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SV C1 - 2 Overview of Macroeconomics Short

This document provides an overview of macroeconomics. It begins by explaining why economics is important to understand how resources are allocated in an economy. It then discusses the key questions of what, how, and for whom to produce that are answered differently in command, market, and mixed economies. The next sections cover macroeconomic principles like how standards of living depend on productivity and the tradeoff between inflation and unemployment. It also discusses the methodology used by economists, including developing models, testing theories, and using assumptions to simplify complex realities. Specific macroeconomic models introduced include supply and demand, the circular flow diagram, and the production possibilities frontier.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views8 pages

SV C1 - 2 Overview of Macroeconomics Short

This document provides an overview of macroeconomics. It begins by explaining why economics is important to understand how resources are allocated in an economy. It then discusses the key questions of what, how, and for whom to produce that are answered differently in command, market, and mixed economies. The next sections cover macroeconomic principles like how standards of living depend on productivity and the tradeoff between inflation and unemployment. It also discusses the methodology used by economists, including developing models, testing theories, and using assumptions to simplify complex realities. Specific macroeconomic models introduced include supply and demand, the circular flow diagram, and the production possibilities frontier.

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phương
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Principles of Macroeconomics Overview of Macroeconomics

Assoc Prof, PhD Nguyen Thi Thuy VINH


Foreign Trade University

1 2

Recall,…what is economics?
Why should you study of economics?
 Economics is concerned with the way scarce resources
• it will help you understand the world in which are allocated among alternative uses to satisfy human
you live; wants.
• it will make you to become a more clever Resources are scarce > < Human wants is unlimited
participant in the economy;
 The three questions of any economy are:
• it will give you a better understanding of both What to produce?
the potential and the limits of economic policy.
How to produce it?
For whom to produce it?

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics 4

1
Recall,…what is economics? Recall,…what is economics?
 Ten Principles of Economics
• In a command economy, the government or central
planning decides all three answers. • How the Economy as a Whole Works

• In a market economy, the producers decide what and (8) A country’s standard of living depends on its
ability to produce goods and services
how and the consumers (based on prices and their
demand) decide for whom by buying the products. • Almost all variations in living standards are explained
• In mixed economy, both private and public sectors by differences in countries’ productivities.
work together to solve economic problems. • Productivity is the amount of goods and services
produced from each hour of a worker’s time.

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

Recall,…what is economics? Recall,…what is economics?


 Ten Principles of Economics  Ten Principles of Economics
• How the Economy as a Whole Works • How the Economy as a Whole Works
(9) Prices rise when the government prints too much (10) Society faces a short-run trade-off between
money inflation and unemployment
• Inflation is an increase in the overall level of prices in • The Phillips Curve illustrates the tradeoff between
the economy. inflation and unemployment:
• One cause of inflation is the growth in the quantity of Inflation   Unemployment 
money. It’s a short-run tradeoff!
• When the government creates large quantities of
money, the value of the money falls.
1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

2
Recall,….the methodology of economics Recall,….the methodology of economics
Economists play two roles:
Observe to identify problem
1. Scientists: try to explain the world
2. Policy advisors: try to improve it
 Economists employ the scientific method, Develop a model based on
Observation  Theory and …  More Observation simplified assumptions

- Uses abstract models to help explain how a


complex, real world operates. Collect data, test model,
- Develops theories, collects, and analyzes data to and formulate a conclusion
evaluate the theories.
9 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

Recall,….the methodology of economics Recall,….the methodology of economics


 Economic Models
 The Role of Assumptions
…are simplified versions of a more complex reality
• Economists make assumptions in order to make the - irrelevant details are stripped away
world easier to understand.
…are used to
• The art in scientific thinking is deciding which
- show relationships between variables
assumptions to make.
- explain the economy’s behavior
• Economists use different assumptions to answer - devise policies to improve economic performance
different questions.

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

3
Recall,….the methodology of economics Recall,….the methodology of economics
 Economic Models
 Economic Models

• Basic economic models:


- Demand and Supply
- The Circular Flow Diagram
- The Production Possibilities Frontier

Economists use models to study economic issues.

