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ECO 154/254 Intermediate Macroeconomics Prof. Michael B. McElroy Multimedia by: Mannig J. Simidian x2 x2a x2b x1a x2b x1 • • • • • • • • The Scarcity Story The Production Function The Production Possibilities Frontier Opportunity Cost Dymamics of the PPF: Economic Growth Choice: Investment or Consumption? Public vs. Private Spending Summary & Exercises The Scarcity Story... “Scarcityman” (as he’s nicknamed) loves pondering the economic phenomenon, scarcity. He claims that scarcity is simply an inherent condition in nature, that we all must endure. He implies that we can’t just have or produce everything. Opportunity costs exist and we must constantly make choices. Decisions will always be about “this or that”, not “this and that” and “now or later” not “now and later.” Scarcity Rules! Scarcityman won’t have to remind us to take our bitter pill, scarcity, we will constantly run into it as we further our study of Macroeconomics. We will come to realize that scarcity exists for everyone, rich or poor. For the richer country, scarcity forces people to work instead of play. If resources were not scarce, the people would pursue more leisure activities like vacation. For the poorer country, poverty and appalling living conditions make scarcity a matter of life and death. The Production Function The production function is a process of transforming inputs (labor (n), capital (k), institutional structure (inst) ) into outputs (final goods and services for a certain time period). The algebraic representation is: y = F ( n, k, inst) output is some function of our given inputs The Production Possibilities Frontier (The PPF) • Our goal in working with the PPF is to see the most output that can be produced given a certain amount of inputs. • So, first assume that as a nation, our inputs (n,k,inst) are fixed and we produce 2 goods, x1 and x2. In other words, right now, we only have a certain amount of workers, and capital to work with and a certain level of institutional efficiency within our society. • Next, we’d like to determine what combinations of our 2 goods we could produce…so here we go. Let’s say you decide to produce this amount of goods x2 and x1. x2 x2a Remember that points that lie outside the PPF, are unattainable. x2b Remember that points that lie inside the PPF are attainable, but not desirable. x1a x1b x1 Or you could cut back on x2 and increase your production of x1. Opportunity Cost The downward slope of the PPF depicts that the opportunity cost of producing more of one good is the amount of the other good that must be sacrificed. x2 10 units A Let’s say you are at point A, producing only good x2. Suddenly you decide to produce some of good x1 without reducing the production of good x2. B Uh oh…this is outside the PPF, so you must reduce production of x2. 7 units Notice that in order to gain 8 units of x1, you had to give up 3 units (10-7) of good x2. 0 units 8 units x1 Dynamics of the PPF: Economic Growth Now, let’s suppose we can increase our inputs (n,k,inst). This will shift out our PPF, making it possible to produce at a higher PPF. x2 PPF This action is called PPF Remember that any points that lie beyond even the higher PPF... are still unattainable!!! x1 9 measured in millions of dollars Investment Choice: Consumption or Investment? A nation at point A is choosing “zero-growth”, that is, they would rather consume right now, than invest and consume more later. C B 6 0 A nation choosing point B shows more willingness to invest. By investing more, the nation can increase its capital stock and therefore experience an increase in their PPF in the future. A 5 Consumption measured in millions of dollars 8 10 A nation choosing point C is investing even more and will see an even larger increase in their PPF. Consumption or investment? There is no “better” choice, it just depends on whether one places a higher value on current consumption, than on growth. Keep in mind that investment implies future consumption, so the decision is really about when to consume. measured in millions of dollars Investment 9 C A nation choosing point C, is said to have a Low Rate of Time Preference. B 6 5 Consumption measured in millions of dollars 8 A nation choosing point B, is said to have a High Rate of Time Preference. Public vs. Private Spending Public Output The issue of Public and Private spending must also run into the boundaries set by scarcity. There is an opportunity cost whereby more government output means less private output. B gB gA +Dg Starting at point A, if the government decides to increase public spending... It must diminish private spending and land at point B. A -D(c+i) (c+i)B (c+i)A Private Output This is known as Copyright 1997 Dead Economists Society • • • • • • • Historical Background A Glimpse of Adam Smith Market Clearing Quantity Theory of Money Classical AS* Curve Classical AD Curve Conclusions on the Classical Model Historical Background The Classical model of economics relates the standard supply-demand analysis to the macroeconomy. It holds that wages and prices will be “flexible” as opposed to “sticky.” Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations (1776) suggested that the economy was controlled by the “invisible hand” whereby the market system, instead of government would be the best mechanism for a healthy economy. A Glimpse of Adam Smith The central thesis of The Wealth of Nations is that capital is best employed for the production and distribution of wealth under conditions of governmental noninterference, or laissez-faire, and free trade. In Smith's view, the production and exchange of goods can be stimulated, and a consequent rise in the general standard of living attained, only through the efficient operations of private industrial and commercial entrepreneurs acting with a minimum of regulation and control by governments. To explain this concept of government maintaining a laissez-faire attitude toward commercial endeavors, Smith proclaimed the principle of the “invisible hand”: Every individual in pursuing his or her own good is led, as if by an invisible hand, to achieve the best good for all. Therefore any interference with free competition by government is almost certain to be injurious. "Smith, Adam," Microsoft® Encarta® 96 Encyclopedia. © 1993-1995 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. © Funk & Wagnalls Corporation. All rights reserved. Market Clearing Market clearing is an alignment process whereby decisions between suppliers and demanders reach an equilibrium. Here’s how it works... Let’s say you begin with an initial demand and supply curve for CDs. Remember that the demand curve slopes downward meaning that as you increase the price (by moving along the demand curve), the quantity demanded decreases. Conversely, the supply curve slopes upward implying that as the price increases (by moving along the supply curve), the amount supplied will increase. P P´ P* D D´ S The center point A is the place where market decisions reach an equilibrium. Now, suppose that there is a sudden increase in the demand for CDs. Demand will shift from D to D´. B A Q* Q´ Q The increase in demand places upward pressure on the price to point B since the original price, P* no longer clears the market. LMp0 LMp1 IS r A ro rshortrun rlongrun Module 4: Dymanics of IS-LM B c y ASLR p B A plongrun c AD AD’ y Steps to doing the “IS-LM” • Step 1:Determine which term will be changed for example, +DX0 (increase in autonomous net exports) • Step 2: Determine which equation (IS or LM) will be affected. • Step 3: Preform the neccisary movements within the IS-LM framework. • Step 4: Determine the affects on the other variables by either reading it directly off the diagram, or using equations 1-10. Given these Equations... 1) Y= c + i + x + g 2) c= co + ci (y-t) 3) t= to + ti y 4) i= io - i2 r 5) x = xo - xiy -x2 r 6) g = go 7) L/P=M/P 8) L/P=j0+j1y-j2r 9) M=M0 10SR) P=P0 10LR) y*=F(n*,K0,I0nst) IS Aggregate Demand (Equ. 1-9) LM Aggregate Supply What happens if there is a + Dx0? What is the impact on other variables in the economy: y,p,r,c,i,x,b? Steps to the “IS-LM” • Since we want to examine how+Dx will affect other variables in the economy. we must see which equation, IS or LM will be affected. • Then we must determine if the variable causes a movement along, or an entire shift of the appropriate line. IS y z 0 g 0 c1t 0) (i 2 x 2)r 1 / (1 c1 c1t 1 x1) z 0 c0 i 0 x 0 y LM ( M 0/ P 0) j 0 j2 j1 r j1 y= (M0/P0) - j0 + j2 r r IS IS’ LMp2 LMp0 C B A p p2 p0 y ASLR C A ASSR B AD AD’ y 1) +Dx causes IS curve to shift right to IS’. 