Short-Run Macroeconomic Equilibrium
... 1. In the AD–AS model, the intersection of the short-run aggregate supply curve and the aggregate demand curve is the point of short-run macroeconomic equilibrium. It determines the short-run equilibrium aggregate price level and the level of short-run equilibrium aggregate output. 2. Economic fluct ...
... 1. In the AD–AS model, the intersection of the short-run aggregate supply curve and the aggregate demand curve is the point of short-run macroeconomic equilibrium. It determines the short-run equilibrium aggregate price level and the level of short-run equilibrium aggregate output. 2. Economic fluct ...
Housing markets and the economy: the assessment
... fact that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve spent many weeks of his personal time over a period of years poring over and refining these spreadsheets illustrates not only his legendary reputation for appreciating data, but also his desire to understand the processes behind one of the most significa ...
... fact that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve spent many weeks of his personal time over a period of years poring over and refining these spreadsheets illustrates not only his legendary reputation for appreciating data, but also his desire to understand the processes behind one of the most significa ...
Outcomes and evidence requirements
... The derivation of the aggregate supply curve is explained in terms of aggregate production and cost behaviour at different output levels. Range ...
... The derivation of the aggregate supply curve is explained in terms of aggregate production and cost behaviour at different output levels. Range ...
8418 Investigate macroeconomic activity using the
... The derivation of the aggregate supply curve is explained in terms of aggregate production and cost behaviour at different output levels. Range ...
... The derivation of the aggregate supply curve is explained in terms of aggregate production and cost behaviour at different output levels. Range ...
Aggregate demand and supply
... The answer is yes - in the short run, events known as supply shocks may have a significant effect on the macroeconomy. A supply shock is modelled by a negative shift of the aggregate supply curve, as illustrated in figure 10.8. The new short run equilibrium occurs at Qd (output has fallen) and Pr (p ...
... The answer is yes - in the short run, events known as supply shocks may have a significant effect on the macroeconomy. A supply shock is modelled by a negative shift of the aggregate supply curve, as illustrated in figure 10.8. The new short run equilibrium occurs at Qd (output has fallen) and Pr (p ...
NBER WORKING PAPERS SERIES ENDOGENOUS MACROECONOMIC GROWTH THEORY Elhanan Helpman
... capital stock A(K) (see Sheshinski [1967]). The effect of capital on productivity is assumed to be external to an individual investor. For this reason the real interest rate equals the private marginal product of capital FK[K,A(K)L]. It follows that with this form of endogenous technical progress an ...
... capital stock A(K) (see Sheshinski [1967]). The effect of capital on productivity is assumed to be external to an individual investor. For this reason the real interest rate equals the private marginal product of capital FK[K,A(K)L]. It follows that with this form of endogenous technical progress an ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IS-LM AND MONETARISM Michael D. Bordo Anna J. Schwartz
... Many components of the Hicksian apparatus were developed by his contemporaries (Meade, Harrod, Champernowne, Reddaway) but Hicks is remembered because he embedded it in a simple compelling diagram (Darity and Young (1995), De Vroey (2000)). Although we always think of Hicks when discussing IS-LM, h ...
... Many components of the Hicksian apparatus were developed by his contemporaries (Meade, Harrod, Champernowne, Reddaway) but Hicks is remembered because he embedded it in a simple compelling diagram (Darity and Young (1995), De Vroey (2000)). Although we always think of Hicks when discussing IS-LM, h ...
The anatomy of three commodity booms
... The purpose of the present paper is to study and compare the nature of the three most dramatic price booms in international commodity markets since the second world war. The first of the three events to be explored began in 1950, when price quotations exploded and remained at high levels during the t ...
... The purpose of the present paper is to study and compare the nature of the three most dramatic price booms in international commodity markets since the second world war. The first of the three events to be explored began in 1950, when price quotations exploded and remained at high levels during the t ...
doc
... • in contrast, India and Indonesia had dense indigenous populations resistant to European disease so there was no heavy settlement by Europeans and these populations still remain largely indigenous • some countries were under colonial rule, but others (like China) were not • Latin America gained ind ...
... • in contrast, India and Indonesia had dense indigenous populations resistant to European disease so there was no heavy settlement by Europeans and these populations still remain largely indigenous • some countries were under colonial rule, but others (like China) were not • Latin America gained ind ...
The Price of Growth
... expanded its bond-buying program to corporate debt and China credit policy was eased during earlier this year causing growing discontent (and a divide) among Chinese policy-makers, some questioning more stimuli when previous rounds have not proven effective. Doves came to the rescue. Emerging Market ...
... expanded its bond-buying program to corporate debt and China credit policy was eased during earlier this year causing growing discontent (and a divide) among Chinese policy-makers, some questioning more stimuli when previous rounds have not proven effective. Doves came to the rescue. Emerging Market ...
price determination and stabilization under free banking system[*]
... addresses the differences among free banking advocates concerning price level determination and stabilization. Third, it provides some empirical evidence concerning both banking systems. Last one has concluding remarks. ...
... addresses the differences among free banking advocates concerning price level determination and stabilization. Third, it provides some empirical evidence concerning both banking systems. Last one has concluding remarks. ...
Institutional Failure, Monetary Scarcity, and the Depreciation of the
... attempts to extinguish specie debt with depreciatedpaper, or evidence of unsophisticatedeconomic analysis. BenjaminFranklin'sand Adam Smith's views on papermoney are the starting point for a model of equilibriumscarcity. This framework is applied first to general patterns in the movements of nominal ...
