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Title: Lecture Notes


1
Lecture Notes
  • October 7, 2003

2
Reminder
  • Midterm on Thursday
  • Last years midterm on the class page
  • On lecture notes, Ch. 5,6
  • Krugman not covered this midterm
  • start reading after midterm, if you havent
    already

3
Web site
  • Try the Prentice Hall web site for a PowerPoint
    presentation
  • (very slick compared to my lecture notes)
  • Also, self-correcting problem sets
  • Go to www.prenhall.com/osullivan
  • Choose our text (Macroeconomics Principles and
    Tools), Study Guide
  • Most of the questions are very easy!

4
Nominal, Real GDP
  • Nominal GDP GDP in current dollars
  • Thats what we have been talking about up to now.
  • Problem cant interpret it as an increase in
    real production prices might have been rising
  • Real GDP
  • Nominal GDP corrected for price change

5
How do you correct for price change?
  • Compute real GDP by valuing date-2 output USING
    DATE-1 PRICES.
  • That way changes in (real) GDP only occur as
    quantities produced change not prices.

6
Example
7
  • GDP deflator ratio of nominal to real GDP
  • Expressed as a
  • In the preceding example, GDP deflator would be
    110
  • Interpretation 10 inflation overall
  • This is the same inflation youd get if you just
    looked at the price of computers.
  • Calculation of GDP deflator is trivial if theres
    just one good.

8
Another example
9
Calculating GDP deflator
  • In this case nominal GDP is 20 in year 1, 39 in
    year 2
  • Real GDP is 27 in year 2
  • So the GDP deflator is 44.4.
  • You can think of this as an average of the rate
    of change of apple price (zero) and orange price
    (100).

10
Does GDP measure welfare?
  • Yes and no
  • Ignores non-market transactions
  • Think of the Montecito divorcee who marries the
    pool boy
  • Ignores externalities
  • Air pollution increases GDP through dry cleaners

11
  • Illegal transactions
  • Productivity change new products
  • Leisure isnt counted

12
  • You have to be careful about making international
    comparisons based on measured real GDP because of
    these distortions.
  • You might think you could compare Indias GDP per
    capita with US (adjusting by the exchange rate),
  • Can you live in the US on 1000/yr?
  • This would be very misleading
  • Conclusion dont take GDP too seriously

13
GDP (and other macroeconomic) data
  • FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data), compiled by
    Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
  • http//www.stls.frb.org/fred/

14
Chapter 6. Unemployment and Inflation
  • Unemployed doesnt have a job and (according to
    questionnaire) is actively seeking work.
  • Employed unemployed labor force
  • Unemployment rate unemployed / labor force
  • Labor force participation rate labor force as a
    of population over 16.

15
Issues in measuring, interpreting unemployment
  • To be unemployed, you have to be actively
    looking.
  • Discouraged workers quit looking, so theyre no
    longer unemployed.
  • They drop out of the labor force.
  • So discouraged worker effect may cause
    unemployment rate to drop!
  • In recessions unemployment rate may not rise
    much labor force drops.

16
Unemployment
  • Differs by groups
  • Young workers high
  • Minorities high
  • Men and women about the same
  • Single mothers have high unemployment rate
  • Reported unemployment is usually seasonally
    adjusted

17
Types of unemployment
  • Cyclical associated with the state of the
    economy (recession, prosperity)
  • Frictional Inevitable periods of temporary
    unemployment for people who are between jobs.
  • Structural Due to mismatch between workers and
    available jobs
  • The breakdown is frequently ambiguous,
    particularly between frictional and structural

18
Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • Economists dont associate full employment with
    an unemployment rate of 0
  • Because theres no way to achieve full employment
    so defined
  • Cant reduce frictional unemployment beyond a
    certain point
  • so its not a useful way to define full
    employment

19
  • By full employment economists often mean that the
    employment rate equals the natural rate.
  • Natural rate zero cyclical unemployment
  • So actual employment can be higher than full
    employment
  • Suggests measuring cyclical unemployment by
    defining an interval of time as full employment
  • The difference between actual unemployment in
    2003 (for example) and unemployment in the
    reference interval is cyclical unemployment.

