macro economics introduction 1 ten principles of economics
TRANSCRIPT
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Macro economics
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INTRODUCTION
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1Ten Principles of Economics
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Economy. . .
. . . The word economy comes from a Greek word for “one who manages a household.”
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Ten principles of economics
A household and an economy face many decisions: ◦Who will work?◦What goods and how many of them should be
produced?◦What resources should be used in production?◦At what price should the goods be sold?
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Ten principles of economics (Contd….)
Society and Scarce Resources: ◦The management of society’s resources is
important because resources are scarce.◦Scarcity. . . means that society has limited
resources and therefore cannot produce all the goods and services people wish to have.
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Ten principles of economics (Contd….)
Economics is the study of how society manages its scarce resources.
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Ten principles of economics (Contd….)
How people make decisions.◦People face tradeoffs.◦The cost of something is what you give up to
get it.◦Rational people think at the margin.◦People respond to incentives.
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Ten principles of economics (Contd….)
How people interact with each other.◦Trade can make everyone better off.◦Markets are usually a good way to organize
economic activity.◦Governments can sometimes improve
economic outcomes.
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Ten principles of economics (Contd….)
The forces and trends that affect how the economy as a whole works. ◦The standard of living depends on a country’s
production.◦Prices rise when the government prints too
much money.◦Society faces a short-run tradeoff between
inflation and unemployment.
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Principle #1: People face tradeoffs.
“There is no such thing as a free lunch!”
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Making decisions requires trading off one goal against another.
Principle #1: People face tradeoffs (Contd….)
To get one thing, we usually have to give up another thing.
◦Guns v. butter◦Food v. clothing◦Leisure time v. work◦Efficiency v. equity
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Principle #1: People face tradeoffs (Contd….)
Efficiency v. Equity◦Efficiency means society gets the most that it
can from its scarce resources.◦Equity means the benefits of those resources
are distributed fairly among the members of society.
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Principle #2: The cost of something is what you give up to get it.
Decisions require comparing costs and benefits of alternatives.◦Whether to go to college or to work?◦Whether to study or go out on a date?◦Whether to go to class or sleep in?
The opportunity cost of an item is what you give up to obtain that item.
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Principle #2: The cost of something is what you give up to get
it. (Contd….)
LA Laker basketball star Kobe Bryant chose to skip college and go straight from high school to the pros where he has earned millions of dollars.
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People make decisions by comparing costs and benefits at
the margin.
Principle #3: Rational People Think at the Margin.
Marginal changes are small, incremental adjustments to an existing plan of action.
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Principle #4: People Respond to Incentives.
Marginal changes in costs or benefits motivate people to respond.
The decision to choose one alternative over another occurs when that alternative’s marginal benefits exceed its marginal costs!
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Principle #5: Trade Can Make Everyone Better Off.
People gain from their ability to trade with one another.
Competition results in gains from trading.Trade allows people to specialize in what
they do best.
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Principle #6: Markets Are Usually a Good Way to Organize
Economic Activity.
A market economy is an economy that allocates resources through the decentralized decisions of many firms and households as they interact in markets for goods and services.◦Households decide what to buy and who to
work for.◦Firms decide who to hire and what to produce.
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Principle #6: Markets Are Usually a Good Way to Organize
Economic Activity.
Adam Smith made the observation that households and firms interacting in markets act as if guided by an “invisible hand.”◦Because households and firms look at prices when
deciding what to buy and sell, they unknowingly take into account the social costs of their actions.
◦As a result, prices guide decision makers to reach outcomes that tend to maximize the welfare of society as a whole.
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Principle #7: Governments Can Sometimes Improve Market Outcomes.
Market failure occurs when the market fails to allocate resources efficiently.
When the market fails (breaks down) government can intervene to promote efficiency and equity.
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Principle #7: Governments Can Sometimes Improve Market Outcomes (Contd…)
Market failure may be caused by ◦an externality, which is the impact of one person
or firm’s actions on the well-being of a bystander.
◦market power, which is the ability of a single person or firm to unduly influence market prices.
