
Chapter 5
... absorbed by the consumers, and quantity does not fall much. This is characteristic of goods which are viewed as necessities or have few substitutes. b. On the other hand, with an “elastic” Demand curve, which is flatter, has a significant decline in quantity demanded for just a small increase in pri ...
... absorbed by the consumers, and quantity does not fall much. This is characteristic of goods which are viewed as necessities or have few substitutes. b. On the other hand, with an “elastic” Demand curve, which is flatter, has a significant decline in quantity demanded for just a small increase in pri ...
SECOND ORDER ECONOMICS AS AN EXAMPLE OF SECOND
... Taking account of the interaction between economic theories and society is what is meant by second-order economics. It is an effort to include the observers (i.e., economists, not just investors or market participants) in the domain of economics. Consequences of the Financial Crisis The 2008 financ ...
... Taking account of the interaction between economic theories and society is what is meant by second-order economics. It is an effort to include the observers (i.e., economists, not just investors or market participants) in the domain of economics. Consequences of the Financial Crisis The 2008 financ ...
3 Supply and Demand
... • By doing this, we can illustrate how when the demand of a good increases, the market sets a new equilibrium price which is higher than the old one. ...
... • By doing this, we can illustrate how when the demand of a good increases, the market sets a new equilibrium price which is higher than the old one. ...
Slide_6-1
... x Inflation erodes the value or purchasing power of money. People, especially those on low and fixed incomes, cannot buy as much as they did before with their incomes. Demand for many products will fall if real incomes continue to be squeezed x It increases the costs of production and reduces profit ...
... x Inflation erodes the value or purchasing power of money. People, especially those on low and fixed incomes, cannot buy as much as they did before with their incomes. Demand for many products will fall if real incomes continue to be squeezed x It increases the costs of production and reduces profit ...
Weekly Commentary 11-25
... replaced by an automated system that would increase money supply at a steady, pre-set rate. He believed such a system would better control inflation, making spending and investment decisions more certain. The Economist article said: “In theory, then, the system ought to keep a lid on inflation – mak ...
... replaced by an automated system that would increase money supply at a steady, pre-set rate. He believed such a system would better control inflation, making spending and investment decisions more certain. The Economist article said: “In theory, then, the system ought to keep a lid on inflation – mak ...
Slide 1 - New City Agenda
... Plausible parameter estimates plugged into a simple growth model can easily generate ever rising house prices – relative to other goods AND to incomes. ...
... Plausible parameter estimates plugged into a simple growth model can easily generate ever rising house prices – relative to other goods AND to incomes. ...
Supply and Demand Extra Practice Answers
... will try to stock up on plywood now while the price still is low. This will increase the current demand (more will be demanded at each price) and shift the demand curve to the right. Producers will react as well. Since they also expect prices to be higher in three months, they have an incentive to h ...
... will try to stock up on plywood now while the price still is low. This will increase the current demand (more will be demanded at each price) and shift the demand curve to the right. Producers will react as well. Since they also expect prices to be higher in three months, they have an incentive to h ...
History of macroeconomic thought

Macroeconomic theory has its origins in the study of business cycles and monetary theory. In general, early theorists believed monetary factors could not have an impact on real factors such as real output. John Maynard Keynes attacked some of these ""classical"" theories and produced a general theory that described the whole economy in terms of aggregates rather than individual, microeconomic parts. Attempting to explain unemployment and recessions, he noticed the tendency for people and businesses to hoard cash and avoid investment during a recession. He argued that this invalidated the assumptions of classical economists who thought that markets always clear, leaving no surplus of goods and no willing labor left idle. The word macroeconomics was first used by Ragnar FrischThe generation of economists that followed Keynes synthesized his theory with neoclassical microeconomics to form the neoclassical synthesis. Although Keynesian theory originally omitted an explanation of price levels and inflation, later Keynesians adopted the Phillips curve to model price-level changes. Some Keynesians opposed the synthesis method of combining Keynes's theory with an equilibrium system and advocated disequilibrium models instead. Monetarists, led by Milton Friedman, adopted some Keynesian ideas, such as the importance of the demand for money, but argued that Keynesians ignored the role of money supply in inflation. Robert Lucas and other new classical macroeconomists criticized Keynesian models that did not work under rational expectations. Lucas also argued that Keynesian empirical models would not be as stable as models based on microeconomic foundations.The new classical school culminated in real business cycle theory (RBC). Like early classical economic models, RBC models assumed that markets clear and that business cycles are driven by changes in technology and supply, not demand. New Keynesians tried to address many of the criticisms leveled by Lucas and other new classical economists against Neo-Keynesians. New Keynesians adopted rational expectations and built models with microfoundations of sticky prices that suggested recessions could still be explained by demand factors because rigidities stop prices from falling to a market-clearing level, leaving a surplus of goods and labor. The new neoclassical synthesis combined elements of both new classical and new Keynesian macroeconomics into a consensus. Other economists avoided the new classical and new Keynesian debate on short-term dynamics and developed the new growth theories of long-run economic growth. The Great Recession led to a retrospective on the state of the field and some popular attention turned toward heterodox economics.