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MACROECONOMICS
What is the purpose of macroeconomics?
• to explain how the economy as a whole “works”
• to understand why macro variables behave in the
way they do (trends and fluctuations)
• to predict the consequences of policy action
COURSE OUTLINE
1. The macro-economy: a theoretical model
2. Controlling the economy: fiscal policy
3. Controlling the economy: monetary policy
4. Policy issues: inflation and unemployment
5. International macroeconomics
Macroeconomic variables
• national income and output
• employment and unemployment
• wages, price level and inflation
• interest rates and money supply
• consumption, saving and investment
• exports and imports
• government spending and taxation
• foreign exchange markets and exchange rates
What factors determine national income and employment?
Can the government affect national income through
fiscal and monetary policy?
How do interest rate decisions reached by the central bank
affect the economy?
What factors determine national savings and investment?
What factors determine the exchange rate?
Why is the trade balance important?
THE CIRCULAR FLOW OF INCOME
Exports
Imports
Investment
Demand for
goods
Households
Government
Firms
Tax
Wages, profits
A MACROECONOMIC MODEL: THE DEMAND SIDE
Building blocks
• consumption
• investment
• government spending
• exports
• imports
65%
15%
20%
25%
-25%
These five variables play a critical role in determining
national income and employment.
Hence: need to be explained.
What determines aggregate consumption?
• disposable income (Y - T)
• interest rates (investment)
• uncertainty (confidence in future income stream)
• wealth (asset prices, house prices)
• expected future income (e.g. pensions)
• age structure of population
Investment
• new capital equipment; not savings/ shares
What determines investment?
• initial cost of investment
• interest rate (cost of borrowing)
• expected future income from investment
The investment decision
PV of investment - cost of investment > 0
Sources and cost of funds:
• internal funds (retained profits)
• borrowing from financial institutions
• selling equity stock in business
How would a reduction in interest rates affect investment?
• lower borrowing costs
• lower mortgage rates (higher demand for houses)
• lower borrowing costs: higher demand for goods
Exports and imports are determined by:
- exchange rate: $ /£
- competitiveness: relative prices
- world income
- price and income elasticities
DETERMINATION OF NATIONAL INCOME:
A DEMAND-BASED MODEL
1. Aggregate supply of goods responds to demand
i.e. unlimited supplies of labour and capital
2. Aggregate demand for goods is determined as
follows:
AD = C + I + G + X - M
3. Predictions:
- if AS > AD, stocks increase, output falls
- if AD > AS, stocks decrease, output rises
- if AD = AS, economy is in equilibrium
Factors causing national income to change
1. If expenditure (AD) increases, so will income (GDP)
2. Why might expenditure increase?
• Increase in consumption due to:
- increase in expected future income
- increase in wealth (house prices, stock market)
- fall in interest rates (monetary authorities)
- lower taxes (govt. policy)
- fall in prices
• Increase in investment due to:
- increase in expected profits (business optimism)
- fall in borrowing costs
• Increase in government spending:
- increase in transfer payments
- increase in capital spending
- increase in expenditure on education/ health
• Increase in net exports:
- fall in exchange rate
- increase in competitiveness
- increase in world income
THE SUPPLY SIDE
So far: we have assumed that AD alone determines
national income
What about supply-side constraints?
• capital stock is limited in the short run
• supply of labour is limited
• skills shortages may arise
Implications of a limited supply of factor inputs
• wages increase as labour demand increases
• diminishing marginal productivity
(fixed supply of capital)
• producers willing to supply more output only at higher
prices
• supply can be increased over the long run
(increase in capital stock)
Revised model
• interaction between AD and AS determines
the economy’s output and price levels
Consider the effects of:
- an increase in production costs
- an increase in the supply of resources
(e.g. capital stock, technology)
- an increase in the demand for goods
Extended model
Assumption: AS is fixed by the economy’s output capacity
• labour market is assumed to clear (full employment)
• AD negatively related to price level
- fall in price leads to higher demand
(real money balances increase, spending increases)
- fall in price reduces demand for money, interest rates fall
(lower interest rate, higher spending)
• AD positively related to aggregate spending
- investment increases as business expectations improve
• AD positively related to money supply
- if money supply increases, interest rate falls (investment
increases)
A further modification
• AS may not be fixed at the full employment level
• AS may be upward sloping in the short run:
- sticky prices
- unemployed labour willing to work at current wages
( costs do not rise as more labour is employed)