2) This leads to a rightward shift in AD to AD’. Short Run: Move from A to B. Long Run: Market clears at p0 to p2 from B to C. 3) +Dp causes LMp0 to shift leftward to LMp2. r IS IS’ LMp2 LMp0 C B Short Run: A p p2 p0 y ASLR C A ASSR B AD AD’ y y p r c I x b + 0 + + ? - Long Run: 0 + ++ 0 -+ 0 Module 5: A Look at the Depression i Unemployment Lines, 1930s The Wall Street stock-market crash of 1929 precipitated the Great Depression, the worst economic downturn in the history of the United States. The depression lasted over a decade, with hundreds of thousands of Americans losing their jobs, businesses failing, and financial institutions collapsing. Of the 6000 people hoping to get jobs on this day in New York, 135 were hired. Module 6: Fiscal Policy What is Fiscal Policy? • Choices about public spending and how to finance that spending. • It is a system for transfering reserces from the private to public sector. “Private vs. Public Choice” “It Depends” Questions • What is the impact of a +Dg on the macroeconomy? • What is the size of the national debt and the deficit? • What is the impact of continued b>0 on y,p,r,c,i,x etc..? • Are continued gov’t defecits sistainable? What is the impact of a +Dg on the macroeconomy? • “It depends” on how the government finances its spending. • It has three options: (+Dg= +Dt0) Theft (taxes: coercion now), (+Dg= +Db) Borrowing (bonds: coersion later), (+Dg= +DM0) Counterfeiting (Printing money). Tax-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+Dg0=+Dt0) Tax-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+Dg0=+Dt0) r IS IS’ IS’’ LMp0 LMp0 E Result: B A Given our IS equation: y=(z0+g0-c1t0)-(i2+x2)r +Dg shifts IS to IS’. But, +Dt shifts IS back to the left (to IS ’’). Note: the shift leftward from IS’ to IS ’’ is less than the original rightward shift becausepE the tax-multiplier (-c1t0) is less than the expenditure multiplier 0 (). p p y ASLR E A ASSR B AD AD’ y A small rightward shift in both IS (IS to IS’) and AD (AD to AD’’) and a movement along ASSR . As the market clears, the rising price level contracts LM and the economy moves to E. Bond-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+Dg0=+Db) Bond-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+Dg0=+Db) r IS IS’ IS’’ LMp0 LMp0 E Result: B A Given our IS equation: y=(z0+g0-c1t0)-(i2+x2)r +Dg shifts IS to IS’. But, +Dt shifts IS back to the left (to IS ’’). Note: the shift leftward from IS’ to IS ’’ is less than the original rightward shift because the tax-pE multiplier (-c1t0) is less than the expenditure multiplier (). p p0 y ASLR E A ASSR B AD AD’ y A small rightward shift in both IS (IS to IS’) and AD (AD to AD’’) and a movement along ASSR . As the market clears, the rising price level contracts LM and the economy moves to E. Money-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+Dg0 =+DM0) ? What is the size of the national debt and the deficit? Annual Deficit (1997) Annual Deficit (1996) Annual Deficit (1995) ……. …... National Debt A meaningful deficit... • Exclude funds borrowed from federal agencies. • Include the deficits of local and stage governments. • Modify the real value of outstanding public debt. to reflect current inflation. • Include hidden liabilities that currently escape detection in accounting system. The Cyclical Deficit • Changes in the cash flow deficit arise purely from fluctuations of real output (y) around its full employment level. • For example: A recession causes a lower tax base and therefore decreases the government collections. t=t0+t1y b=g-t Structural Deficit • Reflects one or more changes in the fiscal policy instruments Dg0, Dt0, or Dt1 and results in a shift in the IS and AD curves. Dg0, Dt0, or Dt1 Myopic Consumers • Short-sighted consumers see a decrease in taxes in such a way that their current consumption might increase because of this new “wealth.” Their response according to our IS equation is ( z0 + g0 - c1 t0) - (x2 + i2) r This t0 induces them to increase Z0. Tax-discounters • Tax-discounters’ perceive that lower tax cuts now, means higher future taxes later, leaving consumption unchanged. “Tax cuts are tax postponements.” • Previously, we looked at (+Dg0=+Db) we measured the effect of +Dg only, because the variable b was not in any of our 10 equations. • Tax discounters treat deficits just the same as taxes when making consumption decisions. They see (+Dg0=+Db) as (+Dg0=+Dt0) !!! Government Deficits and Current Economic Activity • Measurement discrepancies • Impact of fiscal policy (expansionary, contractionary or nuetrat) depends on the CHANGE in the deficit from the precious year. • Cyclical vs. Structural Deficits • Tax-discounting view Module 7: Monetary Policy Money Commodity Symbol Invention Without Money Self-suffiency Barter Functions of Money • • • • Make Transactions Store Purchasing Power Measure Economic