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Principle #8: The Standard of Living Depends on a Country’s Production.
Standard of living may be measured in different ways:◦By comparing personal incomes.◦By comparing the total market value of a
nation’s production.
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Principle #8: The Standard of Living Depends on a Country’s Production.(Contd….)
Almost all variations in living standards are explained by differences in countries’ productivities.
Productivity is the amount of goods and services produced from each hour of a worker’s time.
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Principle #8: The Standard of Living Depends on a Country’s Production.(Contd….)
Standard of living may be measured in different ways:◦By comparing personal incomes.◦By comparing the total market value of a
nation’s production.
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Principle #9: Prices Rise When the Government Prints Too
Much Money.
Inflation is an increase in the overall level of prices in the economy.
One cause of inflation is the growth in the quantity of money.
When the government creates large quantities of money, the value of the money falls.
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Principle #10: Society faces a short-run tradeoff between
inflation & unemployment.
The Phillips Curve illustrates the tradeoff between inflation and unemployment:
òInflation ð ñUnemploymentIt’s a short-run tradeoff!
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Summary
When individuals make decisions, they face tradeoffs among alternative goals.
The cost of any action is measured in terms of foregone opportunities.
Rational people make decisions by comparing marginal costs and marginal benefits.
People change their behavior in response to the incentives they face.
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Summary (Contd….)
Trade can be mutually beneficial.Markets are usually a good way of
coordinating trade among people.Government can potentially improve
market outcomes if there is some market failure or if the market outcome is inequitable.
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Summary (Contd….)
Productivity is the ultimate source of living standards.
Money growth is the ultimate source of inflation.
Society faces a short-run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
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What is macroeconomics?Macroeconomics considers the
performance of the economy as a whole. We try to understand changes in
◦The rate of economic growth◦The rate of inflation◦Unemployment◦Our trade performance with other countries
Macroeconomics also includes an evaluation of the relative success or failure of government economic policies
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So what is ‘the economy’?
The economy is made up of four sectors sometimes called economic agents:
Households who receive payments (income) for their services (eg labour and land) and use this money to buy the output of firms (ie consumption or household spending).
Firms who use land labour and capital to produce goods and services for which they pay wages rent etc (income) and receive payment (expenditure)
Government (also known as the public or state sector) and
International eg consumers buying overseas products (M) and Foreigners buying UK products (X)
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Difference between micro & macro
MicroeconomicsRecession in the tourist industry due to
the global downturnA government subsidy to steel
producersA recession in the textiles industryIncreased spending on the National
Health Service
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Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Microeconomics focuses on the individual parts of the economy. How households and firms make decisions
and how they interact in specific markets Macroeconomics looks at the economy
as a whole. How the markets, as a whole, interact at the
national level.
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Microeconomics is the study of how households and firmsmake decisions and how these decision makers interact in thebroader marketplace. In microeconomics, an individual chooses tomaximize his or her utility subject to his or her budget constraint.
Macroeconomic events arise from the interaction of manyindividuals trying to maximize their own welfare. Becauseaggregate variables are the sum of the variables describingindividuals’ decisions, the study of macroeconomics is based on microeconomic foundations.
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The Essence of Microeconomics-Buyers and Sellers
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The Many Facets of Macroeconomics
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Key Concepts
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)◦ The monetary value of all goods and services produced
within India in a given time periodReal GDP
◦ The volume of goods and services produced within the UK (i.e. GDP adjusted for changes in the price level)
Economic Growth◦ The percentage rate of increase of real GDP
Inflation◦ The annual percentage rate of change of the general
price level
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The Economy’s Income and Expenditure
For an economy as a whole, income must equal expenditure because: Every transaction has a buyer and a seller. Every rupee of spending by some buyer is a
rupee of income for some seller. Say’s Law-Supply creates it’s own demand This process can be seen using a Circular Flow
Diagram.
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Gross Domestic Product
Gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of the income and expenditures of an economy.
It is the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time.
How much is the current GDP?
