Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Comparative and Absolute Advantage

Specialization

  • Individuals and Countries can be made better off if they will produce in what they have a comparative advantage and then trade with others for whatever else they want/need. 
Absolute Advantage: The producer that can produce the most output OR requires the least amount of inputs (resources)



Comparative Advantage: The producer with the lowest opportunity cost.




Countries should trade if they have a relatively lower opportunity cost. 

  • An output problem presents the data as products produced given a set of resources. (ex. Number of pens produced)
  • An input problem presents the data as amount of resources needed to produce a fixed amount of output. (ex. Number of labor hours to produce 1 bushel)
  • When identifying absolute advantage, input problems change the scenario from who can produce the most to who can produce a given product with the least amount of resources. as

Monday, May 8, 2017

Foreign Exchange (FOREX)


  • The buying and selling of currency
    • Ex: in order to purchase souvenirs in France, it is first necessary for Americans to sell their Dollars and buy Euros. 
  • Any transaction that occurs in the Balance of Payments necessitates foreign exchange 
  • The exchange rate (e) is determined in the foreign currency markets 
    • Ex: the current exchange rate is approximately 8 Yuan to 1 dollar
  • Simply put, the exchange rate is the price of a currency 

Changes in Exchange Rates

  • Exchange rates are a function of the supply and demand for currency. 
    • An increase in the supply of a currency will decrease the exchange rate of a currency 
    • A decrease in supply of a currency will increase the exchange rate of a currency 
    • An increase in demand for a currency will increase the exchange rate of currency
    • A decrease in demand for a currency will decrease the exchange rate of a currency 


Appreciation and Depreciation

  • Appreciation of a currency occurs when the exchange rate of that currency increases 
  • Depreciation of a currency occurs when the exchange rate of that currency decreases 
    • Ex: If German tourists flock to America to go shopping, then the supply of euros will increase and the demand for Dollars will increase. This will cause the Euro to depreciate and the dollar to appreciate. '
To understand Appreciation and Depreciation more, please visit this website: Appreciation and Depreciation

Exchange Rate Determinants
  • Consumer Tastes
  • Relative Income 
  • Relative Price Level
  • Speculation 


Thursday, May 4, 2017

Balance of Payments


Measure  of money inflows and outflows between the United States and the Rest of the World

  • Inflows are referred to as CREDITS
  • Outflows are referred to as DEBITS 
The Balance of Payments is divided into 3 accounts
  • Current Account
  • Capital/Financial Account
  • Official Reserves Account 
Current Account
  • Balance of Trade or Net Exports
    • Exports of Goods/Services - Import of Goods/Services 
    • Exports create a credit to the balance of Payments 
    • Imports create a debit to the balance of payments 
  • Net Foreign Income 
    • Income earned by U.S. owned foreign assets -Income paid to foreign held U.S. assets
    • Ex. Interest payments on U.S. owned Brazilian bonds - Interest payments on German-owned U.S. Treasury bonds
  • Net Transfers (tend to be unilateral) 
    • Foreign Aid -> a debit to the current account 
    • Ex. Mexican migrant workers send money to family in Mexico 
Capital/Financial Account
  • The balance of capital ownership
  • Includes the purchase of both real and financial assets
  • Direct investment in the United States is a credit to the capital account
    • Ex. The Toyota Factory in San Antonio
  • Direct Investment by U.S. firms/individuals in a foreign country are debts to the capital account 
    • Ex. The Intel Factory in San Jose, Costa Rica 
  • Purchase of foreign financial assets represents a debt to the capital account 
    • Ex. Warren Buffet buys stock in Petrochina 
  • Purchase of domestic financial assets by foreigners represents a credit to the capital account 
    • The United Arab Emirates sovereign wealth fund purchases a large stake in the NASDAQ
Current Account with Financial Account = 0 

Official Reserves 
  • The foreign currency holdings of the United States Federal Reserve System 
  • When there is a balance of payments surplus the Fed accumulates foreign currency and debits the balance of payments 
  • When there is balance of payments deficit the Fed depletes its reserves of foreign currency and credits the balance of payments 
  • The Official Reserves zero out the balance of payments
Balance of Trade: Exports - Imports 
Balance of Goods and Services: (Goods Exports + Services Exports) - (Goods Imports + Services Imports)
Balance on Current Account: Balance of goods and services + Net investments  + Net transfer
Balance of Capital Account: Direct investment and purchase of stocks and bonds 
Official Reserves: Current Account + Capital Account = 0

