Title: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product
1Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product
- GDP is the market value of all newly produced
final goods and services produced by resources
located in the United States, regardless of who
owns those resources
2Final and Intermediate Goods and Services
- Final goods and services sold to ultimate, users
- Cotton shirts are a final good
- Intermediate goods and services are purchased for
further reprocessing and resale - Cotton is intermediate good
- Keeping final goods and intermediate goods
separate in our thinking allows us to avoid
double counting
3Calculating GDP
- GDP can be computed in two ways
- The expenditure approach A method of computing
GDP that measures the total amount spent on all
final goods during a given period. - The income approach
4The Expenditure Approach
- The expenditure approach calculates GDP by adding
together the four components of spending. In
equation form
5The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure
6Categories of Expenditures
- Consumption (C)
- All household purchases (blue jeans, twinkies,
etc.) - Investment (I)
- Purchases not used for current consumption (newly
built homes,plant, new inventories) - Government Purchases (G)
- Examples include missile systems and paper clips
- Net Exports (X - M)
- Net exports exports (X) - imports (M)
7Personal Consumption Expenditures
- Personal consumption expenditures (C) are
expenditures by consumers on the following - Durable goods Goods that last a relatively long
time, such as cars and appliances. - Nondurable goods Goods that are used up fairly
quickly, such as food and clothing. - Services Things that do not involve the
production of physical things, such as legal
services, medical services, and education.
8Gross Private Domestic Investment
- Investment refers to the purchase of new capital.
- Total investment by the private sector is called
gross private domestic investment. It includes
the purchase of new housing, plants, equipment,
and inventory by the private sector.
9Gross Private Domestic Investment
- Nonresidential investment includes expenditures
by firms for machines, tools, plants, and so on. - Residential investment includes expenditures by
households and firms on new houses and apartment
buildings. - Change in inventories computes the amount by
which firms inventories change during a given
period. Inventories are the goods that firms
produce now but intend to sell later.
10Government Consumptionand Gross Investment
- Government consumption and gross investment (G)
counts expenditures by federal, state, and local
governments for final goods and services.
11Net Exports
- Net exports (EX IM) is the difference between
exports and imports. The figure can be positive
or negative. - Exports (EX) are sales to foreigners of
U.S.-produced goods and services. - Imports (IM) are U.S. purchases of goods and
services from abroad).
12Classify each of these scenarios
- You buy an old house
- You buy some marijuana from a friend
- You buy stock in GM
- A Japanese firm buys City Brewery
- The government makes a welfare payment
- You buy a used car
- A business fails to sell some of its inventory
- A business buys a new truck
13Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach Components of GDP, 2002 The Expenditure Approach
BILLIONS OFDOLLARS BILLIONS OFDOLLARS PERCENTAGEOF GDP PERCENTAGEOF GDP
Personal consumption expenditures (C) Personal consumption expenditures (C) Personal consumption expenditures (C) 7303.7 69.9
Durable goods Durable goods 871.9 8.3
Nondurable goods Nondurable goods 2115.0 20.2
Services Services 4316.8 41.3
Gross private domestic investment (l) Gross private domestic investment (l) Gross private domestic investment (l) 1543.2 14.8
Nonresidential Nonresidential 1117.4 10.7
Residential Residential 471.9 4.5
Change in business inventories Change in business inventories 3.9 0
Government consumption and gross investment (G) Government consumption and gross investment (G) Government consumption and gross investment (G) 1972.9 18.9
Federal Federal 693.7 6.6
State and local State and local 1279.2 12.2
Net exports (EX IM) Net exports (EX IM) Net exports (EX IM) - 423.6 - 4.1
Exports (EX) Exports (EX) 1014.9 9.8
Imports (IM) Imports (IM) 1438.5 13.8
Total gross domestic product (GDP) Total gross domestic product (GDP) Total gross domestic product (GDP) 10446.2 100.0
Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. Note Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
14Current and Historical Data
- US data (BEA)
- http//www.bea.doc.gov/bea/newsrel/gdp499p.htm
- Historical US Data
- http//eh.net/hmit/gdp/
- International
- http//www.stls.frb.org/publications/iet/
- http//www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/
15The Keynesian Framework and the ISLM Model
16Determination of Output
- Keynesian ISLM Model assumes price level is fixed
- Aggregate Expenditures
- AE C I G NX
- Equilibrium
- Y AE
- Consumption Function
- C a (mpc ? YD)
- Investment
- 1. Fixed investment
- 2. Inventory investment
- Only planned investment is included in AE
- NOTE In many of the Slides Yd in place of AE
they are the same thing.
