I.
Gross Domestic Product
A.
GDP is one of the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA)
compiled by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis
(BEA).
B.
GDP is the monetary measure of the total
market value of all
final goods and services
produced within a nation’s
borders in one year.
1.
Money valuation allows the summing of sofas and computers;
money acts as the common denominator.
(See Table 12.1.)
2.
GDP includes only final products and services; it avoids
double or multiple counting, by eliminating any intermediate goods
used in production of these final goods or services.
3.
Secondhand sales are excluded, they do not represent current
output. (However, any
value added between purchase and resale is included, e.g. used car
dealers.)
C.
Measuring GDP
1.
GDP is divided into the categories of buyers in the market;
household consumers, businesses, government, and foreign buyers.
2.
Personal Consumption Expenditures—(C)—includes durable goods
(lasting 3 years or more), nondurable goods, and services.
3.
Gross Private Domestic Investment—(Ig)
a.
All final purchases of machinery, equipment, and tools by
businesses.
b.
All construction (including residential).
c.
Changes in
business inventory.
i.
If total output exceeds current sales, inventories build up.
ii. If
businesses are able to sell more than they currently produce, this
entry will be a negative number.
4.
Government Purchases (of consumption goods and capital goods)
– (G)
a.
Includes spending by all levels of government (federal, state
and local).
b.
Includes all direct purchases of resources (labor in
particular).
c.
This entry excludes transfer payments (e.g. Social Security,
welfare) since these outlays do not reflect current production.
5.
Net Exports—(Xn)
a.
All spending on final goods produced in the
U.S.
must be included in GDP, whether the purchase is made here or
abroad.
b.
Often goods purchased and measured in the
U.S.
are produced elsewhere (imports).
c.
Therefore, net exports, (Xn)
is the difference:
(exports minus imports) and can be either a positive or negative
number depending on which is the larger amount.
6.
Summary: GDP = C
+ Ig +
G + Xn

II.
Nominal GDP versus Real GDP
A.
Nominal GDP is the market value of all final goods and services
produced in a year.
1.
GDP is a (P x Q) figure including every item produced in the
economy. Money is the
common denominator that allows us to sum the total output.
2.
To measure changes in the quantity of output, we need a
yardstick that stays the same size.
To make comparisons of length, a yard must remain 36 inches.
To make comparisons of real output, a dollar must keep the
same purchasing power.
3.
Nominal GDP is calculated using the current prices prevailing
when the output was produced but real GDP is a figure that has been
adjusted for price level changes.
B.
Valid year-to-year comparisons cannot be made with nominal
GDP alone, since both prices and quantities are subject to change.
1. When
there has been inflation, nominal GDP must be deflated; if deflation
has occurred,
nominal GDP must be inflated to put GDP in real terms.
2. Using a
one good economy as an example, real GDP for a given year can be
found by
taking the quantity of goods produced in that year times the
base year price of the good.
Any GDP
changes from the base year will then reflect genuine output changes,
as prices are held
constant.
C.
U.S. nominal GDP
in 2004 was $11,734 billion; real GDP in 2004 (measured in 2000 base
year prices) was $10,842 billion.
D. The
Underground Economy
1.
Illegal activities are not counted in GDP
(estimated to be around 8% of U.S. GDP – about $939 billion in
2004).
2.
Legal economic activity may also be part of
the “underground,” usually in an effort to evade taxation.
III.
Growth and the Business Cycle
A. Two definitions of
economics growth are given.
1.
The increase in real GDP, which occurs over a period of time.
This definition is useful for measuring military potential or
political preeminence.
2.
The increase in real GDP per capita, which occurs over time.
This definition is superior if comparison of living standards
is desired. For
example, China’s 2003 GDP was $1410 billion compared to Denmark’s
$212 billion, but per capita GDP’s wee $1110 and $33,750
respectively.
3.
Growth in real GDP does not guarantee growth in real GDP per
capita. If the growth
in population exceeds the growth in real GDP, real GDP per capita
will fall.

B.
Growth is an important economic goal because
it means more material abundance and ability to meet the economizing
problem. Growth lessens
the burden of scarcity.
C.
The arithmetic of growth is impressive.
Using the “rule of 70,” a growth rate of 2 percent annually
would take 35 years for GDP to double, but a growth rate of 4
percent annually would only take about 18 years for GDP to double.
(The “rule of 70” uses the absolute value of a rate of
change, divides it into 70, and the result is the number of years it
takes the underlying quantity to double.)
D.
Main sources of growth are increasing inputs or increasing
productivity of existing inputs.
1.
About one-third of U.S. growth comes from
more inputs.
2.
About two-thirds comes from increased
productivity.
E.
Growth Record of the United States (Table 12.3) is
impressive.
1. Real GDP
has increased over sixfold since 1950, and real per capita GDP has
risen over threefold.
(See columns 2 and 4, Table 12.3)
2. Rate of
growth record shows that real GDP has grown 3.4 percent per year
since 1950 and real GDP per capita has grown 2.1 percent per year.
But the arithmetic needs to be qualified.
3.
Global Snapshot 12.3
compares U.S. growth rates since 1996 with those of France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, and the U.K.
a. For most
of the period since 1950, U.S. growth has lagged behind the other
nations.
b. Since
1994, U.S. real GDP has grown fasteR
IV.
Overview of the Business Cycle
A.
Historical record:
1.
The United States’ impressive long‑run economic growth has
been interrupted by periods of instability.
2.
Uneven growth has been the pattern, with inflation often
accompanying rapid growth, and declines in employment and output
during periods of recession and depression (see Figure 12.1 and
Table 12.4).
