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THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH

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Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
Lesson 11.5
THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
(CONTINUED.......)
Determinants of Capital Account:
Although the focus of discussion above has been the current account, it is useful to briefly look
at the determinants of the capital account, and the factors which increase the ability of a
country to attract capital account inflows:
a. The attractiveness of the macroeconomic environment, the law and order situation etc.
is an important determinant of foreign investment inflows into the country. The better
the situation, the more inflows can be expected by way of direct investment by foreign
firms.
b. The more favourable are international conditions to borrowing (foreign lenders' attitude
towards, and perception of, the borrowing country; foreign interest rates), the more
easily can a country raise foreign debt.
c. If foreign interest rates are lower than domestic interest rates (the latter adjusted
downwards for any expected exchanger ate depreciation), then foreign portfolio
investors will want to invest in the domestic country's stocks, bonds and other interest
bearing assets. The underlying relationship being referred to here is that of interest
parity which says: id - ΔEe should approximately equal if if private portfolio flows are to
balance. Here id stands for domestic interest rate, ΔEe is the expected depreciation
adjustment, and if is the foreign interest rate.
If it is not already clear, the costs of running a high BOPs or current account deficit (high is
usually defined as over 5% of GNP) for a long time can be fairly severe. The country risks
losing precious foreign exchange reserves if the exchange rate is fixed.1 In this case, a
monetary contraction, and hence AD contraction, follows the loss in reserves with obvious
social costs. Alternatively, if the country completely runs out of reserves, a BOPs crisis can
occur which can be very costly both in terms of the image of the country internationally as well
as its ability to borrow and attract investment from abroad.
GROWTH
The Concept of Growth and Growth Rate:
Economic growth is increase in an economy's level of production, output or income. We can
talk about production or output in two broad definitional contexts. One, we can compare real
GDP with some other measure of welfare (for e.g., one which adjusts for externalities, social
indicators, the black market, purchasing power parity, income inequality etc.). Two, we can talk
about potential vs. actual output. Potential output is the aggregate capacity output of a nation;
the maximum quantity of goods and services that can be produced with available resources
and a given state of technology.2 In our discussion here, we will abstract from such
complexities and take output to simply mean real GDP.
The growth rate of a country's real GDP can be negative, positive or zero. A growth rate of
between 2-3% is considered normal for mature developed countries; for LICs, 5-7% is
considered healthy and 7%+ excellent.
Per Capita Real GDP:
When studying growth, it is always instructive to analyse changes in per capita real GDP along
with changes in real GDP. Per capita real GDP growth adjusts GDP growth downwards by the
population growth rate and gives a more accurate indication of improvements in living
1
Note that serious BOPs problems or crises are unlikely under floating exchange rates.
2
Thus, when the production possibilities frontier of a country shifts out, that represents an increase in potential
GDP. Actual GDP can be less than or equal to potential GDP, and is usually less. The difference between potential
and actual GDP is sometimes referred to as the output gap.
119
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Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
standards in a country. For mature HICs, Real GDP growth rate = per capita real GDP growth
rate, since the population size in these countries is quite stable.
It is also important to note that even a small per capital real GDP growth rate (say around 2%
p.a.), if sustained for a very long very of time (say 100 years) can deliver huge improvements
in living standards. The U.S. and Japan in the 19th and 20th centuries and East Asian tiger
economies in the last four decades are a neat example of this.
Why Growth is an Important Macroeconomic Issue:
It is obvious why growth is an important macroeconomic issue. Every government aspires to
deliver a higher growth rate for the country. High growth rates means higher national income
which means better living standards on average, which in democracies, means happier
electorates and therefore increased chances of re-election for another term in office. However,
while all countries might wish to achieve high growth rates, in practice, only a handful have
been able to convert the wish into reality.
Traditional Thinking about Growth:
Traditional thinking on growth was that it can be driven either by an increase in factor
resources (land, natural resources, labour, capital), i.e. an increase in potential GDP, or by
more efficient use of the factors, i.e. a move from inside the PPF to the PPF. The policy
implication attached to this line of thinking was simple. Countries must either accumulate
factors of production (esp. capital), or develop more cost-efficient technologies and methods of
production to utilize those resources better. In any event, factors of production were at the
heart of growth theory.
120
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS:Economic Systems
  2. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS (CONTINUED………):Opportunity Cost
  3. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM:Goods Market and Factors Market
  4. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..)
  5. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..):Equilibrium
  6. ELASTICITIES:Price Elasticity of Demand, Point Elasticity, Arc Elasticity
  7. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Total revenue and Elasticity
  8. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Short Run and Long Run, Incidence of Taxation
  9. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION:CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
  10. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)
  11. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)The Indifference Curve Approach
  12. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….):Normal Goods and Giffen Good
  13. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS:PRODUCTIVE THEORY
  14. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):The Scale of Production
  15. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):Isoquant
  16. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):COSTS
  17. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):REVENUES
  18. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):PROFIT MAXIMISATION
  19. MARKET STRUCTURES:PERFECT COMPETITION, Allocative efficiency
  20. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):MONOPOLY
  21. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):PRICE DISCRIMINATION
  22. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):OLIGOPOLY
  23. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS:WELFARE ECONOMICS
  24. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS (CONTINUED……………)
  25. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS:Price Level and its Effects:
  26. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..)
  27. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..):The Monetarist School
  28. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME
  29. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME (CONTINUED……………..)
  30. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME
  31. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..)
  32. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..):The Accelerator
  33. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
  34. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….)
  35. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Causes of Inflation
  36. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  37. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH
  38. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Land
  39. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Growth-inflation
  40. FISCAL POLICY AND TAXATION:Budget Deficit, Budget Surplus and Balanced Budget
  41. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY
  42. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY (CONTINUED…….)
  43. JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK
  44. AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCE
  45. PROBLEMS OF LOWER INCOME COUNTRIES:Poverty trap theories: