MACROECONOMICS
ECONOMIC GROWTH, UNEMPLOYMENT & INFLATION
Name:___________________
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Economic Growth
A. Definition of Economic Growth
B. Measurement of Economic Growth
C. Causes of Growth
D. Effects of Economic Growth
E. Recent Performance (evaluation)
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Full Employment = Low Unemployment
A. Definitions
B. Measurement of Unemployment
C. Causes of Unemployment
D. The Concept of Full Employment
E. The Effects of Unemployment
F. Recent Performance (evaluation)
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Price Stability = controlled Inflation
A. The Concept of Price Stability
B. Measurement of Inflation
C. Causes of Inflation
D. Effects of Inflation
E. Recent Performance
MACROECONOMICS
Introduction
Macroeconomics is the study of the performance of the economy as a whole.
It is concerned with the aggregates and economic objectives.
It also looks at policies to achieve economic objectives
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INTERNAL STABILITY
The government aims to keep the economy stable or to avoid sudden changes in the economy.
Why is this objective important?
If economic conditions change too much it creates uncertainty which leads to:
(i) a reduction in business and consumer confidence
(ii) difficulty for a business to make production decisions i.e. investment
Internal Stability objective for the government
Targets for Australia and other western countries
* Steady or stable economic growth (continuous) __% Real GDP
* Price stability or low inflation __ % (CPI)
* Full employment or low unemployment __ % Unemployment
Targets for Indonesia and other developing countries
* Steady or stable economic growth (continuous) __% Real GDP
* Price stability or low inflation __ % (CPI)
* Full employment or low unemployment __ % Unemployment
4.1 ECONOMIC GROWTH – ECONOMIC OBJECTIVE 1
A. Definition of Economic Growth
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Economic growth is _____________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Real GDP is money GDP with the effect of inflation removed.
E.g. No of goods ↓ Price Δ↓ GDP
Year 1 cars $ each » $
Year 2 cars $ each » $
B. Measurement of Economic Growth
It is measured by_______________________________________________
Rate of Growth =
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)____________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Final good is __________________________________________________________
Methods of Measurement of Economic Growth
Real GDP – the value of all final goods and services produced during a given time (year) based on the prices existing in a selected base year.
_______________________________________________________
Money GDP/Nominal GDP – the value of all final goods and services produced during a given time (year) ____________________________________________
Money GDP/Real GDP
Example (i) Output Price Money GDP Real GDP
Year 1 100 cars $ 1 each $ $
Year 2 100 cars $2 each $ $
Example (ii) Money GDP CPI (inflation) Real GDP
Year 1 $100B - $
Year 2 $110 $
Real GDP per capita – __________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
________________________
Considered to be the best measure of GDP
E.g. $100,000,000,000 = $_____ =$_________ per person
20,000,000
• Real GDP is ______________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Calculations of Economic Growth
|YEAR |REAL GDP |ECONOMIC GROWTH % |
|2004 |$800B | |
|2005 |$900B | |
|2006 |$950B | |
The rate of economic growth from 2004-2005 is _________ than the rate from 2005-2006. This does not mean its __________. ________________
_____________________________________________________________
Limitations of Real GDP as a measure of Economic Growth
• __________________________________, it excludes a/ second hand transactions e.g. used cars, non-productive financial transactions.
• ________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
i.e. goods sold for cash-tax free or illegal goods and services
• ________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________.
• ______________________________________________________
e.g. China 1.3 Billion and Australia 22 million and Indonesia ______.
• ____________________________________________________________________________________. (should distinguish between different economies and one economy?)
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C. Causes of Economic Growth (source)
Increase in Production Possibilities Adjust the Diagram and explain
How economic growth increases
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(i)Aggregate Demand (AD)
This represents the __________________ by all participants in the economy.