20
Unemployment
  • Other things equal, low unemployment will lead to
    wage increases, inflation
  • High unemployment will lead to deflation
    (negative inflation)
  • At least according to some theories
  • Great Depression 25 unemployment deflation

21
Natural rate another definition
  • Leads to another definition of natural rate of
    unemployment that rate of unemployment at which
    there is no tendency for inflation to accelerate
    or decelerate
  • Note not zero inflation this definition deals
    with zero inflation change
  • Careful this makes clear that the natural rate
    of unemployment is a theoretical term you have
    to buy into some theories to use this term
  • If you dont think theres any relation between
    unemployment an inflation, you wouldnt want to
    try to answer the question What is the natural
    rate?

22
  • Most macroeconomists think there is a relation,
    so they are comfortable with the question.
  • Numerically, what is the natural rate?
  • Use statistical procedures to estimate natural
    rate
  • 4 to 5.5.

23
Conclusion
  • Even at full employment there is still
    frictional and structural unemployment
  • Natural rate may change over time
  • Example posting job vacancies might reduce
    frictional unemployment, thereby lowering the
    natural rate.
  • Education, relocation assistance
  • Natural rate hypothesis that change in
    inflation is related to the level of unemployment
  • If you allow for the possibility that the natural
    rate changes, its hard to test it.

24
  • Well see later in the course that aggregate
    demand management affects the actual unemployment
    for sure (at least in the short run)
  • It may or may not affect the natural rate (for
    example, because of loss of skills due to
    unemployment)

25
Inflation
  • Increase in prices
  • Dont confuse with high prices
  • Deflation decrease in prices
  • Measuring inflation
  • Why do it?
  • Because we want to distinguish real from nominal
    variables
  • We already spoke about GDP deflator
  • Its computed by dividing nominal GDP by a
    quantity index
  • CPI computes a price index directly

26
Consumer Price Index
  • Takes a fixed basket of goods
  • CPI at each year the cost of the basket that
    year relative to a base year
  • One measure of inflation change of CPI
  • Another measure of real GDP nominal GDP divided
    by CPI
  • Contrast deflator
  • Fixed basket of goods with CPI
  • CPI may overstate inflation
  • People buy less of goods with rising prices.

27
Example
28
CPI
  • Suppose that a market basket consists of 2 apples
    and 1 orange
  • Then CPI goes from 3 to 5, or a 67 increase
  • Compute the GDP deflator for this economy
  • Nominal GDP goes from 300 to 450
  • Real GDP as computed by a quantity index (as last
    week) stays at 300 (in 1998 dollars)
  • So the GDP deflator increases 50
  • Conclusion real GDP, and therefore real GDP
    growth, is different depending on whether its
    computed via the deflator or the CPI.

29
What happened here?
  • Price of apples went up, so people bought fewer
    apples and more oranges
  • CPI takes no account of this substitution away
    from the good with the rising price.
  • because its using a fixed market basket of goods
  • But the GDP deflator does.
  • In general, different price indices (here
    including the GDP deflator as a price index,
    which is a bit loose) give different rates of
    inflation, as this example indicates.

30
Importance of CPI
  • COLAs in labor contracts
  • (Cost of living adjustment)
  • Social security has a COLA

31
Bias in inflation measurement
  • Quality change sometimes easy to measure
    (haircuts)
  • Sometimes virtually impossible (particularly with
    services)
  • Think of bank services
  • Or medical care -- what if pills replace surgery?
  • Sometimes difficult but maybe possible (computers)

32
What the BLS does about quality change
  • (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
  • They do their best to measure quality change
    where theres some objective basis
  • One computer now is actually the equivalent of 2
    computers 3 years ago ...
  • Most economists think they underestimate quality
    change
  • Therefore overestimate inflation.

33
This is important
  • CPI defines COLA in social security benefits
    American Association of Retired People thinks
  • COLA Cost-of-living adjustment
  • Argument CPI growth is biased downward (old
    folks consume more medical care than average, and
    prices of medical care have been rising more than
    most other prices)
  • Or have they? Quality change is a big problem
    here.

34
Inflation
  • Right now, its around 2
  • Inflation was about zero for most of US history
  • This has to do with the monetary regime
  • Under the gold standard, govt couldnt just
    print money
  • US went off the gold standard in the 1970s

35
Inflation in the US
  • Inflation was high (10-15 per year) in the 70s.
    Peak around 1982
  • Dropped in 80s, 90s
  • South America has been on the order of 100 per
    year many times
  • Hyperinflation 100/month or more
  • US has never had it
  • Europe after WW I

36
Looking Ahead
  • Classical economics
  • The economics of the long run
  • Economics of business fluctuations
  • Keynesian economics (according to some)
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