Monday, April 24, 2017

Supply Side of Economics

Supply side Economics/ Reaganomics:

  • to stimulate active policy, to stimulate, to work save and invest
  • Includes tax cuts, which increases disposable income


Laffer curve: it displays the theoretical relationship between tax rates and government revenue




Criticisms of the Laffer Curve:

  1. Empirical evidence suggests that the impact of tax rates on incentives to work, save, and invest are small. 
  2. Tax cuts also increase demand which can fuel inflation 
  3. Where the economy is actually located on the curve is difficult to determine 9w

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Phillips Curve

In the short run: the Phillips curve represents a trade-off between inflation and unemployment.

  • As inflation increases, unemployment decreases 
Each point on the Phillips Curve corresponds to a different level of output.




Long run Phillips curve: 
  • it occurs on the natural rate of unemployment, 
  • it is represented by a vertical line. 
  • There is no tradeoff between inflation and unemployment 
  • the economy produces at a full ouput level 
  • The LRPC (Long run phillips curve) will only shift if the LRAS curve shifts. 
  • Increases in unemployment, it will shift LRPC ->
  • Decreases in unemployment, it will shift LRPC <-

Monday, April 3, 2017

Loanable Funds Market

Is an interest rate of 50% good or bad?

  • Bad for borrowers but good for lenders 
The loanable funds market is the private sector supply and demand of loans. 

This market brings together those who want to lend money (savers) and those who want to borrow (firms with investment spending projects)

  • This market shows the effect on REAL INTEREST RATE 
  • Demand- Inverse relationship between real interest rate and quantity loans demanded 
  • Supply- Direct relationship between real interest rate and quantity loans supplied 

This is NOT the same as MONEY MARKET (supply is not vertical)

Prime Rate: it is the interest rate that banks charge their most creditworthy  customers

Click the link below for more information on loanable funds:
Loanable Funds

Friday, March 31, 2017

Monetary Policy (OMO)

3 tools of monetary policy:
1. Reserve Requirement: If you have a bank account, where is your money?
The FED sets the amount that banks must hold
The reserve requirement (reserve ratio) is the percent of deposits that banks must hold in reserve (the percent they can NOT loan out)

  • bank deposits- when someone (public or private) deposits money in the bank
  • banks keep some of the money in reserve and loans out their excess reserves 
  • The loan eventually becomes deposits for another bank that will loan out their excess reserves 

If there is a recession:
  • Decrease the Reserve Ratio
    • Banks hold less money and have more excess reserves 
    • Banks create more money by loaning out excess 
    • Money supply increases, interest rates fall AD goes up 
If there is an inflation: 
  • Increase the Reserve Ratio
    • Banks hold more money and have less excess reserves 
    • Banks create less money 
    • Money supply decreases, interest rates up, AD down 

2. Open Market Operations (OMO): when the FED buys or sells government bonds/securities

  • This is the most important and widely used monetary policy
  • If the fed BUYS bonds- takes out bonds from economy and replace with money MS (up)
  • IF the fed SELLS bonds - takes the money and gives the security to the investor. MS (down)


IT matters who buys/ sells the bonds and what they do with the cash!


3.  Discount Rate: MANY different interest rates, but they tend to all rise and fall together

  • It is the interest rate that the FED charges commercial banks for short-term loans.
Federal Funds Rate: the interest rate that bank charges another for overnight loans 

Friday, March 24, 2017

Money Creation Formula


  • A Single bank can create $ by the amount of its excess reserves. 
  • The banking system as a whole can create $ by a multiple of the excess reserves. 
  • MM ( Money Multiplier)  X ER = Expansion of money
  • Money Multiplier (MM) = 1/RR 
New vs Existing $
  • If the initial deposit in a bank comes from the FED or bank purchase of a bond or other money out of circulation, the deposit immediately increases the money supply. 
  • The deposit then leads to further expansion of the money supply through the money creation process 
  • Total change in MS if initial deposit is new $ = Deposit (DD) + $  created by banking system (Money Multiplier X ER) *must add the initial deposit as well

  • If a deposit in a bank is existing $ (already counted in M1; ex: Currency or checks), depositing the amount does NOT change the MS immediately because it is already counted. 
  • Existing currency deposited into a checking account changes only the composition of the money supply from coins/paper $ to checking account deposits
  • Total change in the MS if deposit is existing $ = banking system created money only. 