The participants are:-
Consumers , Government, Producers, Exporters, Importers
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An increase in the total of AD causes a shift (or increase) in AD
Price
Levels
AS
AD
Production Output
(Level of Economic Activity)
(Draw an increase in AD Line and Label Diagram)
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Factors that shift the AD Curve
i) Increase in _____________________________________________
ii) Increase in _____________________________________________
iii) Increase in ____________ (borrowing)________________________
______________________________________________________
iv) ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
These factors _______________ AD
Factors that _____________ AD below
____________________ – people have less money to spend
Global Economic Crisis 2008/9 _______________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Austerity Cutbucks in the Eurozone 2011 onwards ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Price of Petrol Increasing in Indonesia in 2014 lead to _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Fall in the Price of Oil worldwide in 2015 will mean ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
(ii)Aggregate Supply (AS) _______________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
AS is determined by _____________________________________________
A supply side contribution to growth can occur by (_____________________)
a/ employing _______________________e.g. unemployed people
b/ by increasing the amount of resources e.g. _______________________________
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Therefore, economic growth needs a contribution from both ______________
A relatively equal contribution is the best outcomes.
The level of AD must be high enough to generate growth (AS) but not too high as to cause inflation.
Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Diagram
Price
AS
AD
Production Output
(Level of Economic Activity)
(Draw an increase in AD and AS Line and Label Diagram)
Describe an increase in AD
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Describe an increase in AS
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If only AD is increased, it eventually results in no economic growth and very high level of inflation.
Increasing both AD and AS produces better results
If the economy is in a recession or many resources are unemployed, only an increase in AD will increase economic growth.
But not when all resources are fully employed
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(Label Diagrams with increase AD at full employment and show full employment on PPC)
E. Effects of Economic Growth
Benefits
i) ______________________________________________________
ii) ______________________________________________________
iii) ______________________________________________________
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Costs
i) ______________________________________________________
e.g. oil and coal and gold etc
ii) ______________________________________________________
e.g. air and water pollution and global warming
iii) ______________________________________________________e.g. too much demand for goods and services
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E. Evaluation of Economic Growth or Recent Performance
How well are we performing for this country?
Aim: to achieve sustainable and stable economic growth
Target: To achieve about ___ % economic growth
Why 4%
Economic growth > _ % reduces unemployment
< _% increases unemployment
> _ % increases inflation
USA 10 year average is ____%GDP (2004-2014)
Indonesia’s 10 year average is ____%GDP (2004-2014)
China’s 10 year average is ____%GDP (2004-2014)
The Trade Cycle (Business Cycle)
The Business Cycle is when there are alternating periods of economic growth and contraction, which can be dated by changes in output, income, sales and employment measures.
Trade Cycle:
Trade
7 Years Time
Draw the Business Cycle and Label
i) Expansion: ____________________________________________
ii) Boom/Peak: ____________________________________________
iii) Contraction: ___________________________________________
iv) Trough/Recession: ______________________________________
______________________________________________________
Q1 Why is it important for a country to achieve close to its target for economic growth
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4.2 FULL EMPLOYMENT – ECONOMIC OBJECTIVE 2
A. Definition of full employment
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Full employment is______________________________________________.
______________
Full employment occurs when there is ____cyclical unemployment. It allows for some natural unemployment such as _____________________________
unemployment.
Cyclical unemployment is considered to be _________________________.
The target for Australia is about _____% unemployment.
The current unemployment rate is __________________________________
N.A.I.R.U. (Target)
N.A.I.R.U. stands from the _______________________________________________
This means we aim to get unemployment as low as possible without causing a sharp rise in inflation.
Classification of People
Four options
i) _________________ – children at home or school
ii) __________________– retired people, students studying, disabled people etc.
iii) ________ – people in workforce working (working more than 1.1hrs per week)
iv) ___________ – are those without work but looking for work (working less than
1hr per week.)
