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Economic fluctuations and Key Characteristics
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The cyclical behaviour of the economy over time
Business cycles are not regular cycles; they are irregular and vary in the size of fluctuations Recessions and expansions are difficult to predict Business cycles involve most or all of the economy (not just certain sectors) |
Recession
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The economy is growing at a rate below normal-Unemployment rises sharply in a recession and typically declines more slowly (often very slowly)-Recessions usually see a fall in inflation; some but not all recessions are preceded by a rise in inflation.
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Expansion
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The economy is growing at a rate above normal
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Potential output
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Measures the amount of GDP (output) when resources (capital and labour, technology) are being used at normal rates.- AKA full-employment GDP- denoted Y*
(the growth rate of potential GDP depends upon the growth rates of the inputs to production (e.g. capital, labour, productivity); periods of high or low GDP growth may reflect changes in the growth rate of Y*) |
Output gap, recessionary and expansionary gap
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When Output Y does not equal potential output Y*
Recessionary Gap: Y* - Y > 0; output is below potential output. Expansionary Gap: Y* - Y < 0; output is above potential output. |
Four types of unemployment:
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1. Frictional - looking for work; looking for workers (job matching takes time).2. Structural - workers lack skills or need to re-locate3. Seasonal - regular seasonal unemployment4. Cyclical - unemployment due to recessions
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Natural rate of unemployment
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= frictional + structural + seasonal unemployment; - - denoted u*.
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Cyclical unemployment
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U - u*(total unemployment - natural rate of unemployment)
- Cyclical unemployment varies closely with the output gap.- Recessionary Gap: a rise in u - u*- Expansionary Gap: a fall in u - u* |
Okun's Law
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100 x ((Y* - Y) / Y*) = 2 x (u - u*)- An estimate of Y* and Okun's Law gives us an estimate of u*; and vice versa
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Basic Keynesian model
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Objective: to set down a simple model of aggregate demand that explains departures from potential(full employment) output.- J.M. Keynes.Critical assumption: in the short run rms meet the demand for their products at preset prices
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Menu Cost |
It is costly to change prices; in the short-run it may be best to set prices and meet demand.
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Planned Aggregate Expenditure (PAE)
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- At any point in time, consumers, rms, and governments have expenditure plans; what theywould like to spend given current conditions.
Y = C + I + G + NX PAE = C + Ip + G + NX PAE = C + c(Y - T) + Ip + G + NX |
Investment and planned investment
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I = Ip + unplanned inventory investment
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Aggregate Expenditure
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Y - PAE = I - Ip = unplanned inventory investment
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Major component of PAE?
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Consumption Function:
C = C + c (Y - T) - C is the autonomous or exogenous component of consumption spending. - c is the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) out of disposable income, Y T. (0 < c < 1, the MPC is less than one) |