Click the link below to watch a video on money multiplier:

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Extra Notes

Demand deposit: created through the fractional reserve system
Fractional reserve system: it is the process in which banks hold a small portion of their deposits in reserves and they loan out the excess.
Required Reserves: the cash that banks keep on hand
Total Reserves/ Actual Reserves= Required Reserves + Excess Reserves


Wednesday, March 22, 2017

The Money Market

Demand for money has an inverse relationship between nominal interest rates and the quantity of money demanded

What happens to the quantity demanded of money when interest rates increases?
Quantity demanded falls because individuals would prefer to have interest earning assets instead of borrowed liabilities

What happens to the quantity demanded when interest rates decrease?
Quantity demanded increases. there is no incentive to convert cash into interest earning assets.

Money Demand Shifters:

  1. Change in price level 
  2. Changes in income 
  3. Changes in taxation that affects investment. 
Money Supply:
  • If the FED increases the money supply, a temporary surplus of money will occur at 5% interest. 
  • The surplus will cause the interest rate to fall to 2%. 
Increase money supply -> decreases interest rates -> Increases inv


Stocks vs Bonds


Bonds are loans, or IOUs, that represent debt that the government or a corporation must repay to an investor. The bond holder has NO OWNERSHIP of the company
  • First: if a corporation issue and then sells a bond, 
    • Is it a liability or an asset for the corporation? Liability
    • Is it an asset or a liability for the buyer? Asset
If that corporation issues a 10k bond with a 10 yr term and a 5% interest.

    • If the nominal interest rate falls to 3% what happens to the value of the bond? increases
    • If the nominal interest rate rises to 8%, what happens to the value of the bond? Decreases
But now you need money.
To get more money, you sell half of your company for $50 to your brother Tom. 


Stock owners can earn a profit in two ways: 
  • Dividends, which are portions of a corporation's profits, are paid our to stockholders
    • The higher the corporate profit, the higher the dividends
  • A capital gain is earned when a stockholder sells stock more than he or she paid for it. 
  • A stockholder that sells stock at a lower price than the purchase price suffers a capital loss. 
Federal Reserve Banks= The Feds= central bank

2 goals: 
  • maintain economy
  • full employment 



    Monday, March 20, 2017

    Money and Monetary Policy

    Why use money?

    What would happen if we didn't have money?
    The Barter System: goods and services are traded directly store value
    .  There is no money exchanged.

    Money?
    It is anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods and services.
    NOT the same as wealth and income

    Wealth is the total collection of assets that store value
    Income is a flow of earnings per unit of time

    Money can be used as

    1. Medium of Exchange
      1. Buy Goods and Services
    2. Unit of account
      1. measuring the value of goods and services 
    3. Store of value 
    3 types of money: 
    • Representative money: money that represents something of value 
      • Ex: IOU's 
    • Commodity money: something that performs the function of money and has alternative uses 
      • Ex: Salt, Gold, Silver, Cigarettes 
    • Fiat money: money because the government says so
      • Ex: coins, paper money
    6 characteristics of money: 
    1. Durability
    2. Portability
    3. Divisibility
    4. Uniformity
    5. Limited Supply 
    6. Acceptability 
    3 types of money supply 
    1. Liquidity- ease with which an asset can be accessed and converted into cash (liquidized) 
      1. M1 (high liquidity) - Coins, Currency, and Checkable deposits (aka check) ( personal and corporate checking accounts which are the largest component of M1). AKA demand deposits. 
      2. M2 (Medium Liquidity) - M1 plus savings deposits (money market accounts), time deposits (CDs = certificates of deposit), and Mutual Funds below $100k. 
      3. M3 (Low Liquidity) - M2 plus time deposits above $100k 

    Tuesday, March 7, 2017

    Fiscal Policy

    How does the Government Stabilize the Economy?