... attempts to extinguish specie debt with depreciatedpaper, or evidence of unsophisticatedeconomic analysis. BenjaminFranklin'sand Adam Smith's views on papermoney are the starting point for a model of equilibriumscarcity. This framework is applied first to general patterns in the movements of nominal ...
measuring GDP
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
Lesson 1
... Money has an effect on utility and on the demand for money However, money is both neutral and superneutral: absolutely no effect on real variables! Is that realistic? Which assumption should we relax? ...
... Money has an effect on utility and on the demand for money However, money is both neutral and superneutral: absolutely no effect on real variables! Is that realistic? Which assumption should we relax? ...
Welfare Effects of Demand Management Policies: Impact Multipliers
... fundamental way. With the fixed capital stocks, higher levels of output can only be achieved through increased employment of labor, which raises the marginal product of capital and. therefore, its rental. However, increased capital rentals will raise output prices (see equation (lb)| so that increas ...
... fundamental way. With the fixed capital stocks, higher levels of output can only be achieved through increased employment of labor, which raises the marginal product of capital and. therefore, its rental. However, increased capital rentals will raise output prices (see equation (lb)| so that increas ...
Welfare Effects of Demand Management Policies: Impact Multipliers
... fundamental way. With the fixed capital stocks, higher levels of output can only be achieved through increased employment of labor, which raises the marginal product of capital and. therefore, its rental. However, increased capital rentals will raise output prices (see equation (lb)| so that increas ...
... fundamental way. With the fixed capital stocks, higher levels of output can only be achieved through increased employment of labor, which raises the marginal product of capital and. therefore, its rental. However, increased capital rentals will raise output prices (see equation (lb)| so that increas ...
Document
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. The same prices should be used to value the goods and services in the countries being compared, but often are not. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. The same prices should be used to value the goods and services in the countries being compared, but often are not. ...
Gross Domestic Product
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. The same prices should be used to value the goods and services in the countries being compared, but often are not. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. The same prices should be used to value the goods and services in the countries being compared, but often are not. ...
Real GDP and the Price Level
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
The Measurement of Output and Prices In the Service
... began in 1992. 12 indices are currently published and another 11 are collected but described as “experimental”. Under current plans, the published series should cover “most of the sector by early 2001”. It is planned that banking and finance should be included by this date, but no such services are ...
... began in 1992. 12 indices are currently published and another 11 are collected but described as “experimental”. Under current plans, the published series should cover “most of the sector by early 2001”. It is planned that banking and finance should be included by this date, but no such services are ...
Growth domestic product
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
... currency units as the real GDP of the other country, so an exchange rate must be used. ...
fifty years of economic growth in western europe
... generally accepted that it owed a good deal to ICT. The episode has been analyzed by several authors using variants of growth accounting techniques. They show a distinct change of pace in the mid-1990s and attribute this mainly to the impact of ICT. The estimates in Table 3 are drawn from a study th ...
... generally accepted that it owed a good deal to ICT. The episode has been analyzed by several authors using variants of growth accounting techniques. They show a distinct change of pace in the mid-1990s and attribute this mainly to the impact of ICT. The estimates in Table 3 are drawn from a study th ...
This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from... Bureau of Economic Research Volume Title: Inflation: Causes and Effects
... Readjustments in the dollar price of the resource unit could be the responsibility of the Federal Reserve Board just as the quantity of money is under the board's discretion in the present system. Much the same considerations would underlie the setting of the dollar price as permeate monetary policy ...
... Readjustments in the dollar price of the resource unit could be the responsibility of the Federal Reserve Board just as the quantity of money is under the board's discretion in the present system. Much the same considerations would underlie the setting of the dollar price as permeate monetary policy ...
Chapter 3. From Recession to Recovery: How Soon and How
... the thrust remains relevant (see, for instance, Calomiris, 1993). See, for example, Eggertsson (2008), Romer (1990), and Temin and Wigmore (1990). In both cases, financial innovation accompanied the boom. In the 1920s, household credit expanded more rapidly than personal income in the United State ...
... the thrust remains relevant (see, for instance, Calomiris, 1993). See, for example, Eggertsson (2008), Romer (1990), and Temin and Wigmore (1990). In both cases, financial innovation accompanied the boom. In the 1920s, household credit expanded more rapidly than personal income in the United State ...
Long Depression
The Long Depression was a worldwide price recession, beginning in 1873 and running through the spring of 1879. It was the most severe in Europe and the United States, which had been experiencing strong economic growth fueled by the Second Industrial Revolution in the decade following the American Civil War. The episode was labeled the ""Great Depression"" at the time, and it held that designation until the Great Depression of the 1930s. Though a period of general deflation and a general contraction, it did not have the severe economic retrogression of the Great Depression.It was most notable in Western Europe and North America, at least in part because reliable data from the period are most readily available in those parts of the world. The United Kingdom is often considered to have been the hardest hit; during this period it lost some of its large industrial lead over the economies of Continental Europe. While it was occurring, the view was prominent that the economy of the United Kingdom had been in continuous depression from 1873 to as late as 1896 and some texts refer to the period as the Great Depression of 1873–96.In the United States, economists typically refer to the Long Depression as the Depression of 1873–79, kicked off by the Panic of 1873, and followed by the Panic of 1893, book-ending the entire period of the wider Long Depression. The National Bureau of Economic Research dates the contraction following the panic as lasting from October 1873 to March 1879. At 65 months, it is the longest-lasting contraction identified by the NBER, eclipsing the Great Depression's 43 months of contraction.In the US, from 1873–1879, 18,000 businesses went bankrupt, including 89 railroads. Ten states and hundreds of banks went bankrupt. Unemployment peaked in 1878, long after the panic ended. Different sources peg the peak unemployment rate anywhere from 8.25% to 14%.