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

Supply and Demand for new cars Recall,…Endogenous vs. Exogenous variables
• shows how various events affect price and quantity of • The values of endogenous variables are determined
cars in the model.
• assumes the market is competitive: each buyer and • The values of exogenous variables are determined
seller is too small to affect the market price outside the model:
Variables the model takes their values & behavior as given.
Qd = quantity of cars that buyers demand • In the model of supply & demand for cars,
Qs = quantity that producers supply endogenous:
P = price of new cars
exogenous:
Y = aggregate income
Ps = price of steel (an input)
1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

4
The Circular-Flow Diagram
Households:
• a visual model of the economy, shows how money  Own the factors of production,
flow through markets among households and firms sell/rent them to firms for income
 Buy and consume goods & services
• Two types of “actors”:
– households
Firms Households
– firms
• Two markets: Firms:
– the market for goods and services  Buy/hire factors of production,
– the market for “factors of production” use them to produce goods and
services
 Sell goods & services
1- Overview of Macroeconomics

FIGURE 1: The Circular-Flow Diagram


The Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)
Revenue Spending
Markets for
Goods & • a graph that shows the combinations of
G&S G&S
sold Services two goods the economy can possibly produce given
bought
the available resources and the available technology
• Example:
Firms Households – Two goods: computers and wheat
– One resource: labor (measured in hours)
Factors of Labor, land,
– Economy has 50,000 labor hours per month available
production Markets for capital for production.
Factors of
Wages, rent, Production Income
interest or profit
1- Overview of Macroeconomics

5
PPF Example PPF Example
• Producing one computer requires 100 hours labor.
Wheat
• Producing one ton of wheat requires 10 hours labor. Point Production
(tons)
on Com-
Employment of 6,000
Production graph puters Wheat E
labor hours 5,000
A 500 0 D
Computers Wheat Computers Wheat 4,000 G
B 400 1,000
3,000 C
A 50,000 0 500 0 F
C 250 2,500
2,000
B 40,000 10,000 400 1,000 D 100 4,000 B
1,000
C 25,000 25,000 250 2,500 E 0 5,000 A
0
D 10,000 40,000 100 4,000 0 100 200 300 400 500 600
Computers
E 0 50,000 0 5,000
22

PPF Example Economic Growth and the PPF


Points on the PPF (like A – E) With additional Wheat
Economic
resources or an (tons)
– possible 6,000 growth shifts
improvement in
– efficient: all resources are fully utilized the PPF
technology, 5,000 outward.
the economy can
Points under the PPF (like F) produce more
4,000
– possible computers, 3,000
– not efficient: some resources underutilized more wheat, 2,000
(e.g., workers unemployed, factories idle) or any combination in 1,000

Points above the PPF (like G) between. 0


0 100 200 300 400 500 600
– not possible
Computers

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

6
I– What is Macroeconomics? I– What is Macroeconomics?
For examples,
Economics is divided into two subfields:
• What causes recessions? What is “government
- Microeconomics studies how households and firms stimulus” and why might it help?
make decisions and how they interact in markets.
• Why does the cost of living keep rising?
- Macroeconomics is concerned with the behavior of the • Why are so many countries poor? What policies
economy as a whole – with booms and recessions, might help them grow out of poverty?
economic growth, inflation, unemployment, the balance • What is the government budget deficit?
How does it affect workers, consumers, businesses,
of payment, and exchange rate.
and taxpayers?
• What is the trade deficit? How does it affect the
country’s well-being?
1- Overview of Macroeconomics 25

II- Basic Model of Macroeconomics


The use of multiple models
Exogenous Macroeconomics Endogenous
Variables Models Variables • No one model can address all the issues we care
(AS x AD) about.
• E.g., our supply-demand model of the car market…
Variables that a model Variables that a model
takes as given tries to explain – can tell us how a fall in aggregate income affects
price & quantity of cars.
Output, economic growth – cannot tell us why aggregate income falls.
Non- Economic
economic factors Inflation rate
factors
Unemployment rate
Economic
policies
1- Overview of Macroeconomics 27 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

7
The use of multiple models Assumption of Prices: flexible vs. sticky
• Market clearing: An assumption that prices are
• So we will learn different models for studying
flexible, adjust to equate supply and demand.
different issues (e.g., unemployment, inflation, long-
run growth). • In the short run, many prices are sticky –
adjust sluggishly in response to changes in supply or
• For each new model, you should keep track of
demand. For example:
– its assumptions
– many labor contracts fix the nominal wage for a
– which variables are endogenous, year or longer
which are exogenous
– many magazine publishers change prices only once
– the questions it can help us understand, every 3-4 years
those it cannot

1- Overview of Macroeconomics 1- Overview of Macroeconomics

Assumption of Prices: flexible vs. sticky

• The economy’s behavior depends partly on whether


prices are sticky or flexible:
– If prices sticky (short run),
demand may not equal supply, which explains:
• unemployment (excess supply of labor)
• why firms cannot always sell all the goods
they produce
– If prices flexible (long run), markets clear and
economy behaves very differently

1- Overview of Macroeconomics

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