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The Circular-Flow Diagram
Firms Households
Market for Factors
of Production
Market for Goods
and Services
SpendingRevenue
Wages, rent, and
profit
Income
Goods & Services
sold
Goods & Services bought
Labor, land, and capital
Inputs for production
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The Components of the Macroeconomy
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Everyone’s expenditure is someone else’s receipt. Every transaction must have two sides.
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National Income Accounting: Important Identities
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Microeconomics
Microeconomics is the study of how individual households and firms make decisions and how they interact with one another in markets.
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Macroeconomics
Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole. Its goal is to explain the economic
changes that affect many households, firms, and markets at once.
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Macroeconomics
Macroeconomics answers questions like the following: Why is average income high in some countries
and low in others? Why do prices rise rapidly in some time periods
while they are more stable in others? Why do production and employment expand in
some years and contract in others?
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The Economy’s Income and Expenditure
When judging whether the economy is doing well or poorly, it is natural to look at the total income that everyone in the economy is earning.
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IN ORDER TO EVALUATE THE PERFORMANCE OF OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM IN TERMS OF:
How rapidly it is growing,How stable it is,How it allocates its productive resources
to different end products- we need some measure of output & income
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Strangely enough however, it was not until the 1930’s that reliable overall figures on Y & output were produced.
The main reason was that until the 1930’s most economists concerned themselves not so much with the overall performance of the economy (i.e. macroeconomics) but with the price system& the allocation of resources (i.e. microeconomics)
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The coming of the GREAT DEPRESSION of the 1930’s forced economists to devote attention to the overall level of economic activity.
To measure the depth of depression & the extent of recovery, it was important to construct data on National Output & Y
These accounts supply the most valuable data we have about our economy
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Are we interested in forecasting the level of economic activity next year???
-data on output, spending & Y—available to base our forecast
-Do we wish to study long term economic growth????- the historical data in NIA show output growth in the past, its growth compared with population or labour force, & proportion of output devoted to growth stimulating I
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Are we intersted in the distribution of Y between wages & profit???—data available in components of Y
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The Economy’s Income and Expenditure
For an economy as a whole, income must equal expenditure because:Every transaction has a buyer and a seller.
Every Rs. of spending by some buyer is a dollar of income for some seller.
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Measuring the ◦Production,◦Income and◦Spending of Nations
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National Income Accounts:
•Provide the formal structure for our macro-theory models
Aggregate Demand….aggregate income..consumed or investedAggregate Supply….Total output..paid as wages, interest and dividendsIn equilibrium….Aggregate Demand=Aggregate Supply (growth) Inputs=Outputs Real output price levelBroad magnitudes to characterize the economy
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GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
It is the value of all goods & services produced annually in the nation.
GDP is a flow, it is an amount of production
Per unit of time
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Basic Measures:
•Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the value of final goods and services produced in the country within a given period
Notable termsfinal goodsIntermediate goods•Value Added•Past output vs. current outputs•Measure of welfare•Use of resources to avoid bads such as crime•Improvement in the qualityin the country
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GDP = ALL THE FINAL GOODS & SERVICES PRODUCED IN THE DOMESTIC TERRITORY OF INDIA
GNP = GDP + NET EXPORTSNNP = GNP – DEPRICIATIONNI = NNP – INDIRECT TAXES + SUBSIDIES
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PRODUCTIVE & NON-PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITIES
Goods & services which enter into the circle of exchange = PRODUCTIVE
-FRANCE= SATELITE ACOUNTS
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Factors of production….labor, capital, land
GDP= sum of payments to labor, capital, land and profits
Gross National Product (GNP)˸GDP+receipts from abroad made as factor payments to domestically owned factors of production.
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• Net Domestic Product◦GDP minus depreciation ◦Depreciation is usually 11%◦NDP=89% of GDP
• National Income◦NDP-Indirect taxes that Business pay◦Indirect taxes that Business pay nearly 10%◦NI is nearly 90% of NDP
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PI is the total income received – whether it is earned or unearned – by the households of the economy before the payment of personal taxes.
It is found by adding transfer payments to and subtracting social security contributions, corporate income taxes and undistributed corporate profits from the NI.
