Macroeconomics
Economics 204
Study Guide I
Chapter 1
Ten Principles of Economics
No! I do not expect you to memorize the ten points. We have used them and will continue to refer back to them so you should understand their meaning, but no memorization. This is not a comprehensive look at the chapters, but it illustrates many of the important topics
A quick review:
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People Face TradeoffsØ
There is no such thing as a free lunch!Ø
Every choice has a tradeoff. These can range from the government tradeoff between national defense and consumer goods (guns vs. butter) to your tradeoff between sleeping and attending class.Ø
Frequently we encounter a tradeoff between efficiency and equity
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The Cost of Something is What You Give Up to Get ITØ
Making good decisions means knowing the full costs, including the opportunity costs, of making one choice over another.Ø
What is an opportunity cost? Can you cite examples in your life?v
Rational People Think at the MarginØ
How does a small incremental adjustment or a marginal change affect your existing plan?Ø
Why should we ignore the costs or benefits that occurred in the past?v
People Respond to IncentivesØ
When marginal benefits or marginal costs change your incentives will change.Ø
Provide some examples where your incentives have changedv
Trade Can Make Everyone Better OffØ
Even though there is competition among consumers and among producers in different countries, countries can benefit from specializing in what they do best and trade with each other.v
Markets are Usually a Good Way to Organize Economic ActivityØ
Compare the planned economy of the former Soviet Union to the market economy of the United StatesØ
Adam Smith explained this invisible hand in 1776, The Wealth of Nations.§
When household and firms do what is best for themselves, they end up doing what is best for society, as if guided by an invisible hand or market forcesØ
When the government interferes with markets by changing prices through taxation or price controls, the invisible fails and resources are not allocated in the best possible way. That is social welfare is not maximized when the government interferes.v
Governments can sometimes improve market outcomesØ
There are two reasons for government intervention: to change the (i) Efficiency, the size of the economic pie or (ii) Equity, how the economic pie is divided.Ø
Sometimes the invisible hand fails. Markets can fail to allocate resources efficiently if the economy has externalities or an economic player has market power.v
A countrys standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and servicesØ
Differences in standard of living in nations around the world can be attributed to differences in productivity.Ø
What is productivity?Ø
How can the government use public policy to change productivity?v
Prices Rise when the Government Prints Too Much MoneyØ
Examples: The German Hyperinflation and the inflation of Latin America and South AmericaØ
What is inflation?v
Society Faces a Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and UnemploymentØ
Reducing inflation is often thought to cause a rise in unemployment.Ø
Are there public policy implications based on the tradeoff? How does the structures of the US affect your answer?Do you know the economic jargon?
Economics, Scarcity, Efficiency, Equity, Opportunity Cost, Marginal Changes, Market Economy. Invisible Hand, Market Power, Productivity, Inflation
Chapter 2Thinking Like and Economist
Economists behave like scientists. We hypothesize, collect data, and analyze the data to see if our theories are supported or not.
To start thinking like an economist, we examine two simple models:
Circular Flow Model
Production Possibilities Frontier
Economic Jargon: (Relate the jargon two the above models.)
Factors of Production, Product Markets , Resource Markets, Efficient, Opportunity Cost, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics
Chapter 3Lastly, economics involves both positive questions and normative questions. Positive questions are great test questions. Normative questions are great homework problems and are usually poor test questions, but you may still see one on the test.
Interdependence and the Gains From Trade
A continuation of the production possibilities frontier and an excellent example of some of our ten principles.
- What is the difference between a straight line PPF and a bowed-out PPF?
- What is an absolute advantage?
- What is a comparative advantage?
- How does a comparative advantage relate to specialization?
- Who wins when groups trade?
- Can you calculate advantages like in the homework? This looks like a great numerical problem for the test!
Chapter 10
Measuring a Nation's Income
National income accounts are an accounting framework useful in measuring economic activity.
GNP=output produced by domestically owned factors of production.
GDP=ouput produced with the borders of a country
The market value if a final goods and services produced within a country in a given time period