SAMPLE Macroeconomics

‭THE ULTIMATE‬ ‭CREDIT-BY-EXAM‬ ‭STUDY GUIDE FOR:‬ ‭Macroeconomics‬ ‭1‬ ‭st‬ ‭Edition‬

‭2/01/2024‬

Acknowledgements We would like to thank the author for their patience, support, and expertise in contributing to this study guide; and our editors for their invaluable efforts in reading and editing the text. We would also like to thank those at Achieve Test Prep whose hard work and dedication to fulfilling this project did not go unnoticed. Lastly, we would like to thank the Achieve Test Prep students who have contributed to the growth of these materials over the years.

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‭Contents‬ ‭Chapter 1:‬ ‭Basic Economic Concepts‬

‭1‬

‭A. Basic Definitions of Economic Principles‬

‭1‬ ‭4‬ ‭5‬ ‭8‬ ‭9‬

‭B. The Economy‬

‭C. Factors of Production‬

‭D. Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Costs‬ ‭E. Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)‬

‭F. Comparative Advantage, Specialization, and Exchange‬

‭18‬ ‭23‬ ‭25‬ ‭42‬

‭G. Gains from Trade‬

‭H. Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium‬

‭Chapter 1: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 2:‬ ‭Measurement of Economic Performance‬

‭45‬

‭A. Introduction to Economic Performance‬

‭45‬ ‭46‬ ‭57‬ ‭70‬ ‭74‬ ‭78‬ ‭82‬ ‭83‬ ‭89‬ ‭96‬ ‭77‬

‭B. National Income Accounts‬

‭C. Inflation Measurement and Adjustment‬

‭D. Unemployment‬

‭Chapter 2: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 3:‬ ‭National Income and Price Determination‬

‭A. Aggregate Demand (AD)‬

‭B. Business Cycles and Economic Fluctuations‬

‭C. Multiplier and Crowding-Out Effects‬

‭D. Aggregate Supply (AS)‬

‭E. Macroeconomic Equilibrium‬ ‭F. Self-Correction of Output Gaps‬

‭102‬ ‭104‬ ‭108‬

‭G. Long-Run Self-Adjustments in the AD-AS Model‬

‭Chapter 3: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 4:‬ ‭Financial Sector‬

‭111‬

‭A. Definition of Financial Assets: Money, Stocks, and Bonds‬ ‭B. Time Value of Money (Present and Future Value)‬

‭111‬ ‭116‬ ‭117‬ ‭119‬ ‭122‬ ‭125‬ ‭128‬ ‭131‬ ‭133‬

‭C. Measures of Money Supply‬

‭D. Financial Institutions‬

‭E. Banks and Creation of Money‬

‭F. Money Demand‬ ‭G. Money Market‬

‭H. Real vs. Nominal Interest Rates‬

‭I. Loanable Funds Market‬

‭J. Central Bank and Control of the Money Supply‬

‭139‬ ‭140‬ ‭146‬ ‭146‬ ‭148‬ ‭151‬ ‭152‬ ‭155‬ ‭156‬ ‭157‬ ‭158‬ ‭161‬ ‭166‬ ‭169‬ ‭170‬ ‭175‬ ‭179‬ ‭180‬ ‭183‬ ‭186‬ ‭189‬ ‭190‬ ‭192‬ ‭195‬ ‭197‬ ‭200‬ ‭201‬ ‭202‬ ‭204‬ ‭206‬ ‭208‬ ‭214‬ ‭216‬ ‭218‬ ‭151‬ ‭186‬ ‭206‬

‭K. Tools of Central Bank Policy‬ ‭L. Limitations of Monetary Policy‬ ‭M. Quantity Theory of Money‬ ‭Chapter 4: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 5:‬ ‭Inflation, Unemployment, and Stabilization‬‭Policies‬

‭A. Fiscal Policy‬

‭B. Demand-Side Effects of Fiscal Policy‬ ‭C. Government Deficits and Debt‬

‭D. Crowding out‬

‭E. Automatic Stabilizers‬

‭F. The Reserve Market Model‬

‭G. Monetary Policy‬

‭H. Supply-Side Effects and Policies‬

‭I. Policy Mix‬

‭J. Inflation and Unemployment‬

‭K. Changes in the AD-AS and Phillips Curve Models‬

‭L. Role of Expectations‬ ‭M. Economic Philosophies‬ ‭Chapter 5: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 6:‬ ‭Economic Growth and Productivity‬