DI is the total income available to households after the payment of personal taxes. It is equal to PI less personal taxes and also equal to personal consumption expenditures plus personal saving.
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S. No.
Countries GDP in 2003$million
GDP in 2010$million *
1. United States 10,881,609 14,580,000
2. Japan 4,326,444 5,500,000
3. Germany 2,400,655 3,310,000
4. U.K. 1,794,858 2,250,000
5. France 1,747,973 2,560,000
6. Italy 1,465,895 2,050,000
7. China 1,409,852 5,880,000
8. Spain 836,100 1,410,000
9. Canada 834,390 1,570,000
10. Mexico 626,080 1,040,000
* Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators
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GDP:An important and versatile conceptWe will see that GDP measures
§ total income
§ total expenditure
§ total output
§ the sum of value-added at all stagesin the production of final goods
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With government and foreign agents Need to account for :
a. Government purchases of goods and services.
b. Government payments for factor services (wages, rent, interest).
c. Transfer payments between different agents.d. Firms and households pay taxes to
government. e. Taxes paid on income, property, goods and
services.f. Transactions with the foreign sector.
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Transfer payments
Transfer payments – are transactions wherein one party is not obliged to deliver a good or service in return for the payment.
◦Examples: retirement benefits, unemployment benefits, scholarships, and donations.
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Transactions with foreign sector
Includes sales of goods and services, assets, and transfers
Exports - sales of domestically produced goods to other countries
Imports - goods bought from other countries
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Measurement of economy’s output:The Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
The GDP measures the market value of all final goods and services produced within an economy in a given period.
GDP only measures current production. Transfer payments and transactions involving goods produced in other periods are not included in the calculation of GDP.
GDP is usually expressed in the currency of a particular country, e.g., Philippine peso….indicates the market value of the goods and services
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Definition of GDP
The market value of good i (Vi) is equal to PiQi
GDP = sum of the market values of all final goods and services produced within the year.
n n
i i ii 1 i 1
GDP V P Q
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GDP includes final goods and services only
Final goods - goods and services that are not purchased for the purpose of producing other goods and services or for resale ◦Eg. Rice (final) and palay or unhusked rice (intermediate product)
Including intermediate goods and final goods will result in “double counting”.
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3 Approaches for measuring GDP
1. Expenditure Approach (upper loop) – measures GDP as the sum of expenditures on final goods and services.
2. Income Approach (lower loop) – measures GDP as the sum of incomes of factors of production (wages, rent, interest and profit.
3. Value-added Approach – measures GDP as the sum of value added at each stage of production (from initial to final stage)
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Expenditure Approach
Uses the upper loop of the circular flow diagram.Example: Suppose the economy has only one product,
namely, rice.
Good Price per unit
Q sold Expenditure
Rice 20 1000 20,000
GDP 20,000
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Income ApproachUses the lower loop of the circular flow diagram:
sum of payments to the various factors of production.
Suppose that in the production of rice the sales and expenses are as follows:
Sales P 20,000
Expenses:
Wages 8000
Rent 4000
Interest 2000
Total 14,000
Profit 6,000
GDP=Sum of Payments to factors 20,000 P 20,000
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Value Added Approach
Suppose that rice is the only final product of an economy: It goes through several (3) stages of production.
Stage of Prod’nValue of
intermediate good
Value of Sales
Value-added
Farmer - Palay 12,000 12,000
Rice Miller -Milled Rice
12,000 15,000 3,000
Retailers - Rice 15,000 20,000 5,000
GDP= Total Value Added
20,000
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Notes of the 3 approaches
The expenditure approach, income approach, and the value-added approach all come up with the same estimate of the GDP. They are equivalent approaches.
In the income approach, profit is also considered a payment to the entrepreneur. So the incomes are (1) wages, (2) rent, (3) interest, and (4) profit. Profit adjusts to make the sum equal to the final value of the good.
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Notes of the 3 approaches (Contd…)
In the value added approach, only the value added in each stage of production are included. If we add the value of intermediate product with the value of the final product, we commit the sin of “double-counting.”