B. Measurement or Calculation of Unemployment
______________ = Unemployed__(iv)_______ * 100
Employed + unemployed (iii)+(iv)
______________ = Labour Force_(iii)+(iv)_________ * 100
Population above 15 years (ii)+(iii)+(iv)
|0-14 years |
|Not wishing to work |
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|Unemployed |
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|Employed |
Employed: _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
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Unemployed: __________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Q/ Why do we need to know the value of the unemployment rate and participation rate?
A/ _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
C. Causes or Types of Unemployment
(i)Cyclical Unemployment (avoidable)
This is caused by _______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Diagram
Price
AS
AD
Production Output
Trade Cycle (Level of Economic Activity
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Draw a decrease in AD A Recession on Trade Cycle.
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When the economy recovers, _____________________________________________
(Unavoidable – natural unemployment) Expected
(ii) Seasonal Unemployment
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__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
e.g. Snow ski instructor in summer and a fruit picker in winter
(Natural Event!)
(iii)Frictional Unemployment
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
e.g. Ms Accounts leaves Accounting Firm to look for a job at a University.
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(iv)Structural Unemployment
_____________________________________________________________________
e.g. When a bank teller is replaced by an automatic teller.
Clothing and textile workers in Australia lose their jobs as production moves to China.
{The concept of sunrise industries i.e. Mobile phones – expanding industry equals new employment
and sunset industries i.e. cars and clothes – contracting industry equals increase unemployment}
Solution to structural unemployment
Retrain workers/new skills required. Education funding from government needed.
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Hard core unemployment _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Calculation Question
Taylia (Country)
Workforce = 50 Workforce – Employed = _________________
Employed = 45
Not wishing to work = 20
Unemployment Rate = Unemployed__________ * 100
Employed + unemployed (workforce)
Participation Rate = Labour Force__________ * 100
Population above 15 years
D. The Concept of Full Employment
Full employment occurs when there is zero cyclical unemployment.
E. Benefits of achieving full employment
(i)More income tax is collected and less social welfare payment are paid.
This improves the federal government budget.
This means more funds for education, health and public transport (opportunity cost)
(ii)Social Factors: there should be less crime, vandalism and lower divorce rate.
Less money is spent on Police and Social Workers etc
(iii)Improved productive efficiency in theory as we approached the PPC
(iv)More goods and services and improved living standards
E. Cost of High Unemployment Opposite of above
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Costs of Full Employment (Eco Growth)
i) ____________________________
ii) ____________________________
iii) ____________________________
F. Evaluation of Australian performance
(i)Current unemployment rate compared to the past? _________________________
This is __________________compared to the last ten years of unemployment figures
(ii)Australia compared to other countries? ___________________________
_____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
How accurate are the unemployment figure measurements?
(i)Many people have moved away from unemployment benefits onto DSP (Disability support pension) [cheating?] From 1996 to 2006 370,000 more people on DSP
(ii)Hidden Unemployment: many people are giving up looking for work but still want a job. These people are recorded as not wishing to work. This lowers the unemployment rate (but ↑not wishing to work rate) e.g. mothers who can’t find a job and husband is working
So in a time of a boom, when consumer and business confidence is high, more people join the workforce, pushing the participation rate up. Conversely, during a recession when confidence is low and pessimism prevails, some people withdraw from the workforce. This is called “discouraged worker hypothesis”
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(iii)Under-employment or disguised unemployment. This occurs when part-time workers are seeking full-time work. They are counted as full employed.
e.g. if a teacher works 2 classes at Taylors they are only getting 50% of wage but are considered fully employed and not counted as unemployed.
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4.3 PRICE STABILITY
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A. Definition: Price Stability
______________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________Price rises on average should not be faster than your trading partners. E.g. Australia trades with China, Japan and USA
Inflation: _____________________________________________________________
Aim is to maintain a rate of ___% per year, Indonesia’s current rate is ______________
Deflation: _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Disinflation: _____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
Where does inflation become a problem?
Where there is a sustained and substantial increase in the average price levels.
