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Chapter 23: An Introduction to Macroeconomics

  • Business cycle - Long-run economic growth and the short-run fluctuations in output and employment

  • Recession - Output + living standards decline

  • Performance + policy

    • Real gross domestic product - Measures the value of final goods and services produced within the borders of a given country during a given period of time, typically a year

    • Nominal GDP - The dollar value of all goods and services produced within the borders of a given country using their current prices during the year that they were produced

      • Fisher Equation of Nominal GDP = Real GDP + Inflation

    • Unemployment - The state a person is in if he or she cannot get a job despite being willing to work and actively seeking work

    • Inflation - Increase in overall level of prices

  • Modern economic growth - Output per person rises as compared with earlier times in which output (but not output per person) increased

  • Savings, investment, + choosing b/w present + future consumption

    • Savings - Generated when current consumption is less than current output

    • Investment - When resources are devoted to increasing future output

    • Financial investment - Purchase of assets in the hope of reaping financial gain

    • Economic investment - Creation + expansion of business enterprises

  • Banks collect household savings + lend funds to businesses

  • Uncertainty, expectations, + shocks

    • Expectations have large effect on investment + economic growth

    • Shocks - Situations in which firms were expecting one thing to happen but then something else happened

    • Demand shocks - Unexpected changes in demand for goods + services

      • Causes short-run fluctations

    • Supply shocks - Unexpected changes in supply of goods + services

  • Demand shocks + sticky prices

    • Many prices are inflexible + unable to change rapidly

    • Inventory - Store of output that has been produced but not yet sold

    • Demand falls → Firms that produce will be forced to cut production (vice versa)

  • Inflexible (sticky) prices - Prices that cannot change rapidly in response to changes in demand

    • Flexible prices - React within seconds to changes in supply + demand

    • Consumers prefer stable + predictable prices

  • Economy behaves differently based on how much time has passed after demand shock

    • Fully flexible prices in long run

JQ

Chapter 23: An Introduction to Macroeconomics

  • Business cycle - Long-run economic growth and the short-run fluctuations in output and employment

  • Recession - Output + living standards decline

  • Performance + policy

    • Real gross domestic product - Measures the value of final goods and services produced within the borders of a given country during a given period of time, typically a year

    • Nominal GDP - The dollar value of all goods and services produced within the borders of a given country using their current prices during the year that they were produced

      • Fisher Equation of Nominal GDP = Real GDP + Inflation

    • Unemployment - The state a person is in if he or she cannot get a job despite being willing to work and actively seeking work

    • Inflation - Increase in overall level of prices

  • Modern economic growth - Output per person rises as compared with earlier times in which output (but not output per person) increased

  • Savings, investment, + choosing b/w present + future consumption

    • Savings - Generated when current consumption is less than current output

    • Investment - When resources are devoted to increasing future output

    • Financial investment - Purchase of assets in the hope of reaping financial gain

    • Economic investment - Creation + expansion of business enterprises

  • Banks collect household savings + lend funds to businesses

  • Uncertainty, expectations, + shocks

    • Expectations have large effect on investment + economic growth

    • Shocks - Situations in which firms were expecting one thing to happen but then something else happened

    • Demand shocks - Unexpected changes in demand for goods + services

      • Causes short-run fluctations

    • Supply shocks - Unexpected changes in supply of goods + services

  • Demand shocks + sticky prices

    • Many prices are inflexible + unable to change rapidly

    • Inventory - Store of output that has been produced but not yet sold

    • Demand falls → Firms that produce will be forced to cut production (vice versa)

  • Inflexible (sticky) prices - Prices that cannot change rapidly in response to changes in demand

    • Flexible prices - React within seconds to changes in supply + demand

    • Consumers prefer stable + predictable prices

  • Economy behaves differently based on how much time has passed after demand shock

    • Fully flexible prices in long run