At each stage of production, the value-added is equal to wages, interest, rent, and profit. Therefore the value of the final product is likewise the same of all payments to the factors of production
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Additional Topics
GDP vs GNPReal vs current GDPInter-country comparisons of GDP
◦Convert to international currency like US dollars◦Convert to per capita measures
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THE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS OF THE PHILIPPINES
Same principles as above but need to make adjustments in order to accommodate the realities in modern economies
Expenditure approach
◦GDP = C + G + I + X –M+ SD
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Table. Expenditures on GDP, 2002 in million pesos.
Item Symbol Value
Personal Consumption Expenditure C 2,750,9000
Government Consumption Expenditure
G 488,700
Gross Domestic Capital Formation I 776,200
Exports of Goods and Services X 1,968,500
Less: Imports of Goods and Services M 1,989,100
Statistical Discrepancy SD 27,500
Gross Domestic Product GDP 4,022,700
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Expenditure Approach
C - spending of households and private non-profit institutions on goods and services◦ Non-durables - goods and services that are consumed rapidly◦ Durable goods - that last for a longer period of time
I - investment spending of domestic agents. Its major components are “changes in” Fixed Capital and Changes in Stocks
G - government’s payments for the salaries of its workforce as well as purchases of goods and services used for the government’s day to day operations and projects.
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Expenditure Approach (Contd…)
X - the spending of the rest of the world on goods and non-factor services produced in the country
M - the country’s purchases of goods and non-factor services from the rest of the world.
SD - accounts for accounting and reporting errors in the accounts. Needed to ensure that GDP value from all approaches are the same
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Income Approach
ITEMS SYMBOLS VALUE
Compensation of Employees COE 1,093,800
Net Operating Surplus NOS 2,215,100
Depreciation D 357,200
Indirect Business Taxes less Subsidies
IBTS 356,600
Gross Domestic Product GDP 4,022,700
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Income Approach
GDP = COE + NOS + D + IBTS
In a simple world, GDP = COE + NOS. In practice, require
two adjustments (D and IBTS)
D - accounts for the wear and tear of physical capital
“D” is treated as a business cost not included in NOS.
However, “D” is part of “I” in the expenditure side of the
national accounts
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Income Approach (Contd….)
IBTS - includes taxes on the use or purchase goods and
services and grants from government to firms. E. g sales
taxes, value added tax
Not included in NOS but is part of the market prices, of which
the items in the expenditure accounts are quoted
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Value added or Industrial Origin approach
GDP = value added of different activities (sectors)
ITEM VALUE
Agriculture, Fishery and Forestry 519,400
Industry 1,307,400
Services 2,123,900
Gross Domestic Product 4,022,700
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The distinction between GDP and GNP
GNP = GDP + Net Factor Income from the Rest of
the World (NFIRW)
NFIRW - measures the difference between the
earnings of Philippine residents in other countries
and foreign residents in the Philippines
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The distinction between GDP and GNP
Gross Domestic Product GDP 4,022,700
Net Factor Income from the Rest of the World
NFIRW 267,500
Gross National Product GNP 4,290,200
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Nominal and Real GDP
GDP at current prices or nominal GDP - GDP measured using the prices of the year for which it is calculated
Nominal GDP can be a misleading indicator of changes in output or income because it also embodies changes in the prices of goods and services.
Real GDP or GDP at constant prices measures the total value of output using the prices of a selected year (the base year).
Real GDP better for analysis overtime because it eliminates the effects of price changes
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Table 8.5YEAR 1 YEAR 2
QUANTITY
Ice Cream 100 100
Buko Pie 100 100
PRICE
Ice Cream 50 100
Buko Pie 100 200
VALUE
Ice Cream 5,000 10,000
Buko Pie 10,000 20,000
NOMINAL GDP 15,000 30,000
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GDPyear 1 = (100) (50) + (100) (100) = 15,000
GDPyear 2 = (100) (50) + (100) (100) = 15,000
In practice, calculating real GDP using the previous approach is a tedious process because there are so many goods and services are produced in an economy. Can simplify the calculation process by using the GDP deflator.
