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Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located in the United States, regardless of who owns those resources

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Page 1: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product

GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located in the United States, regardless of who owns those resources

Page 2: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Final and Intermediate Goods and Services

Final goods and services sold to ultimate, users Cotton shirts are a final good

Intermediate goods and services are purchased for further reprocessing and resale Cotton is intermediate good

Keeping final goods and intermediate goods separate in our thinking allows us to avoid double counting

Page 3: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Calculating GDP

GDP can be computed in two ways:

The expenditure approach: A method of computing GDP that measures the total amount spent on all final goods during a given period.

The income approach:

Page 4: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Expenditure Approach

The expenditure approach calculates GDP by adding together the four components of spending. In equation form:

GDP C I G EX IM ( )

Page 5: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure

aggregate income = GDP

aggregate income = GDP

transfer paymentstransfer payments

taxestaxesDisposable incomeDisposable income

Financialmarkets

consumption (C)consumption (C)

SS

Investment (I)Investment (I)

Gov’t (G)Gov’t (G)

X-MX-M

C+I+G+X-M

Page 6: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Categories of Expenditures

Consumption (C) All household purchases (blue jeans, twinkies,

etc.) Investment (I)

Purchases not used for current consumption (newly built homes,plant, new inventories)

Government Purchases (G) Examples include missile systems and paper

clips Net Exports (X - M)

Net exports = exports (X) - imports (M)

Page 7: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Personal Consumption Expenditures

Personal consumption expenditures (C) are expenditures by consumers on the following: Durable goods: Goods that last a

relatively long time, such as cars and appliances.

Nondurable goods: Goods that are used up fairly quickly, such as food and clothing.

Services: Things that do not involve the production of physical things, such as legal services, medical services, and education.

Page 8: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Gross Private Domestic Investment

Investment refers to the purchase of new capital.

Total investment by the private sector is called gross private domestic investment. It includes the purchase of new housing, plants, equipment, and inventory by the private sector.

Page 9: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Gross Private Domestic Investment

Nonresidential investment includes expenditures by firms for machines, tools, plants, and so on.

Residential investment includes expenditures by households and firms on new houses and apartment buildings.

Change in inventories computes the amount by which firms’ inventories change during a given period. Inventories are the goods that firms produce now but intend to sell later.

Page 10: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Government Consumptionand Gross Investment

Government consumption and gross investment (G) counts expenditures by federal, state, and local governments for final goods and services.

Page 11: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Net Exports

Net exports (EX – IM) is the difference between exports and imports. The figure can be positive or negative. Exports (EX) are sales to foreigners of

U.S.-produced goods and services. Imports (IM) are U.S. purchases of

goods and services from abroad).

Page 12: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Classify each of these scenarios

You buy an old house You buy some marijuana from a friend You buy stock in GM A Japanese firm buys City Brewery The government makes a welfare

payment You buy a used car A business fails to sell some of its

inventory A business buys a new truck

Page 13: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Components of GDP, 2002: The Expenditure Approach

BILLIONS OFDOLLARS

PERCENTAGEOF GDP

Personal consumption expenditures (C) 7303.7 69.9

Durable goods 871.9 8.3

Nondurable goods 2115.0 20.2

Services 4316.8 41.3

Gross private domestic investment (l) 1543.2 14.8

Nonresidential 1117.4 10.7

Residential 471.9 4.5

Change in business inventories 3.9 0

Government consumption and gross investment (G)

1972.9 18.9

Federal 693.7 6.6

State and local 1279.2 12.2

Net exports (EX – IM) 423.6 4.1

Exports (EX) 1014.9 9.8

Imports (IM) 1438.5 13.8

Total gross domestic product (GDP) 10446.2 100.0

Note: Numbers may not add exactly because of rounding.Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Page 14: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Current and Historical Data

US data (BEA) http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/newsrel/gdp499p.

htm Historical US Data

http://eh.net/hmit/gdp/ International

http://www.stls.frb.org/publications/iet/ http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/

Page 15: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Keynesian Framework and the ISLM Model

Page 16: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

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Determination of OutputKeynesian ISLM Model assumes price level is fixed

Aggregate ExpendituresAE= C + I + G + NX

EquilibriumY = AE

Consumption FunctionC = a + (mpc YD)

Investment1. Fixed investment2. Inventory investmentOnly planned investment is included in AENOTE: In many of the Slides Yd in place of AE they are the

same thing.