(inflation rate _________ 2-3% is high inflation)
Measurement:
(i)Headline Inflation:
This is measured by the CPI or the Consumer Price Index. It is a quarterly measure
(3 months) of average changes in consumer prices in a ‘basket’ (regime/list) of goods and services normally purchased by typical city households.
(ii)Underlying Inflation:
Calculated by removing the more volatile, seasonal and policy factors in the CPI.
e.g. ____________________________________________________
This is also know as core inflation or trimmed mean.
Calculation of CPI
Formula
Rate of Inflation = Current CPI – Previous CPI * 100
Previous CPI
Base year CPI always 100
Year Price Index Year 3 Inflation
1 100
2 109
3 119
Problems with the Accuracy of Consumer Price Index
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The CPI is only an _______: (Due to costs of checking all goods +services in Australia)
(i)_________________________________________ –only goods in basket (selection)
(ii)_______________________________________, Sydney, Brisbane and not country
(iii)__________________________________________________________________
Factor market is not included only consumer goods and services (product market)
(iv)_______________________________________________ (exhibit 13.1 Text Book)
C. Causes or Types of Inflation
Demand Pull Inflation = Increase in AD
Demand Pull inflation is __________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________________________.
This is caused by
E.g. A large increase in government spending or large tax cuts
Increase in wages that leads to a higher level of consumption spending
Lower interest rates leading to increase in Investment spending
Demand Pull Inflation Diagram
Price
AS
AD AD=___________________
Production Output
(Level of Economic Activity)
Draw an increase in AD and describe it’s effect on Price levels and Output.
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Shortages of goods and services occur and prices rise
AD>AS = High inflation
Solution: (i)Reduce AD or cut spending –increasing interest rates means people save more and people pay more in interest and therefore spend less reducing AD and therefore inflation decreases
(ii)Increase AS (difficult in Short Term)
Cost Push Inflation
Cost Push inflation is ____________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
This occurs when increases in the cost of production of most products leads to reduced profit margins and a _____________________.
e.g. __________________________________________________________
Unemployment is often associated with cost push inflation as workers can price themselves out of the labour market when seeking higher wages.
The producer may try to pass on the price increase to consumers when profit margins for businesses, there are 2 choices
A/ Reduce profit or B/ pass on the costs in higher prices for consumers
This depends on the types of market structure dominating the economy
Cost Push inflation Diagram
Price
AS
AD AD=C+I+G+(X-M)
Production Output
(Level of Economic Activity)
Draw an decrease in AS and describe it’s effect on Price levels and Output.
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Reasons for the decrease in AS are increases in costs of production e.g. pay rises, raw materials i.e. increase in fuel costs and so businesses will supply less
Not easy to solve
Must increase AS
D. Effects of High Inflation
High inflation is like a disease that effects the whole economy. It is the priority objective [FIFS – Fight Inflation First Strategy]
Achieving low inflation makes it easier to achieve all other objectives _____________________________________________________________
(i)___________________________________________________________________(these investments do not increase output of goods and services)
e.g. gold, art work, land etc.
(ii)___________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________. E.g. less factories built
The costs to businesses may increase. They may cutback on production.
(iii) Income redistribution effect occurs because there are winners and losers as a result of inflation. The winners include borrowers of funds, strong trade unions, powerful firms and the owners of real assets. Losers include those on fixed incomes, lenders, poorly organised groups such as weak trade unions and firms facing strong competition perhaps from cheap imports, holders of money assets and exporters
(iv) __________________________________________________________
___________________________________ (↓ exports, ↑ imports). If the prices of AUSTRALIA goods increase too much then people and businesses may start to import more goods from abroad because they are cheaper. .
(v)__________________________________________________________________ in the long-term. And therefore Lower economic growth leads to higher unemployment
|WINNERS High Inflation |LOSERS of High Inflation |
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E. Evaluate Indonesia's Recent Performance with Inflation
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Phillips Curve
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In economics, the Phillips curve is a historical inverse relationship between rates of unemployment and corresponding rates of inflation that result in an economy. Stated simply, decreased unemployment, (i.e., increased levels of employment) in an economy will correlate with higher rates of inflation.