    The Government has two different tool boxes it can use:

    1. Fiscal Policy - Actions by Congress to stabilize the economy

    • changes in the expenditures or tax revenues of the federal government 
      • 2 tools of the Fiscal policy: 
        • Taxes- government can increase or decrease taxes
        • Spending- government can increase or decrease spending 
    • Fiscal Policy is enacted to promote our nation's economic goals: full employment, price stability, economic growth
    Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt
    • Balanced budget
      • Revenues = Expenditures
    • Budget deficit
      • Revenues < Expenditures 
    • Budget surplus
      • Revenues > Expenditures 
    • Government debt
      • Sum of all deficits - Sum of all surpluses 

    • Government must borrow money when it runs a budget deficit 
    • Government borrows from: 
      • Individuals
      • Corporations
      • Financial Institutions 
      • Foreign entities or foreign governments 


    Fiscal Policy Two Options
    • Discretionary Fiscal Policy (action)
      • Expansionary fiscal policy - think deficit 
      • Contractionary fiscal policy - think surplus 
    • Non-Discretionary Fiscal Policy (no action)
    Three types of Taxes 
    • Progressive Taxes - takes a larger percent of income from high-income groups (takes more from rich people) Ex: Current Federal Income Tax System 
    • Proportional Taxes (flat rate) - takes the same percent of income from all income groups.         Ex: 20% flat income tax on all income groups
    • Regressive Taxes - takes larger percentage from low-income groups (takes more from poor people) Ex: Sales tax; any consumption tax
    Contractionary Fiscal Policy (The BRAKE)
    Laws that reduce inflation, decrease GDP
    (Close a Inflationary Gap)
    • Decrease Government Spending 
    • Tax Increases 
    • Combinations of the Two
    Expansionary Fiscal Policy (The GAS)
    Laws that reduce unemployment and increase GDP (Close a Recessionary Gap)
    • Increase Government Spending
    • Decrease Taxes on consumers



    How much should the Government Spend?

    Automatic or Built-In Stabilizers

    • Anything that increases the government's budget deficit during a  recession and increases its budget surplus during inflation without requiring explicit action by policymakers
    1. Transfer Payments
    • Welfare checks 
    • Food Stamps
    • Unemployment checks 
    • Corporate dividends 
    • Social Security 
    • Veteran's benefits 


    Tuesday, February 28, 2017

    Classical vs Keynesian

    Classical Schools:

    • Trickle down theory to help the rich 1st a then everyone else
    • In the LR, the economy will balance @ full employment output
    • The invisible hand
    Keynesian School: 
    • AD is the key, not AS
    • In the LR, we are dead
    • Leaks cause recessions 
    • Savings cause recessions
    Digging deeper please visit:

    Friday, February 24, 2017

    Multiplier Effect


    The Spending Multiplier Effect: 

    • An initial change in spending (C, Ig, G, Xn) causes a larger change in aggregate spending, or Aggregate Demand (AD). 
    • Multiplier = Change in AD/Change in Spending 
    • Multiplier = Change in AD/ Change in C, Ig, G, Xn 
    • Why does this happen?
      • Expenditures and income flow continuously which sets off a spending increase in the economy. 
    Calculating the Spending Mulitplier 
    •  The spending multiplier can be calculated from the MPC or the MPS. 
    • Mulitplier = 1/(1-MPC) or 1/MPS
    • Multipliers are + when there is an increase in spending and - when there is a decrease 
    Calculating the Tax Multiplier 
    • When the government taxes, the multiplier works in reverse
    • Why?
      • Because now money is leaving the circular flow
    • Tax Multiplier (note: it's negative)
      • = -MPC/ (1-MPC) or -MPC/MPS
    • If there is a tax-CUT, then the multiplier is +, because there is now more money in the circular flow 

    Thursday, February 23, 2017

    Consumption & Saving

    Disposable Income (DI)

    • Income after taxes or net income 
    • DI= Gross Income - Taxes
    2 choices: 
    • With disposable income, households can either 
      • Consumer (spend money on goods & services)
      • Save (not spend money on goods & services)
    Consumption: 
    • Household spending
    • The ability to consume is constrained by 
      • the amount of disposable income
      • The propensity to save
    • Do households consume if DI=0?
      • Autonomous consumption
      • Dissaving 
    Saving: 
    • Household NOT spending 
    • The ability to save is constrained by 
      • the amount of disposable income
      • The propensity to consume 
    • Do households save if DI=0?
      • No, there is nothing to save 
    APC & APS