Page 17: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

17

Consumption Function

Page 18: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

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Keynesian Cross Diagram

Assume G = 0, NX = 0, T = 0AE= C + I = 200 + .5Y + 300

= 500 + .5YEquilibrium:1. When Y > Y*, Iu > 0 Y

to Y*2. When Y < Y*, Iu < 0 Y

to Y*

AE Y=AE

AE

Page 19: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Expenditure Multiplier

Page 20: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Analysis of Figure 3: Expenditure Multiplier

I = + 100 Y/I = 200/100 = 21

Y = (a + I) 1 – mpc

A = a + I = autonomous spending

Conclusions:1. Expenditure multiplier = Y/A = 1/(1 – mpc)

whether change in A is due to change in a or I2. Animal spirits change A

Page 21: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Great Depression and the Collapse of Investment

Page 22: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Role of Government

Page 23: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Analysis of Figure 5: Role of Government

G = + 400, T = + 400

1. With no G and T, Yd = C + I = 500 + mpc Y = 500 + .5Y, Y1 = 1000

2. With G, Y= C + I + G = 900 + .5Y, Y2 = 1800

3. With G and T, Yd = 900 + mpc Y – mpc T = 700 + .5Y, Y3 = 1400

Conclusions:1. G Y ; T Y 2. G = T = + 400, Y 400

Page 24: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Role of International Trade

NX = +100,Y/NX = 200/100 = 2

= 1/(1 – mpc) = 1/(1 – .5)

Page 25: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Summary: Factors that Affect Y

Page 26: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

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IS Curve

IS curve1. i I NX , Yad ,

Y Points 1, 2, 3 in figure

2. Right of IS: Y > Yad Y to ISLeft of IS: Y < Yad Y to IS

Page 27: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

27

LM Curve

LM curve1. Y , Md , i Points 1, 2, 3 in figure2. Right of LM: excess Md, i to LM Left of LM : excess Ms, i to LM

Page 28: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

ISLM Model

Point E, equilibrium where Y = Yad (IS) and Md = M s (LM )At other points like A, B, C, D, one of two markets is not in equilibrium and arrows mark movement towards point E

Page 29: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Monetary and Fiscal Policy in the ISLM Model

Page 30: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shift in the IS Curve

1. C : at given iA, Yad , Y

IS shifts right2. Same reasoning when

I , G , NX , T

Page 31: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shift in the LM Curve from a Rise in Ms

1. Ms : at given YA, i in panel (b) and (a) LM shifts to the right

Page 32: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shift in the LM Curve from a Rise in M d

1. M d : at given YA, i in panel (b) and (a) LM shifts to the left

Page 33: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Response to an Increase in Ms

1. M s : i , LM shifts right Y i

Page 34: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Response to Expansionary Fiscal Policy

1. G or T : Yad , IS shifts right Y i

Page 35: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Summary: Factors that Shift IS and LM Curves

Page 36: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

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Effectiveness of Monetary and Fiscal Policy

1. M d is unrelated to i i , M d = M s at same Y LM vertical

2. Panel (a): G , IS shifts right i , Y stays same (complete crowding out)

3. Panel (b): M s , Y so M d , LM shifts right i Y Conclusion: Less interest sensitive is M d, more effective is monetary policy relative to fiscal policy

Page 37: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Ms vs. i Targets When IS Unstable

1. IS unstable: fluctuates from IS' to IS''

2. i target at i*: Y fluctuates from YI' to YI''

3. M target, LM = LM*: Y fluctuates from YM' to YM''

4. Y fluctuation is less with M target

Conclusion: If IS curve is more unstable than LM curve, M target is preferred

Page 38: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Ms vs. i Targets When LM Unstable

1. LM unstable: fluctuates from LM' to LM''

2. i target at i*: Y = Y*

3. M target: Y fluctuates from YM' to YM''

4. Y fluctuation is less with i target

Conclusion: If LM curve is more unstable than IS curve, i target is preferred

Page 39: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The ISLM Model in the Long Run

Panel (a)1. Ms , LM right to LM2, go to point 2, i to i2, Y to Y2

2. Because Y2 > Yn, P , M/P , LM back to LM1, go back to point 1Panel (b)1. G , IS right to IS2, go to point 2 where i = i2 and Y = Y2

2. Because Y2 > Yn, P , M/P , LM left to LM2, go to point 2', i = i2` and Y = Yn.

Page 40: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Deriving AD Curve

P , M/P , LM shifts in, Y Points 1, 2, 3

Page 41: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shift in AD from Shift in IS

At given PA, IS shifts right: Y in panel (b) AD shifts right in panel (a)

Page 42: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shift in AD from Shift in LM

At given PA, LM shifts right: Y in panel (b) AD shifts right in panel (a)

Page 43: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve

Aggregate supply is the total supply of all goods and services in the economy.

Page 44: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve

The aggregate supply (AS) curve is a graph that shows the relationship between the aggregate quantity of output supplied by all firms in an economy and the overall price level.