GDP deflator - a price index that allows us to convert nominal GDP into real GDP. (note: price index to be defined later)
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Real GDP
Nominal GDPReal GDP 100.
GDP deflator
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Investment vs. Capital§ Capital is one of the factors of production. At any given moment, the economy has a certain overall stock of capital.
§ Investment is spending on new capital.
Investment vs. CapitalExample (assumes no depreciation):§ 1/1/2002: economy has $500b worth of capital
§ during 2002: investment = $37b
§ 1/1/2003: economy will have $537b worth of capital
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Stocks vs. FlowsFlow Stock
More examples:stock flowa person’s wealth a person’s saving# of people with # of new collegecollege degreesgraduatesthe govt. debt the govt. budget deficit
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A question for you:Suppose a firm
§ produces $10 million worth of final goods
§ but only sells $9 million worth.
Does this violate the expenditure = output identity?
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Why output = expenditure§ Unsold output goes into inventory, and is counted as “inventory investment”… . ….whether the inventory buildup was intentional or not.
§ In effect, we are assuming that firms purchase their unsold output.
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The Income Approach
The income approach divides GDP according to who receives the income from the spending flow.
In addition to aggregate income, national income and personal income are also used as measures of income.
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The income approach
The Income Components Include:◦Wages and salaries ◦Corporate profits ◦Proprietors income (the profits of partnerships and soley
owned businesses, like a family restaurant) ◦Farm income ◦Rent ◦Interest ◦Sales taxes ◦Depreciation (the amount of capital that has worn out during
the year)
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Interest (only the interest payments made by business firms
are included and the interest payments made by government are excluded).
Corporate profits which are subdivided into
Corporate income taxes Dividends Undistributed corporate profits
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Three additions are made to the income side to balance it with expenditures.
1.Indirect business taxes are added because they are initially income that later gets paid to government.
2.Depreciation or the consumption of fixed capital is added because it is initially income to businesses that later gets deducted in calculating profits.
3.Net foreign factor income is added because it reflects income from all domestic output regardless of the foreign or domestic ownership of domestic resources.
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The Production Approach
The production approach looks at GDP from the standpoint of value added by each input in the production process.
The three approaches--spending, income, and production– (should) result in equivalent values for GDP.
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Personal consumption expenditures $245
Net foreign factor income earned in the U.S. 0004
Transfer payments 0012
Rents 0014
Consumption of fixed capital (depreciation) 0027
Social security contributions 0020
Interest 0013
Proprietors’ income 0033
Net exports 0011
Dividends 0016
Compensation of employees 0223
Indirect business taxes 0018
Undistributed corporate profits 0021
Personal taxes 0026
Corporate income taxes 0019
Corporate profits 0056
Government purchases 0072
Net private domestic investment 0033
Personal saving 0020
Below is a list of domestic output and national income figures for a given year. All figures are in billions. Determine the major national income measures by both the Expenditures and income methods.
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Simple Economy…..No govt…no foreign trade C=consumption I=investment S=saving Y= Income
Output produced=output sold
Y= C+I………….(1)
I=S
Y=C+S…………(2)
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Introducing govt. in the above identity
G= govt. purchases of goods and servicesTA=all taxesTR=transfers to private sector (including interest)NX=net exports (exports-imports)YD=disposable income
Y=C+I+G+NX……….(3)
YD=Y+TR-TA………..(4)
YD= C+S………………(5)
C+S=Y+TR-TA
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• LEAKAGES (Withdrawals (W) : (T + S + IM) out of the system must equal INJECTIONS (J): (G + I + X) for the circular flow to balance (be in EQUILIBRIUM).