    APC= Average propensity to consumer
    APS= Average propensity to save

    APC + APS = 1
    APC > 1 : Dissaving 
    -APS : Dissaving 

    MPC & MPS
    • Marginal Propensity to Consume
      • change in C/ change in DI
      • % of every extra dollar earned that is spent
    • Marginal propensity to save
      • change in S/ change in DI
      • % of every extra dollar earned that is saved 
    • MPC + MPS= 1


    Determinants of Consumption and Saving: 
    • Wealth
    • Expectation 
    • Households Debt
    • Taxes

    Tuesday, February 21, 2017

    The AS/AD Model

    The equilibrium of AS & AD determines current output (GDPr) and the price level (PL)

    Full employment 

    • Full-employment equilibrium exists where AD intersects SRAS & LRAS at the same point
    Inflationary Gap
    • Output is high and unemployment is less than NRU 
      • Actual GDP above potential GDP 

    Recessionary Gap 
    • Output low and unemployment is more than NRU 
      • Actual GDP below potential GDP 

    Aggregate Supply

    Aggregate Supply: the level of Real GDP that firms will produce at each price level (PL)


    Long run v Short run

    Long run: 

    • period of time where input prices ar completely flexible and adjust to changes in the price-level
    • In the long run, the level of Real GDP supplied is independent of the price-level


    Short run: 

    • period of time where input prices are sticky and do not adjust to changes in the price level
    • In the short run, the level of Real GDP supplied is directly related to the price level 
    Long-Run aggregate supply (LRAS)
    • The Long-Run aggregate supply or LRAS marks the level of full employment in the economy (analogous to PPC)

    Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)
    • Because input prices are sticky in the short-run, the SRAS is upward sloping. 

    Changes in SRAS
    • An increase in SRAS is seen as a shift to the right. SRAS -->
    • A decrease in sRAS is seen as a shift to the left. SRAS <--
    • The key to understanding shifts in SRAS in per unit cost of production 

    Per unit production cost= total input cost/ total output. 



    Determinants of SRAS (all of the following affect unit production cost):

    Input prices
    • Domestic Resource Prices
      • Wages (75% of all business cost)
      • Cost of Capital
      • RAW Materials (commodity prices)
    • Foreign Resource Prices 
      • Strong $ = lower foreign resource prices
      • Weak $ = higher foreign resource prices 
    • Market Power
      • Monopolies and cartels that control resources control the price of those resources. 
    • Increases in Resource Prices = SRAS <--
    • Decreases in Resource Prices = SRAS -->
    Productivity 
    • Productivity= total output/ total input
    • More productivity= lower unit production cost = SRAS -->
    • Lower productivity = higher unit production cost = SRAS <--
    Legal-Institutional Environment 
    • Taxes and Subsidies 
      • Taxes ($ to government) on business increase per unit production cost = SRAS <--
      • Subsisdies ($ from government) to business reduce per unit production cost = SRAS -->
    • Government Regulation 
      • Government regulation creates a cost of compliance = SRAS <--
      • Deregulation reduces compliance costs = SRAS -->





    Thursday, February 16, 2017

    Interest rates & Investment Demand

    Investment: Money spent or expenditures on:
      • New plants (factories)
      • Capital equipment (machinery)
      • Technology (hardware & software)
      • New Homes 
      • Inventories (goods sold by producers)

    Expected Rates of Return

    • How does business make investment decisions?
      • Cost/Benefit Analysis
    • How does business determine the benefits?
      • Expected rate of return 
    • How does business count the cost?
      • Interest costs
    • How does business determine the amount of investment they undertake?
      • Compare expected rate of return to interest cost
        • If expected return > interest cost, then invest
        • If expected return < interest cost, then do not invest 

    What then, determines the cost of an investment decision? 
      • The real interest rate (r%)

    Investment Demand Curve (ID)

    • What is the shape of the investment demand curve?
      • Downward sloping
    • Why?
      • When interest rates are high, fewer investments are profitable; when interest rates are low, more investments are profitable 
    Shifts in Investment Demand
    • Cost of Production
    • Business Taxes 
    • Technological Change
    • Stock of Capital
    • Expectations 
    A little video to help further understand this topic: 