Stagflation
Definition of Stagflation.
Stagflation is a period of rising _________ and falling __________. With falling output, unemployment will tend to be _____________.
Diagram Stagflation
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Stagflation is often caused by a ______________________. For example, rising commodity prices, such as _____ prices, will cause a rise in business costs and Aggregate Supply will shift to the left. This causes a higher __________ rate and lower _______.
People may talk about stagflation if there is a rise in inflation and a fall in the growth rate. This is less damaging than higher inflation and negative _________. But, it still represents a deterioration in the trade off between unemployment and inflation.
Stagflation and Phillips Curve
The traditional phillips curve suggests there is a __________ between inflation and unemployment. A period of stagflation will shift the Phillips curve to the right, giving a worse trade off.
Stagflation in the 1970s
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In 1974, we have an inflation spike of 25%, at the same time, we see negative GDP growth. This was caused by the oil price boom and also end of the Barber Boom.
Stagflation in 2011
In 2011, the UK experienced a rise in inflation to 5%, at the same time, we experienced economic stagnation, with a very low growth rate.
This was caused by:
• Higher ___________ prices
• Higher __________ prices
• Impact of devaluation increasing ____________ prices
• Impact of higher _______, which increased inflation but reduced _____ standards.
• see also: _______________________
Solutions to Stagflation
There are no easy solutions to stagflation, though supply side policies to increase productivity may help.
e.g. _____________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
REVISION QUESTIONS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
1/ Define economic growth.
2/ What is the formula for calculating economic growth?
3/ a. What are the costs and benefits of economic growth?
b. What are 2 limitations of Real GDP as a measure of Economic Growth
4/ What are the 2 main causes/sources of economic growth?
5/ Using a PPC explain how economic growth is achieved.
6/ Using an AD and LRAS diagram. Explain how economic growth can be achieved with increased LRAS and what increases LRAS.
7/ Is increased investment essential to achieve economic growth? Evaluate
8/ Is improved productivity essential to achieve economic growth? Evaluate
9/ Evaluate the consequences of good economic growth.
LOW EMPLOYMENT
1/ Define unemployment.
2/ Distinguish between employed and unemployed person.
3/ Show the formula for calculating the unemployment rate and the participation rate.
4/ What is the difference between hidden and disguised unemployment?
5/ Is Cyclical unemployment avoidable? Why? Use a AS/AD diagram
6/ Explain each of the 4 types of unemployment and give examples of each.
7/ Using a diagram explain how structural unemployment is caused by changes in demand and the reasons why.
9/ Explain the Social and economic effects of a high unemployment rate on the economy.
10/ Ms Jo’s Island
No of People-:
Workforce 1000
Unemployed 200
Not Wishing to work 300
a/ What is the unemployment rate?
b/ what is the participation rate?
11/ Evaluate government policies to deal with different types of unemployment
PRICE STABILITY – Low and stable rate of inflation
1/ Define the term “Inflation”, “disinflation” and “deflation”
2/ Explain the difference between
a/ Demand Pull
b/ Cost Push Inflation
using AD and AS diagrams.
3/ How can high inflation effect resource allocation?
4/ What are the benefits of low inflation for an economy?
5/ Who are the winners and losers of HIGH inflation country? Effects of changes in oil and food prices for example
6/ What are the consequences of
a/ Inflation
b/ Deflation?
7/ Why is the achievement of price stability a high priority Indonesia.
8/ Explain the relationship between interest rates and the level of inflation?
High inflation. The solution is to interest rates
This will saving and interest payments and
People will spend and AD will be _____________.
9/ Evaluate Policies used to deal with different types of inflation
10/ Using the Philips curve explain how there is a trade off between the unemployment and inflation rate in the short run
11/ Using the Philips curve explain how “stagflation” may occur.
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