B.
Four phases of the business cycle are identified over a
several‑year period.
(See Figure 12.1)
1.
A peak is when business activity reaches a temporary maximum
with full employment and near-capacity output.
2.
A recession is a decline in total output, income, employment,
and trade lasting six months or more.
3.
The trough is the bottom of the recession period.
4.
Recovery is when output and employment are expanding toward
full‑employment level.
V.
Unemployment
A.
Measuring unemployment (see Figure 12.2 for 2004):
1. The
population is divided into three groups:
those under age 16 or institutionalized,
those “not in labor force,” and the labor force that includes
those age 16 and over who
are
willing and able to work, and actively seeking work
(demonstrated job search
activity within the last four weeks).
2.
The unemployment rate is defined as the percentage of the
labor force that is not employed.
(Note: Emphasize not the percentage of the
population.)
3.
Unemployment data are collected by a random survey of 60,000
households nationwide.
(Note: Households are in survey for four months, out for eight, back
in for four, and then out for good; interviewers use the phone or
home visits using laptops.)
.
B.
Types of unemployment:
1.
Frictional unemployment consists of those searching for jobs
or waiting to take jobs soon; it is regarded as somewhat desirable,
because it indicates that there is mobility as people change or seek
jobs.
2.
Structural unemployment:
due to changes in the structure of demand for labor; e.g.,
when certain skills become obsolete or geographic distribution of
jobs changes.
a.
Glass blowers were replaced by bottle-making machines.
b.
Oil-field workers were displaced when oil demand fell in
1980s.
c.
Airline mergers displaced many airline workers in 1980s.
d.
Foreign competition has led to downsizing in U.S. industry
and loss of jobs.
e.
Call centers have been relocated to countries such as India
as communication technology has improved.
3.
Cyclical unemployment is caused by the recession phase of the
business cycle.
4.
It is sometimes not clear which type describes a person’s
unemployment circumstances.
C.
Definition of “Full Employment”
1.
Full employment does not mean zero unemployment.
2.
The economy is at full‑employment unemployment when there is
only frictional and structural unemployment.
3.
The level of real GDP associated with full employment is
called potential output or potential GDP.
D.
Economic cost of unemployment:
1. GDP gap:
The GDP gap is the difference between potential and actual
GDP.
2. Higher
rates of unemployment are correlated with a greater negative GDP
gap.
3. Lost GDP
for the nation also means lost income for unemployed workers,
meaning the
burden of the lost output is unequal.
Additionally, lower-skilled workers have higher
rates of unemployment than higher-skilled workers
E.
International comparisons.
(Global Snapshot 12.4)
VI.
Inflation:
Defined and Measured
A.
Definition: Inflation
is a rising general level of prices (not all prices rise at the same
rate, and some may fall).
B.
The main index used to measure inflation is the Consumer
Price Index (CPI).
1. The CPI is
found by taking the price of the most recent market basket in a
particular year
divided by the price of the same market basket in the base
year (1982-84 in text).
2. To
measure inflation, subtract last year’s price index from this year’s
price index and
divide by last year’s index; then multiply by 100 to express
as a percentage. Using
the
text numbers: [(188.9 – 184.0)/184.0] x 100 = 2.7 percent.
C.
“Rule of 70” permits quick calculation of the time it takes
the price level to double:
Divide 70 by the percentage rate of inflation and the result
is the approximate number of years for the price level to double.
If the inflation rate is 7 percent, then it will take about
ten years for prices to double.
(Note: You can also use this rule to calculate how long it
takes savings to double at a given compounded interest rate.)
D.
Facts of inflation:
1. Prices
have risen every year since 1960 (no deflation).
The highest rates of inflation during this period occurred
from 1973-1980.
2.
All industrial nations have experienced the problem (see
Global Snapshot 12.5).
3.
Some nations experience astronomical rates of inflation
(Zimbabwe’s was 350 percent in 2004).
E.
Causes and theories of inflation:
1.
Demand‑pull inflation:
Spending increases faster than production.
It is often described as “too much spending chasing too few
goods.”
2.
Cost‑push or supply‑side inflation:
Prices rise because of rise in per-unit production costs
(Unit cost = total input cost/units of output).
a.
Output and employment decline while the price level is
rising.
b.
Supply shocks have been the major source of cost-push
inflation. These
typically occur with dramatic increases in the price of raw
materials or energy.
VII.
Redistributive Effects of Inflation
A.
The price index is used to deflate nominal
income into real income.
Inflation may reduce the real income of individuals in the
economy, but won’t necessarily reduce real income for the economy as
a whole (someone receives the higher prices that people are paying).
B.
Unanticipated inflation has stronger
impacts; those expecting inflation may be able to adjust their work
or spending activities to avoid or lessen the effects.
C.
Fixed‑income groups will be hurt because
their real income suffers.
Their nominal income does not rise with prices.
D.
Savers will be hurt by unanticipated
inflation, because interest rate returns may not cover the cost of
inflation. Their
savings will lose purchasing power.
E.
Debtors (borrowers) can be helped and
lenders hurt by unanticipated inflation.
Interest payments may be less than the inflation rate, so
borrowers receive “dear” money and are paying back “cheap” dollars
that have less purchasing power for the lender.
F.
If inflation is anticipated, the effects of
inflation may be less severe, since wage and pension contracts may
have inflation clauses built in, and interest rates will be high
enough to cover the cost of inflation to savers and lenders.
1.
“Inflation premium” is amount that interest
rate is raised to cover effects of anticipated inflation.
2.
“Real interest rate” is defined as nominal
rate minus inflation premium. (Figure 12.4)
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