    Wednesday, February 15, 2017

    Aggregate Demand

    Aggregate Demand Curve

    AD: is the demand by consumers, businesses, government and foregin countries
    AD=  C + I
    y axis: price level
    x axis: Real Domestic output


    Changes in price level cause a move along the curve not a shift of the curve

    Aggregate Demand (AD)

    • Shows the amount of Real GDP that the private, public and foreign sector collectively desire to purchase at each possible price level. 
    • The relationship between the price level and the level of Real GDP is inverse
    3 reasons Why is AD downward sloping 
    1.  Wealth Effect
      • Higher prices reduce purchasing power of $
      • This decreases the quantity of expenditures
      • Lower price levels increase purchasing power and increase expenditures
      • Ex: If the balance in your banks was $50,000, but inflation erodes your purchasing power, you will likely reduce your spending. 
    1. Interest-Rate Effect
      • As price level increases, lenders need to charge higher interest rates to get a REAL return on their loans.
      • Higher interest rates discourage consumer spending and business investment.
      • Ex: Increase in price lead to an increase in the interest rate from 5% to 25%. You are less likely to take out loans to improve your business.  
    2.  Foreign Trade Effect
      • When U.S. price level rises, foreign buyers purchase fewer U.S. goods and Americans buy more foreign goods
      • Exports fall and imports rise causing real GDP demanded to fall (Xn decreases)
      • Ex: If price triple in the US, Canada will no longer buy US goods causing quantity demanded of US products to fall. 
    Shifts in Aggregate Demand (AD) 

    There are two parts to a shift in AD: 
    • A change in C, I, G, and/for Xn
    •  a multiplier effect that produces a greater chage than the originial change in the 4 components. 
    • Incrase in Ad= AD
    Determinant of AD
    • Consumption
    • Gross Private Investment
    • Government Spending
    • Ne tExporots 
    Change in consumer Spending


    • Consumer Wealth (Boom in the stock market..)
    • Consumer Expectations 
    • Household indebtedness (more combine debt)
    • Taxes



    Change in investment spending 

    • Real interest rates (price of borrowing) 
    • Future Business expectations
    • Productivity and technology 

    Change in Government Spending

    • (War...)
    • ( Nationalized Health CAare)
    • (Decrease in defense spending...)

    Change in Net Exports


    • Exchange Rates
    • national income compared to Abroad

    Government Spending: More (AD goes right) Less (AD goes left)



    Monday, February 13, 2017

    Unemployment

    Unemployment rate: percent of people in the labor force who want a job but are not working.

    Labor force: the number of people in a country that are classified as either employed or unemployed.

    Employed:

    1. someone who works at least one hour a month
    2. someone considered temporarily absent from work 
    3. Part-time people 
    Not in Labor Force: 
    1. Kids
    2. Full-Time Students
    3. People who are in mental institutions
    4. Military personnel
    5. Stay at home parents 
    6. Retirees  
    7. People who are incarcerated (time in jail)
    8. Discouraged workers 
    Unemployment rate=  (# unemployed/ # in labor force(# unemployed + # employed)) x 100




    Standard Unemployment Rate= 4-5%

    Types of Unemployment:

    1. Frictional Unemployment:  
    • "Temporarily unemployed" or being between jobs
    • Qualified workers with transferable skills but they aren't working 
          2.  Seasonal Unemployment: 
    • Time of the year and the nature of the job 
    • These jobs will come back 
      • Ex: Santa claus, easter bunnies, lifeguards 
           3.  Structural Unemployment
    • Structure of the labor force make some  skills obsolete
    • Workers DO NOT have transferable skills and these jobs will never come back 
    • Workers must learn new skills to get a job
    • permanent loss of these jobs is called "creative destruction" 
          4.  Cyclical Unemployment
    •  Unemployment that results from economic downturns (Recessions) 
    • AS demand for goods and services falls, demand for labor falls and workers are fired. 