‭A. Economic Growth and Real GDP per Capita‬ ‭B. Economic Growth vs. Economic Expansion‬

‭C. Sources of Economic Growth‬

‭D. Labor Productivity‬

‭E. Research and Development and Technological Progress‬

‭F. The Aggregate Production Function‬

‭G. Benefits and Drawbacks of Economic Growth‬

‭H. Growth Policy‬

‭I. Additional Reading: The Trajectory of Productivity Since the 1950s‬

‭Chapter 6: Review Questions‬

‭Chapter 7:‬ ‭Open Economy: International Trade and Finance‬

‭A. Closed Economy vs. Open Economy‬ ‭B. Balance of Payments Accounts‬ ‭C. How and Why the BOP is Balanced‬

‭D. Exchange Rates‬

‭E. Demand for Foreign Exchange‬

‭F. Supply of Foreign Exchange‬ ‭G. Exchange Rate Determination‬

‭221‬ ‭223‬ ‭225‬ ‭225‬ ‭228‬

‭H. Exchange Rate Effects on the Economy‬

‭I. Exchange Rate Policies‬ ‭Chapter 7: Review Questions‬

‭Glossary‬

‭230‬

‭Chapter 1:‬ ‭Basic Economic Concepts‬ ‭Overview‬

‭This‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭introduces‬ ‭core‬ ‭macroeconomics‬ ‭concepts,‬ ‭laying‬ ‭the‬ ‭groundwork‬ ‭for‬ ‭understanding‬ ‭complex‬‭national‬‭economies.‬‭Fundamental‬‭principles‬‭like‬‭scarcity‬‭and‬‭opportunity‬‭cost‬‭guide‬‭individual‬ ‭and‬ ‭national‬ ‭resource‬ ‭allocation‬ ‭decisions.‬ ‭Chapter‬ ‭1‬ ‭discusses‬ ‭the‬‭factors‬‭of‬‭production‬‭(land,‬‭labor,‬ ‭capital,‬ ‭entrepreneurship)‬ ‭that‬ ‭drive‬ ‭economic‬ ‭activity‬ ‭and‬ ‭explore‬ ‭the‬ ‭Production‬ ‭Possibilities‬ ‭Curve‬ ‭(PPC)‬ ‭as‬ ‭a‬ ‭tool‬ ‭for‬ ‭understanding‬ ‭trade-offs‬ ‭and‬ ‭growth.‬ ‭Furthermore,‬ ‭this‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭will‬ ‭examine‬ ‭comparative‬ ‭advantage‬ ‭and‬‭specialization,‬‭revealing‬‭the‬‭basis‬‭for‬‭mutually‬‭beneficial‬‭trade.‬‭Lastly,‬‭this‬ ‭chapter analyzes demand and supply, the invisible forces shaping market prices and resource allocation.‬ ‭Learning Objectives‬ ‭●‬ ‭Define key economic principles such as scarcity, opportunity cost, and different economic‬ ‭systems.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Distinguish macroeconomics from microeconomics.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Recognize factors of production and define land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship, and how‬ ‭they combine for production.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Navigate scarcity and choices by understanding how to apply opportunity cost calculations to‬ ‭understand trade-offs in economic decisions.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Master market dynamics through the comprehension of demand, supply, and macroeconomic‬ ‭equilibrium to analyze market responses.‬ ‭A. Basic Definitions of Economic Principles‬ ‭Economics‬ ‭is‬‭a‬‭social‬‭science‬‭that‬‭studies‬‭how‬‭individuals,‬‭firms,‬‭societies,‬‭and‬‭nations‬‭make‬ ‭choices‬ ‭to‬ ‭use‬ ‭scarce‬‭resources‬ ‭.‬‭It‬‭examines‬‭the‬‭allocation‬‭of‬‭resources,‬‭the‬‭behavior‬‭of‬‭markets,‬‭and‬‭the‬‭impact‬ ‭of various factors on economic outcomes.‬ ‭The‬ ‭fundamental‬‭economic‬‭problem‬ ‭arises‬‭because‬ ‭resources‬ ‭,‬‭which‬‭are‬‭the‬‭“inputs”‬‭used‬‭to‬‭produce‬ ‭goods‬ ‭and‬ ‭services,‬ ‭are‬ ‭scarce‬ ‭(meaning‬ ‭they‬ ‭are‬ ‭limited)‬ ‭and‬ ‭may‬ ‭not‬ ‭be‬ ‭enough‬ ‭to‬ ‭fulfill‬ ‭people’s‬ ‭basic needs‬ ‭as well as society’s essentially‬ ‭unlimited‬‭wants‬ ‭.‬ ‭Study Tip‬ ‭In‬ ‭economics,‬ ‭needs‬ ‭are‬ ‭limited‬ ‭and‬ ‭represent‬‭anything‬‭that‬‭is‬‭necessary‬‭for‬‭survival‬‭such‬‭as‬‭food,‬ ‭water,‬ ‭shelter,‬ ‭and‬ ‭clothing.‬ ‭Wants‬ ‭,‬ ‭on‬ ‭the‬ ‭other‬‭hand,‬‭are‬‭not‬‭essential‬‭for‬‭living‬‭but‬‭are‬‭unlimited‬ ‭desires‬ ‭that‬ ‭make‬ ‭life‬‭more‬‭enjoyable‬‭and‬‭comfortable.‬‭For‬‭example,‬‭a‬‭human‬‭being‬ ‭needs‬ ‭water‬‭to‬ ‭drink, but may‬ ‭want‬ ‭juice or soda.‬ ‭By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:‬