• Withdrawals [ T + S + IM] = Injections [G + I + X] can be broken down to three important balances in the economy:
1. T - G: the Government's Budgetary Balance;
2. S - I: the Private Sector's Saving/Investment Balance;
3. IM - X: the Country's Trade Balance (current account of Balance of Payments)
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C=YD-S=Y+TR-TA-S……………………..(6)
Consumption is disposable income less savingOr consumption is equal to income plus transfers less taxes and saving
Using RHS of (6) in (3):
Y=C+I+G+NX……….(3)
Y= (Y+TR-TA-S)+ I+G+NXS-I=(TR-TA+G)+NX…………………………(7)Govt. budget deficit,I.e., total govt. expenditure consisting of govt. Purchases of goods and services(G) plus govt. transfer payments (TR) Minus amount of taxes (TA) received by govt. equals excess of private saving over investment and net exports
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The budget deficit, trade, saving and investment(in Rs. Billion)
Saving (S)……………1000 1000 1000 1000Investment(I)…………1000 850 900 950Budget Deficit(BD)…..0 150 0 150Net Exports (NX)……0 0 100 -100
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Exercises
Q.1 What would happen to GDP if the govt. hired unemployed Workers, who had been receiving amount $TR in unemployment Benefits, as govt. employees and now paid them $TR to do nothing?Explain.
Q.2In the national income accounts, what is the difference between:a)A firm’s buying an auto for an executive and the firm’s paying theExecutive additional income to buy the automobile herself?
b)Your hiring your spouse (who takes care of the house) rather than having him or her do the work without pay?
c)Your deciding to buy an Indian car rather than a German car?
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3. The following is information from the national income accounts for a hypothetical country:
GDP $6, 000Gross investment 800Net investment 200Consumption 4, 000Government purchases of goods and services 1, 100Government budget surplus 30
What is:a. NDP? d. Disposable personal income?b. Next exports? e. Personal saving? c. Government taxes minus transfers?
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GDP and GDP deflator
§ We would like to convert different goods
quantities and prices into one single quantity of composite good and
one general price level. How?
§ We use the concepts of nominal GDP, real GDP and
GDP deflator to achieve such aggregation.
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
§ GDP is the value of all final goods and services
produced domestically.§ Nominal GDP measures these values using current prices.§ Real GDP measure these values using the prices of a base year.
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Real and Nominal GDP2001 Nominal GDP
2006 Nominal GDP
2006 Real GDP
Bread (ton)
1 at Rs.1 thousand… Rs. 1thousand
2 at Rs.2 thousand.. Rs. 4 thousand
2 at Rs. 1 thousand…………Rs.2 thousand
Milk (thousand Litres)
1 at Rs 0.5 thousand………....Rs. 0.5 thousand
3 at Rs.0.75 thousand…………..Rs. 2.25 thousand
3 at Rs.0.50 thousand…………..Rs.1.50 thousand
Total GDP Rs. 1.5 thousand
Rs. 6.25 thousand Rs. 3.50 thousand
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Real GDP and living standard
Changes in nominal GDP can be due to:§ changes in prices§ changes in quantities of outputproduced
Changes in real GDP can only be due tochanges in quantities, because real GDP isconstructed using constant base-yearprices. Therefore, changes in real GDPmeasure changes in living standard.
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GDP DeflatorWhile real GDP captures living standard,
cost of living is measured by general price level.
One measure of the general price level is the GDP Deflator, defined asGDP deflator = 100 * Nominal GDP /Real GDP
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Measuring the Cost of Living§ Inflation refers to a situation in which the economy’s overall price level is rising.§ The inflation rate is the percentage change in the price level from the previous period.
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Nominal GDP billions
Price index (1992=100) Real GDP billions
1959 $ 507.2 23.0 $______
1964 663.0 24.6 $______
1967 833.6 26.6 $______
1973 1382.6 35.4 $______
1988 5049.6 86.1 $______
1995 7265.4 107.8 $______
Exercise: The following table shows nominal GDP and an appropriate price index for a group of selected years. Compute real GDP. Indicate in each calculation whether you are inflating or deflating the nominal GDP data
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CPI vs. GDP deflatorprices of capital goods• included in GDP deflator (if produced domestically) • excluded from CPIprices of imported consumer goods • included in CPI• excluded from GDP deflator
the basket of goods• CPI: fixed• GDP deflator: changes every year
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International Comparisons of GDP
In any attempt to compare GDP between countries, some account must be taken of differences in prices.
