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Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
UNIT
- 8
Lesson
8.1
INTRODUCTION
TO MACROECONOMICS
As
a subject, macroeconomics only
began to be taught in colleges
and universities in the
1940s
after
the influence of a very
influential British economist,
John Maynard Keynes who
believed the
macro
economy (with its associated
variables) deserved to be understood
and analyzed in its
own
right, and not just as an
aggregation of the various
micro-markets, as was believed
earlier.
Macroeconomics
deals with the behaviour of
the economy as a whole. The
variables of interest
change
from the price, demand or
supply of a particular product to
the economy-wide price
level,
aggregate
demand and aggregate
supply.
Aggregate
Demand (AD):
Aggregate
demand (AD) is the total
planned or desired spending
(expenditure) in the
economy
during
a given period. AD is the
sum of consumption, investment,
government spending and
net
exports
(i.e. exports minus
imports), and is inversely
related to the aggregate
price level through
the
wealth, interest rate and
international purchasing power
effects.
Price
Level and its
Effects:
The
price level is the weighted
average price index of the
prices of all the goods
and services in
the
economy.
Inflation
or inflation rate is the
percentage annual increase in
the price level.
Hyperinflation
is
inflation at extremely high
rates (say 1000, 1 million,
or even 1 billion percent
a
year).
The
wealth effect of a price
level increase on AD is negative
and works through the
reduction in
the
purchasing power of consumers'
income and wealth (real
asset values). These cause
a
reduction
in consumption demand.
The
interest rate effect of a
price level increase on AD is
negative as it causes a fall
in
investment
demand. Higher prices cause
the nominal interest rate to
rise discouraging
firm
investment.
The
international purchasing power
(or competitiveness) effect of a
price level increase on AD
is
also
negative as it reduces the
net foreign demand for
domestic goods and services.
As the
price
level of a certain country
increases the demand for
its exports falls because
they become
expensive
(less competitive) in international
markets.
Shifts
in Aggregate Demand:
AD
shifts to the right when
any component of AD increases
autonomously; e.g., if a)
consumers
become
more willing to spend at
every price level; b) there
are autonomous increases
in
investment
due to better business
prospects; c) the government
spends more, or reduces
taxes;
net
exports rise at all prices
(due to say an increase in
the quality of domestic
goods relative to
foreign
goods).
Aggregate
Supply (AS):
Aggregate
supply (AS) is the total
value of goods and services
that all the firms in
the economy
would
and can willingly produce in
a given time period.
Aggregate supply is a function
of
available
inputs, technology and the
price level. It slopes
upward in P-Output space but
the
exact
slope depends whether the
economy is operating at below
full employment (flat) or
full
employment
(steep)
Full
Employment:
Full
employment is a state of the
economy in which the
productive resources of the
economy are
fully
employed. Output may be
expanded from this full
employment level by asking
labourers to
work
overtime or renting capital
from outside. An alternative
(historical) definition of
full
79
Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
employment
was: that level of
employment at which no (or
minimal) involuntary
unemployment
exists.
The
Concept of Invisible
Hand:
Invisible
hand was a concept
introduced by Adam Smith in
1776 to describe the paradox
of
laissez-faire
market economy. The
invisible hand doctrine
holds that, with each
participant
pursuing
his or her own private
interest, a market system
nevertheless works to the
benefits of
all
as though a benevolent invisible
hand were directing the
whole process.
Classical
Economists:
Classical
economists were the earliest
brand of economists the
world knew. They
were
essentially
micro-economists who believed
the macro economy was an
uninteresting
aggregation
of individual (or micro)
markets, and any problem at
the macro level was
necessarily
a
symptom of some micro level
problem.
The
optimal role for the
government under Classical
economics was one of
laissez-faire. They
believed
that if the prices of goods,
services and factors were
allowed to be determined by
the
free
operation of the forces of
demand and supply (i.e.
the price mechanism) the
best possible
outcome
for resource allocation
would obtain. In other words
the economy would be at the
full
employment
level, and it would not be
possible to improve that
situation through
government
intervention.
A
recession
is
a downturn in real GDP for
two or more successive
quarters.
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