17Consumption Function
18Keynesian Cross Diagram
AE
YAE
AE
- Assume G 0, NX 0, T 0
- AE C I 200 .5Y 300 500 .5Y
- Equilibrium
- 1. When Y gt Y, Iu gt 0 ? Y ? to Y
- 2. When Y lt Y, Iu lt 0 ? Y ? to Y
19Expenditure Multiplier
20Analysis of Figure 3 Expenditure Multiplier
- ?I 100 ? ?Y/?I 200/100 2
- 1
- Y (a I) ?
- 1 mpc
- A a I autonomous spending
- Conclusions
- 1. Expenditure multiplier ?Y/?A 1/(1
mpc) whether change in A is due to change in a
or I - 2. Animal spirits change A
21The Great Depression and the Collapse of
Investment
22Role of Government
23Analysis of Figure 5 Role of Government
- ?G 400, ? T 400
- 1. With no G and T, Yd C I 500 mpc ??Y
500 .5Y, Y1 1000 - 2. With G, Y C I G 900 .5Y, Y2 1800
- 3. With G and T, Yd 900 mpc ? Y mpc ??T
700 .5Y, Y3 1400 - Conclusions
- 1. G ? Y ? T ? Y ?
- 2. ?G ?T 400, Y ? 400
24Role of International Trade
- ?NX 100,
- ?Y/?NX 200/100 2 1/(1 mpc) 1/(1 .5)
25Summary Factors that Affect Y
26IS Curve
- IS curve
- 1. i ? I ? NX ?, Yad ?, Y ?
- Points 1, 2, 3 in figure
- 2. Right of IS Y gt Yad ? Y ? to IS
- Left of IS Y lt Yad ? Y ? to IS
27LM Curve
- LM curve
- 1. Y ?, Md ?, i ? Points 1, 2, 3 in figure
- 2. Right of LM excess Md, i ? to LM Left of LM
excess Ms, i ? to LM
28ISLM Model
- Point E, equilibrium where Y Yad (IS) and Md
M s (LM ) - At other points like A, B, C, D, one of two
markets is not in equilibrium and arrows mark
movement towards point E
29Monetary and Fiscal Policy in the ISLM Model
30Shift in the IS Curve
- 1. C ? at given iA, Yad ?, Y ? ? IS shifts right
- 2. Same reasoning when I ?, G ?, NX ?, T ?
31Shift in the LM Curve from a Rise in Ms
- 1. Ms ? at given YA, i ? in panel (b) and (a) ?
LM shifts to the right
32Shift in the LM Curve from a Rise in M d
- 1. M d ? at given YA, i ? in panel (b) and (a) ?
LM shifts to the left
33Response to an Increase in Ms
- 1. M s ? i ?, LM shifts right ? Y ? i ?
34Response to Expansionary Fiscal Policy
- 1. G ? or T ? Yad ?, IS shifts right ? Y ? i ?
35Summary Factors that Shift IS and LM Curves
36Effectiveness of Monetary and Fiscal Policy
- 1. M d is unrelated to i ? i ?, M d M s at same
Y ? LM vertical - 2. Panel (a) G ?, IS shifts right ? i ?, Y stays
same (complete crowding out) - 3. Panel (b) M s ?, Y? so M d ?, LM shifts right
? i ? Y ? - Conclusion Less interest sensitive is M d, more
effective is monetary policy relative to fiscal
policy
37Ms vs. i Targets When IS Unstable
- 1. IS unstable fluctuates from IS' to IS''
- 2. i target at i Y fluctuates from YI' to YI''
- 3. M target, LM LM Y fluctuates from YM' to
YM'' - 4. Y fluctuation is less with M target
- Conclusion If IS curve is more unstable than LM
curve, M target is preferred
38Ms vs. i Targets When LM Unstable
- 1. LM unstable fluctuates from LM' to LM''
- 2. i target at i Y Y
- 3. M target Y fluctuates from YM' to YM''
- 4. Y fluctuation is less with i target
- Conclusion If LM curve is more unstable than IS
curve, i target is preferred
39The ISLM Model in the Long Run
- Panel (a)
- 1. Ms ?, LM right to LM2, go to point 2, i to i2,
Y to Y2 - 2. Because Y2 gt Yn, P ?, M/P ?, LM back to LM1,
go back to point 1 - Panel (b)
- 1. G ?, IS right to IS2, go to point 2 where i
i2 and Y Y2 - 2. Because Y2 gt Yn, P ?, M/P ?, LM left to LM2,
go to point 2', i i2 and Y Yn.
40Deriving AD Curve
- P ?, M/P ?, LM shifts in, Y ?