Performance Measure fullfillment of contracts Here’s what Money Does... Monetezation brings effeciency... PPF1 PPF2 nst Di ) The better the money, the farther out the PPF. How does money do this? Fiat money: A declaration of legal tender. Back to Classical Model: Quantity Theory of Money • MV=Py • Take the logs: ln M + ln V = ln P + ln y • Next solve for ln P: ln M +ln V - ln y = ln P • Then, take the derivative of the logs to get the percent changes: d ln M dt + d ln V d ln y d ln P = dt dt dt %DM + %DV - %Dy* = %DP = P Growth of Money Supply + Growth of Money Demand - Growth of output = Inflation (P ) %DM = %Dy* - %DV Non-inflationary condition for Monetary Policy. How does the Fed Control the Money Supply? • To expand the Money Supply: They buy ___________ and pay for it with new money. • To reduce the Money Supply: They sell ___________ and receive the existing dollars and then destroy it. But this is difficult to do… The criteria for choosing__________. 1. Storage Cost 2. Equity U.S. Treasury Bonds •To expand the Money Supply: They buy U.S. Treasury Bonds and pay for it with new money. •To reduce the Money Supply: They sell U.S. Treasury Bonds and receive the existing dollars and then destroy it. The Fed Controls the Money Supply through... 1) Open Market Operations (buying and selling U.S. Treasury bonds). 2) D Reserve Requirements (never really used). 3) D Discount rate which member banks can borrow from the Fed (not meeting the reserave requirements). What impact does DM have on y, p, r….? • Whether y=y*, or y<y*. • Whether SR or LR. • Continued +DM or one shot +DM. • Depends on Interest Rates (nominal or real). Fisher Equation: R = r + Pe Actual (Market) Nominal rate of interest Real rate of interest Inflation One shot +DM +DM SR -Dr +Dy -DR r IS +DLM, +DAD . A In the short-run, prices are stickey, so inflation is zero. (Point A to B.) Plug in the latter effects of the AD/AS diagram into the fisher equation to see the effect on the Nomonal interest rate (R). e 0 R= r+ P In the long-run, prices will adjust so quickly to point c, that the market will not incur any inflation, despite the new price level P1. LR Dr =DR =Dy=0 LM P P1 P0 LM’ . B . . . y C A B AD y AD’ Continuous +DM (Increasing rate of gr wth of the money suppy) SR: The AD/AS diagram +DM tells us....-Dr +Dy LR: Prices adjust, shifting LM back leftward, Dr =0, but with +DP. The fisher equation tells us +DPe +DR (R=0r+Pe) In the LR, prices will adjust and the Nominal Interest Rate (R) will rise. Any attempts to -Dr, at y* will only increase the price level and R. Money Neutrality: “You can’t print your way to prosperity.” Changes in Monetary Policies have no lasting effect on r, but changes in Fiscal Policies do. Distinction between Short-term and Long-term Interest Rates on Bonds (3 mos.) RST= r + Pe (10 yr.) RLT= r + Pe How will the bond market react to a sudden +DM, what happens to R? +DM SR -Dr DRST LR Dr =0 + DPe You would be quite rich if you predict interest rates. Effecient Market Hypthesis • Good Prediction • Unique Random Walk Hypthesis • Given that there are so many people in the market, you select the stocks randomly. Why doesn’t the central bank do a better job of stabilizing the economy? • What’s the goal? • Policy Lag: Long &Variable lag between +DM and Dy? • Which money supply? Module 8: Suppose you were Chairman... Module 9: International Trade World Trade Center, New York City Manhattan, one of the boroughs of New York City, is the headquarters for much of the world’s foreign trade. The twin towers of the 110-story World Trade Center are seen in this photograph, with the Statue of Liberty in the foreground. New York Conv. & Vis. Bureau Scarcity: A bitter pill for rich or poor nations For the richer country, scarcity rears its ugly head by forcing people to work instead of play. If resources were not scarce, the people would pursue more leisure activities like vacation. For the poorer country, poverty and appalling living conditions make scarcity a matter of life and dealth. The PPF • Our goal in working with the PPF is to see the most output that can be produced given a certain amount of inputs. • So, first assume that as a nation, our inputs (n,k,inst) are fixed and we produce 2 goods, x1 and x2. In other words, right now, we only have a certain amount of workers, and capital to work with and a certain level of institutional efficiency to work with. • Next, we’d like to determine what combinations of our 2 goods we could produce…so here we go.