Adjustment for GDP based on exchange rates makes some improvement in the comparison of GDP figures.
However, if we wish to determine the value of GDP in another country, some information on the price differences of goods is needed.
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Purchasing power parity exchange rates
attempt to adjust exchange rates for
differences in the prices of goods across
borders through the use of a ratio of price indexes.
The exchange rate is adjusted to reflect this ratio
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•Once this adjustment is made, international rankings of countries
• based on GDP or per capita GDP tend to fluctuate
•as exchange rates vary, while the corresponding prices do not.
•Despite their variability due to exchange rate fluctuations,
• purchasing power parity exchange rates provide a better basis
for international comparisons than an adjustment based solely on exchange rates.
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The Measurement of GDP
GDP is: the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time.
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What Is Counted and Not Counted in GDP?
GDP includes all items produced in the economy and sold
legally in markets.
GDP excludes services that are produced and consumed at
home and that never enter the marketplace. Eg: Caring labor,
the work that is normally produced by women.
Because GDP does not count it, it diminishes its importance.
GDP also excludes black market items, such as illegal drugs.
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Other Measures of Income
Gross National Product (GNP)Net National Product (NNP)National IncomePersonal IncomeDisposable Personal Income
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The Components of GDP
GDP (Y ) is the sum of the following: Consumption (C) Investment (I) Government Purchases (G) Net Exports (NX)
Y = C + I + G + NX
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GDP and Its Components (1998)
Total (Billions of Rs)
Per Person (In Rs)
% of Total
GDP (Y) $8,511 $31,522 100%
Consumption C 5,808 21,511 68%
Investment I 1,367 5,507 16
Government G 1,487 5,507 18
Net Exports NX -151 -559 -2
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Net Exports -2 %
GDP and Its Components (1998)
Consumption 68 %
Investment16%
Government Purchases
18%
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Measuring Economic Growth
◦We use real GDP to calculate the economic growth rate.
◦The economic growth rate is the percentage change in the quantity of goods and services produced from one year to the next.
◦We measure economic growth so we can make:◦ Economic welfare comparisons◦ International welfare comparisons◦ Business cycle forecasts
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Measuring Economic Growth
Business Cycle Forecasts◦Real GDP is used to measure business cycle
fluctuations. ◦These fluctuations are probably accurately
timed but the changes in real GDP probably overstate the changes in total production and people’s welfare caused by business cycles.
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Real versus Nominal GDP
Nominal GDP values the production of goods and services at current prices.
Real GDP values the production of goods and services at constant prices.
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Real GDP and the Price Level
Deflating the GDP Balloon◦Nominal GDP increases because production—real GDP– increases.
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Real GDP and the Price Level
Deflating the GDP Balloon
Nominal GDP also increases because prices rise.
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Real GDP and the Price Level
We use the GDP Deflator to take the air out of Nominal GDP.
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What makes a stable economy?Macro stability can be measured by the volatility of key
indicators: 1. Consumer price inflation (annual % change in prices)
2. Real GDP growth over one or more business cycles 3. Changes in measured unemployment / employment 4. Fluctuations in the current account of the balance of payments 5. Changes in government finances (i.e. the size of the fiscal deficit or surplus) 6. Volatility of short term policy interest rates and long term interest rates such as the yield on government bonds 7. Stability of the exchange rate in currency markets
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A stable economy provides a framework for an improved supply-side
performance i.e. • Stable low inflation encourages higher investment which is a determinant of
improved productivity and non-price competitiveness
• Control of inflation helps to main price competitiveness for exporters and
domestic businesses facing competition from imports
• Stability breeds higher levels of consumer and business confidence – sentiment
drives spending in the circular flow
• The maintenance of steady growth and price stability helps to keep short term
and long term interest rates low, important in reducing the debt-servicing costs of
people with mortgages and businesses with loans to repay
• A stable real economy helps to anchor stable expectations and this can act as an
incentive for an economy to attract inflows of foreign direct investment