Page 45: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve:A Warning

The aggregate supply curve is not a market supply curve or the sum of all the individual supply curves in the economy.

Page 46: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve:A Warning

Firms do not simply respond to market-determined prices, but they actually set prices. Price-setting firms do not have individual supply curves because these firms are choosing both output and price at the same time.

Page 47: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve:A Warning

When we draw a firm’s supply curve, we assume that input prices are constant. In macroeconomics, an increase in the overall price level means that at least some input prices will be rising as well.

The outputs of some firms are the inputs of other firms.

Page 48: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Aggregate Supply Curve:A Warning

Rather than an aggregate supply curve, what does exist is a “price/output response” curve — a curve that traces out the price and output decisions of all the markets and firms in the economy under a given set of circumstances.

Page 49: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run

In the short run, the aggregate supply curve (the price/output response curve) has a positive slope.

Page 50: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run

At low levels of aggregate output, the curve is fairly flat. As the economy approaches capacity, the curve becomes nearly vertical. At capacity, the curve is vertical.

Page 51: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run

Macroeconomists focus on whether or not the economy as a whole is operating at full capacity.

As the economy approaches maximum capacity, firms respond to further increases in demand only by raising prices.

Page 52: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Output Levels andPrice/Output Responses

When the economy is operating at low levels of output, an increase in aggregate demand is likely to result in an increase in output with little or no increase in the overall price level.

Page 53: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the Overall Price Level

There must be a lag between changes in input prices and changes in output prices, otherwise the aggregate supply (price/output response) curve would be vertical.

Page 54: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the Overall Price Level

Wage rates may increase at exactly the same rate as the overall price level if the price-level increase is fully anticipated. Most input prices, however, tend to lag increases in output prices.

Page 55: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve

A cost shock, or supply shock, is a change in costs that shifts the aggregate supply (AS) curve.

Page 56: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve

Bad weather, natural disasters, destruction from wars

Good weather

Public policy waste and inefficiency over-regulation

Public policy supply-side policies tax cuts deregulation

Stagnation capital deterioration

Economic growth more capital more labor technological change

Higher costs higher input prices higher wage rates

Lower costs lower input prices lower wage rates

Shifts to the LeftDecreases in Aggregate Supply

Shifts to the RightIncreases in Aggregate Supply

Factors That Shift the Aggregate Supply Curve

Page 57: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Equilibrium Price Level

The equilibrium price level is the point at which the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves intersect.

Page 58: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Equilibrium Price Level

P0 and Y0 correspond to equilibrium in the goods market and the money market and a set of price/output decisions on the part of all the firms in the economy.

Page 59: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve

Costs lag behind price-level changes in the short run, resulting in an upward-sloping AS curve.

• Costs and the price level move in tandem in the long run, and the AS curve is vertical.

Page 60: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve

Output can be pushed above potential GDP by higher aggregate demand. The aggregate price level also rises.

Page 61: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve

When output is pushed above potential, there is upward pressure on costs, and this causes the short-run AS curve to the left.

• Costs ultimately increase by the same percentage as the price level, and the quantity supplied ends up back at Y0.

Page 62: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve

Y0 represents the level of output that can be sustained in the long run without inflation. It is also called potential output or potential GDP.

Page 63: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary and Fiscal Policy

Expansionary policy works well when the economy is on the flat portion of the AS curve, causing little change in P relative to the output increase.

• AD can shift to the right for a number of reasons, including an increase in the money supply, a tax cut, or an increase in government spending.

Page 64: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

When the economy is operating near full capacity, an increase in AD will result in an increase in the price level with little increase in output.

• On the steep portion of the AS curve, expansionary policy does not work well. The multiplier is close to zero.

Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary and Fiscal Policy

Page 65: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Long-Run AggregateSupply and Policy Effects

If the AS curve is vertical in the long run, neither monetary policy nor fiscal policy has any effect on aggregate output.

• In the long run, the multiplier effect of a change in government spending or taxes on aggregate output is zero.

Page 66: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

The Simple “Keynesian”Aggregate Supply Curve

The output of the economy cannot exceed the maximum output of YF.

The difference between planned aggregate expenditure and aggregate output at full capacity is sometimes referred to as an inflationary gap.

Page 67: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Causes of Inflation

Inflation is an increase in the overall price level.

Sustained inflation occurs when the overall price level continues to rise over some fairly long period of time.

Page 68: Gross Domestic Product and Gross National Product  GDP is the market value of all newly produced final goods and services produced by resources located

Causes of Inflation

Demand-pull inflation is inflation initiated by an increase in aggregate demand.

• Cost-push, or supply-side, inflation is inflation caused by an increase in costs.