    Frictional Unemployment + Structural Unemployment = Natural Rate of Unemployment (Full employment)(4-5%)
    Full employment means NO cyclical unemployment 

    Okun's Law: When unemployment rises 1 percent above the natural rate, GDP falls by about 2 percent 

    Friday, February 10, 2017

    Inflation :

    Inflation: general rising level of prices

    • reduces the "purchasing power" of money 
    • Example: 
      • It takes $2 to buy today what $1 bought in 1982
      • It takes $6 to buy today what $1 bought in 1961

    Three Causes of Inflation

    1. Printing too much money (The Quantity Theory) 
    2. Demand-Pull Inflation 
      1. "Too many dollars chasing too few goods" - caused by an excess of demand over output that pulls prices upwards
    3. Cost-push inflation 
      1. Higher Production costs increase prices



    Standards Inflation Rate: 2-3%

    Inflation Rate=(Current Year Price Index - Base year Price Index/ Base Year Price Index) x 100

    Rule of 70: used to calculate the number of years it will take for the price level to double at any given rate of inflation 

    Rule of 70= (70/ annual inflation rate)

    Deflation: general decline in the price level 

    Disinflation:  it occurs when the inflation rate declines 

    Real Interest Rates: percentage increase in purchasing power  that a borrower pays to the lender. (adjusted for inflation)
    Real= nominal interest rate - expected inflation

    Nominal Interest Rates: the percentage increase in money that the borrower pays back to the lender not adjusting for inflation 

    Ex: You lend out $100 with 20% interest

    Unanticipated inflation: 

    Hurt by Inflation: Lenders-People who lend money (at fixed interest rates) , People with fixed incomes, Savers 

    Helped by Inflation: Borrowers- People who borrow money , A business where the price of the products incrassees faster than the price of resources. 

    Friday, February 3, 2017

    Nominal GDP vs Real GDP



     Nominal GDP: the value of output produced at current prices.

    • can increase from year to year if either output or prices increase.
    • Nominal GDP= Price X Quantity
    Real GDP: the value of output produced at constant based year prices. 
    • it is adjusted for inflation
    • Real GDP= Price X Quantity
    • can increase from year to year only if output increases 
    Key Tips:
    • If you want to measure economic growth, you measure Real GDP
    • Only in the base year does Real GDP equal to Nominal GDP
    • In years after the base year, Nominal GDP will exceed Real GDP 
    • In years before the base year, Real GDP will exceed Nominal GDP
    • If base year is not given, the earliest year is the base year

    GDP Deflator: a price index that is used to adjust from Nominal to Real GDP 
    • GDP Deflator= (Nominal GDP/ Real GDP) x 100
    Consumer Price Index (CPI): it measures inflation by tracking changes in the price of a market basket of goods. 
    • CPI= (Price of Market basket in current year/ Price of market basket in base year) x 100

    Thursday, February 2, 2017

    Calculating the GDP: Expenditure and Income Approach

    Depreciation: the loss of value of capital equipment due to normal wear and tear.

    Formulas: 

    Expenditure Approach to GDP= C + Ig + G + Xn
    C= Consumption
    Ig= Gross Domestic Investment
    G= Government Spending
    Xn= Net Exports

    Income Approach to GDP= W + R + I + P + Statistical Adjustment




    W- Wages/ Compensation of employee/ salary
    R- Rent 
    I- Interest 
    P- Profit 

    Budget= Government Purchases of Goods and Services + Transfer Payments - Government Taxes & Fee Collection   (if answer is +=deficit -= surplus)

    Trade= Exports - Imports (if answer is += surplus -= deficit)


    National Income=

    •  Compensation of employees + Rental Income + Interest Income + Properitors Income + Corporate Profit 
    • GDP - Indirect Business Taxes - Depreciation - Net Foreign Factor Payments 

    Disposable Personal Income= National Income - Personal Household Taxe + Government Transfer Payments. 

    Net Domestic Product = GDP - Depreciation 

    Net National Product = GNP - Depreciation 

    Gross Investments= Net Investment + Depreciation 

    GNP= GDP + Net Foreign Factor Payment 

    Tuesday, January 31, 2017

    GDP (Gross Domestic Product)

    GDP: the total value of final goods and services that are produced within a country’s borders
    In  a given year
    Includes: all production or income earned within the U.S. by U.S. and foreign producer. It excludes production outside of the U.S. even by Americans


    GNP: (gross national Product): It is the total of all goods and services that are produced by Americans in a given year.
    Includes: production or income earned by Americans anywhere in the world. It excludes production by non-americans even in the United States.


