usually induced by a bubble
  • Aggregate Demand rise in 2000

Through the so called wealth effect, recent
stock market gains have tended to foster
increases in aggregate demand beyond the
increases in supply. It is this imbalance that
contains the potential seeds of rising
inflationary pressures that could undermine the
current expansion. Our goal is to extend the
expansion by containing its imbalances and
avoiding the very recession that would complete
the business cycle. -Alan Greenspan,
January 13, 2000
88
How will each of the following affect the AD-AS
diagram?
  • Stock market growth
  • Fiscal expansionary policy
  • Increase in taxes
  • Capital investment

89
Classical View
  • The Invisible Hand logic
  • Flexible Economy
  • Dominated by small firms
  • Recessionary pressure translates into deflation
  • Price mechanism as a corrective tool
  • Rapid price adjustments
  • Says Law Supply Creates Its Own Demand

90
Keynesian Points
  • Price flexibility is too strong of an assumption
  • Non-flexible input prices in the short-run
    leading to output adjustments
  • Decline in Expenditures Components of the GDP
    (Aggregate Demand)
  • The Thrift Paradox
  • Consumption spending and other factors
  • Under-Production as an equilibrium in the
    short-run

91
Aggregate Supply
  • Long-Run
  • Classical view
  • Capacity level
  • Long-term Growth
  • Short-Run
  • Fixed input prices
  • Relationship between the price level and the
    output CPI and Q

92
equilibrium
  • Long-Run and Short-Run
  • Demand Driven Recession
  • Deflationary pressure
  • Long-run input cost adjustment
  • Possible need for government intervention in the
    short-run
  • Supply Driven Recession
  • Input cost rise
  • Inflationary pressure
  • Eliminating Recession through Demand Side Policy

93
Fiscal Stabilization Policy
  • Instruments
  • Government Spending
  • Taxes
  • Transfers
  • Budget
  • Ability to be targeted
  • State level
  • Municipality level

94
Drawbacks of Fiscal Expansionnote that this is
in chapter 30
  • crowding-out effects these refer to the
    replacement of one sector by another, in the case
    of expansionary fiscal policy, the public sector
    displaces the private sector
  • direct direct provision. GSU reduces the demand
    for Emory
  • indirect this works through the interest rate
    mechanism, expansionary fiscal policy results in
    government borrowing, the current tax cut and
    budget deficit is a perfect example of that,
    government borrowing may lead to an increase in
    the interest rates and hence higher costs for
    private sector investment
  • open-economy effect an increase in the interest
    rate due to government borrowing may cause an
    influx of foreign investment and therefore drive
    up the value of domestic currency
  • Time lags (decision, recognition, effect)

Ideally the second exam will be here
95
Monetary Side
  • MONEY
  • Functions of money
  • Medium of exchange
  • Unit of account
  • Store of value
  • Measuring the supply of money (liquidity and
    transaction principles)
  • M1
  • Cash, checking accounts, travelers checks
  • M2
  • M1savings accounts, CD accounts, money market
    accounts

96
Money Creation by Banks
  • Creation of money balances by banks
  • Fractional reserve system and lending
  • Money multiplier
  • Potential
  • Actual
  • Regulatory institutions
  • Federal Reserve Bank
  • FDIC

97
Monetary Policy
  • Federal Reserve Bank of the US (Central Bank)
  • Goal of the Policy
  • Influence consumption and investment spending
  • Change the exchange rate ? side effect more than
    a goal
  • Policy Instruments
  • Open Market Operations
  • Discount Rate
  • Reserve Requirements
  • Policy Operating Targets
  • Federal Funds Rate
  • Weaknesses of the Policy
  • Liquidity trap
  • Recognition/time lags

98
Economic Policy and the Exchange Rate Regime
  • Float
  • Monetary
  • Fiscal
  • Fixed
  • Monetary
  • Fiscal

99
Currency Trade and Exchange Regime
  • (History optional)
  • Floating Exchange Rate Regime
  • Currency Trade by Central Banks
  • (Forward looking instruments optional)
  • Fixed Exchange Rate Regime
  • Does Recent Dollar Depreciation Impact the Trade
    Deficit with CHINA?
  • Price Stabilization and Fixed Exchange Rate
    Regime
  • Risk to CB
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