Sunday, February 16, 2014

Unit II


  • Circular Flow Model
  • it is represents the flow of money, goods, and services in an economy
-Factor Market (resources): we sell our resources to business
-Product Market (goods): goods and services are bought and sold
-Households: where a person or group shares an income
-Firm: an organization that produces goods and services for sale




  • GDP (Gross Domestic Product): total value of all final goods and services produced within a countries border within a given year
  • GNP (Gross National Product): total value of all final goods and services produced by American's in a given year
  • GDP Includes
-Final goods and services
-Income earned
-Interest payments on corporate bond
-Current production of final goods and services
-Unsold output (business inventories)
  • GDP Excluded
-Intermediate goods
-Transfer payments (public on private)
-Purchases of stocks and bonds
-Used goods or second handed sales
-Non-market transactions (illegal drugs, prostitution, own house work or repairs, babysitting, growing your own product for personal consumption)
  • Expenditure Approach 
C: Personal Consumption
Ig: Gross Private Domestic Investment (factor equipment, construction on homes and businesses tools and machines)
G: Government spending
Xn: Net exports (export - imports)
  • Income Approach 

R: Rent (rental income)
I: Interest (interest income)
P: Proprietors income
SA: Statistical Adjustment
W: Wages (salaries, compensation of employees)
  • Budget Deficit: total amount the government borrows in a year
-Total government spending exceed tax and fee revenue
Budget= (transfer payment)+(government purchase of goods and services)-(government tax and fee collection)
-Budget deficit: positive
-Budget surplus: negative
  • Trade
Trade=(exports)-(imports)
-Trade deficit: negative
-Trade surplus: positive
  • National Income
National Income=(compensation of employees)+(proprietors income)+(rental income)+(interest income)+(corporate profits)

National Income=(GDP)-(indirect business taxes)-(depreciation)-(net foreign factor)
  • Disposable Personal Income 
Disposable Personal Income=(national income)-(household taxes)+(government transfer payments)
  • Net Domestic Product (NDP)
NDP=(GDP)-(depreciation)

-Depreciation (consumption of fixed capitol)
  • Net National Product (NNP)
NNP=(GNP)-(depreciation)
  • GNP
GNP=(GDP)+(foreign factor payment)


  • Real GDP vs. Nominal GDP
  • Real GDP (Economic Growth)
-Value of output produces in constant or based year prices
-Can only increase if output increases
Real GDP= (p)(q)

  • Nominal GDP (Inflation)
-Value of output produced in current prices
-Can increase year to year if either output or prices increase
Nominal GDP= (p)(q)
  • This video might help you calculate Real GDP and Nominal GDP!

  • GDP Deflator

-In base year GDP is always equal to 100, for years after the base GDP deflator is greater than a 100
-For years before base year GDP deflator is less than 100

  • Consumer Price Index (CPI)
-Measures the cost of the market basket of goods of a typical urban American family


  • Real GDP is adjusted for inflation
  • Inflation vs. Deflation
-Inflation: general rise in the price level
-Deflation: fall of the price level

  • Rate of Inflation

  • Types of Inflation

  1. Cost-Push Inflation: higher production cost which increases prices, usually the result of supply shock
  2. Demand-Pull Inflation: too many dollars too few goods, a shortage that is driving up the prices, overheated economy with excessive spending with the same amount of goods
  3. Political Panics: depression or recession 

  • How Inflation Hurts/Helps
-Hurts:

  1. Lenders (loan money at fixed rate)
  2. People with fixed income
  3. Savers
  4. People with fixed wages
-Helps: 

  1. Debtors
  2. Businesses where the prices of a product increases faster than the price of resources

  • Unemployment: percentage of people that do not have jobs but they are in the labor force
  • Labor Force: employed and unemployed not in the labor force
-Kids 16 and younger
-Military personal
-Mentally insane
-Locked in prison
-Stay at home moms and dads
-Full time students
-Retired people
-The discouraged
  • Employed vs. Unemployed
-Employed: 16 and older that have a job
-People 16 and older that have actively looked for a job for two weeks



Labor Force=(employed)+(unemployed)

  • Types of Unemployment

  1. Seasonal (ex: lifeguards, school bus drivers)
  2. Frictional: between jobs (ex: McDonald's to University )
  3. Structural: associated with lack of skill or declining industry (ex: NASA closed, technology update)
  4. Cyclical: bad for society and individuals, have a recession
  • Full Employment (FE)
-It occurs when there is no cyclical unemployment present in the economy
-NRU (Natural Rate of Unemployment) : 4 to 5 %

  • Okun's Law 
-For every 1% of unemployment above NRU causes a 2% decline in real GDP



6 comments:

  1. I like how you've actually put pictures of the circle flow model in different versions because it shows us a different view of the model and you're equations are easy to spot because it stands out from the rest of the notes.

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  2. I like how everything is all pieced together. Everything is easy to understand, and if I ever forget a formula I can find it on your blog. You also chose a great video to explain nominal and real GDP.

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  3. The way you had the formulas in picture form is helpful as it makes them easy to spot if needed. Nice organization, but bolded headings would go a long way as well. Also, note the Rule of 70, which is used to estimate the number of years it takes for a certain variable to double if given the percentage increase. For this use the formula: 70/percent increase = years to double. Anyway, great job!

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  4. I like how your blog is very organized and easy to understand. The pictures of the circular flow graphs and the video made it also easier for me to understand as well!

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  5. Great job on this unit. You've hit legitimately every point minus the Rule of 70 which Brandon has already explained.

    The only minor gripe (if you would even go so far as to call it one) would be to elaborate on exclusion and inclusion in GDP. For our purposes, exclusion rules out inclusion when both apply. For instance, if I sell stock and earn income from it, it is still not included in GDP as it is a purely financial transaction. I must sound like a broken record for posting that on as many blogs as I did, but that's what stood out to me.

    Again, great job. Good luck on your test.

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  6. Just received a cheque for over $500.

    Sometimes people don't believe me when I tell them about how much money you can get by taking paid surveys online...

    So I took a video of myself getting paid $500 for doing paid surveys to finally set the record straight.

    ReplyDelete