- Points 1, 2, 3
41Shift in AD from Shift in IS
- At given PA, IS shifts right Y ? in panel (b) ?
AD shifts right in panel (a)
42Shift in AD from Shift in LM
- At given PA, LM shifts right Y ? in panel (b) ?
AD shifts right in panel (a)
43The Aggregate Supply Curve
- Aggregate supply is the total supply of all goods
and services in the economy.
44The Aggregate Supply Curve
- The aggregate supply (AS) curve is a graph that
shows the relationship between the aggregate
quantity of output supplied by all firms in an
economy and the overall price level.
45The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
- The aggregate supply curve is not a market supply
curve or the sum of all the individual supply
curves in the economy.
46The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
- Firms do not simply respond to market-determined
prices, but they actually set prices.
Price-setting firms do not have individual supply
curves because these firms are choosing both
output and price at the same time.
47The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
- When we draw a firms supply curve, we assume
that input prices are constant. In
macroeconomics, an increase in the overall price
level means that at least some input prices will
be rising as well. - The outputs of some firms are the inputs of other
firms.
48The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
- Rather than an aggregate supply curve, what does
exist is a price/output response curve a
curve that traces out the price and output
decisions of all the markets and firms in the
economy under a given set of circumstances.
49Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
- In the short run, the aggregate supply curve (the
price/output response curve) has a positive slope.
50Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
- At low levels of aggregate output, the curve is
fairly flat. As the economy approaches capacity,
the curve becomes nearly vertical. At capacity,
the curve is vertical.
51Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
- Macroeconomists focus on whether or not the
economy as a whole is operating at full capacity. - As the economy approaches maximum capacity, firms
respond to further increases in demand only by
raising prices.
52Output Levels andPrice/Output Responses
- When the economy is operating at low levels of
output, an increase in aggregate demand is likely
to result in an increase in output with little or
no increase in the overall price level.
53The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the
Overall Price Level
- There must be a lag between changes in input
prices and changes in output prices, otherwise
the aggregate supply (price/output response)
curve would be vertical.
54The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the
Overall Price Level
- Wage rates may increase at exactly the same rate
as the overall price level if the price-level
increase is fully anticipated. Most input
prices, however, tend to lag increases in output
prices.
55Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve
- A cost shock, or supply shock, is a change in
costs that shifts the aggregate supply (AS) curve.
56Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve
57The Equilibrium Price Level
- The equilibrium price level is the point at which
the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves
intersect.
58The Equilibrium Price Level
- P0 and Y0 correspond to equilibrium in the goods
market and the money market and a set of
price/output decisions on the part of all the
firms in the economy.
59The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
- Costs lag behind price-level changes in the short
run, resulting in an upward-sloping AS curve.
- Costs and the price level move in tandem in the
long run, and the AS curve is vertical.
60The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
- Output can be pushed above potential GDP by
higher aggregate demand. The aggregate price
level also rises.
61The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
- When output is pushed above potential, there is
upward pressure on costs, and this causes the
short-run AS curve to the left.
- Costs ultimately increase by the same percentage
as the price level, and the quantity supplied
ends up back at Y0.
62The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
- Y0 represents the level of output that can be
sustained in the long run without inflation. It
is also called potential output or potential GDP.
63Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary
and Fiscal Policy
- AD can shift to the right for a number of
reasons, including an increase in the money
supply, a tax cut, or an increase in government
spending.
- Expansionary policy works well when the economy
is on the flat portion of the AS curve, causing
little change in P relative to the output
increase.
64Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary
and Fiscal Policy
- On the steep portion of the AS curve,
expansionary policy does not work well. The
multiplier is close to zero.
- When the economy is operating near full capacity,
an increase in AD will result in an increase in
the price level with little increase in output.
65Long-Run AggregateSupply and Policy Effects
- If the AS curve is vertical in the long run,
neither monetary policy nor fiscal policy has any
effect on aggregate output.
- In the long run, the multiplier effect of a
change in government spending or taxes on
aggregate output is zero.
66The Simple KeynesianAggregate Supply Curve
- The output of the economy cannot exceed the
maximum output of YF. - The difference between planned aggregate
expenditure and aggregate output at full capacity
is sometimes referred to as an inflationary gap.
67Causes of Inflation
- Inflation is an increase in the overall price
level. - Sustained inflation occurs when the overall price
level continues to rise over some fairly long
period of time.
68Causes of Inflation
- Demand-pull inflation is inflation initiated by
an increase in aggregate demand.
- Cost-push, or supply-side, inflation is inflation
caused by an increase in costs.