    GDP= C + Ig + G +Xn
    C=Consumption - finals good and services that are being produced (67% of the economy)
    Ig: Gross Private Domestic Investment (17% of the economy)
    Ex: construction of new houses, factory equipment, factory equipment maintenance, and unsold inventory that products are built in a year.
    G: Government spending( 18% of the economy)
    Ex: school buses, highways, guns
    Xn: net exports (Exports-imports) (-2% of the economy)




    GDP


    Excluded:  
    • Intermediate goods - avoid double or multiple counting
    • Used or second-hand goods -avoid double counting
    • Unreported business activities -tips
    • Stocks and bonds
    • Non-market activity
    • Illegal activity Ex: prostitution
    • Gifts or Transfer Payments (Public or Private) Ex: scholarships, social securities, unemployment


    Stock & Bonds: purely financial transaction (there’s no production; just investments)

    Circular Flow

    Circular Flow - Represents the transactions in an economy by flows around a circle.

    2 Economic Actors:
    1. Household - Person or a group of people who share their income
    2. Firm or Business - Organization that produces goods and services for sale.

    Factor Market: FOP (Factors of Production)
    Product Market: Goods & Services

    Willy Rest In Peace = Wages, Rents, Interest, Profit.

    Monday, January 23, 2017

    Elasticity of Demand

    What causes a “change in demand”?
    • Change in Income:
    1. Normal goods - as income increases, demands increase
    2. Inferior goods - as income increases, demand for goods increase

    • Elastic demand:
      • demand that is sensitive to a change in $$
      • A product, not a necessity
      • available substitute
      • ex: steak, fur coat
      • e > 1
    • Inelastic demand
      • demand that is not sensitive to a change in $$
      • product = necessity
      • few to no substitutes
      • ex: gas, insulin
      • e < 1
    • Unitary elastic
      • e = 1



    Step 1: Quantity
    • new quantity - old quantity
        old quantity
    Step 2: Price
    • new $$ - old $$
    old $$
    Step 3: PED
    • % change in quantity
           % change in $$

    P x Q = Total revenue
    • Total amount of $$ a firm receives from selling goods & services

    Marginal Revenue
    • Additional income from selling an additional limit
    • New Total Cost - Old Total Cost = Marginal Cost



    Equilibrium:
    The point in which the supply curve intersects with the demand curve

    Excess Demand:
    occurs when quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied.
    (result in a shortage-consumers can't get the quantities of items that they want )

    Price Ceiling:
    when the government puts a legal limit on high the price of a product  
    (found under the point of equilibrium) Price Ceiling -> creates shortage
    Ex: Rent Control

    Excess Supply:
    occurs when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
    (result in a surplus-producers have inventory that they can’t get rid of)

    Price floor:
    the lowest legal price a commodity can be sold at. (found above the point of equilibrium)
    Ex: Minimum Wage

    Wednesday, January 4, 2017

    Factors of Production

    Factors of Production
    1. Land:natural resources
    2. Labor: work exerted
    3. Capital:
      1. Human Capital: when people acquire skills and knowledge through experience and education
      2. Physical Capital: consist of money, tools, buildings, equipment, and machinery
    4. Entrepreneurship: risk-taker, innovative


    • Trade offs: an alternative that we sacrifice that we make a decision (Scarcity leads to Tradeoffs)
    • Opportunity Cost: the most desirable alternative given up as a result of a decision
    • Guns or Butter: refers to tradeoffs that the governments make when choosing whether to produce more or less military or consumer goods
    • Thinking at the Margins: deciding whether to add or subtract one additional unit of some resource
    • Production Possibilities Graph (PPG): graph that shows alternative ways to use an economy's resources
         Curve (PPC)       
         Frontier (PPF)


    • Efficiency: using resources in such a way to maximize the production of goods and services (increases profits)
    • Underutilization: (opposite of efficiency) using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using. (leads to a decrease in profit)


    4 key Assumptions (PPG):
    1. Only 2 goods can be produced
    2. Full employment of resources
    3. Fixed Resources (factors of production)
    4. Fixed Technology