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‭Economics‬‭is‬‭divided‬‭into‬‭two‬‭main‬‭branches,‬‭macroeconomics‬‭and‬‭microeconomics,‬‭each‬‭with‬‭its‬‭own‬ ‭distinct focus.‬ ‭Macroeconomics vs. Microeconomics‬ ‭Macroeconomics‬ ‭is‬‭the‬‭branch‬‭of‬‭economics‬‭that‬‭focuses‬‭on‬‭the‬ ‭overall‬‭behavior‬‭and‬‭performance‬‭of‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭.‬ ‭It‬ ‭examines‬ ‭large-scale‬ ‭economic‬ ‭phenomena‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭economic‬ ‭growth,‬ ‭inflation,‬ ‭unemployment,‬ ‭and‬ ‭national‬ ‭income.‬ ‭At‬ ‭its‬ ‭core,‬ ‭macroeconomics‬ ‭aims‬ ‭to‬ ‭establish‬ ‭not‬ ‭just‬‭efficient‬ ‭production and exchange‬ ‭, but also overall‬ ‭economic‬‭stability‬ ‭.‬ ‭Microeconomics‬ ‭,‬‭on‬‭the‬‭other‬‭hand,‬ ‭analyzes‬‭individual‬‭components‬‭of‬‭the‬‭economy‬ ‭,‬‭like‬‭consumers,‬ ‭firms,‬ ‭and‬ ‭markets,‬ ‭to‬ ‭understand‬ ‭how‬ ‭they‬ ‭make‬ ‭decisions‬ ‭and‬ ‭interact‬ ‭to‬ ‭determine‬ ‭prices‬ ‭and‬ ‭quantities‬ ‭of‬ ‭goods‬ ‭and‬ ‭services‬ ‭while‬ ‭considering‬ ‭resource‬ ‭constraints.‬ ‭It‬ ‭helps‬ ‭derive‬ ‭useful‬ ‭conclusions‬‭about‬‭how‬‭resources‬‭are‬‭allocated‬‭and‬‭how‬‭markets‬‭work.‬‭In‬‭other‬‭words,‬‭microeconomics‬ ‭deals‬ ‭with‬ ‭individual‬ ‭decisions,‬ ‭whereas‬ ‭macroeconomics‬ ‭deals‬ ‭with‬ ‭the‬ ‭sum‬ ‭of‬ ‭these‬‭individuals.‬‭In‬ ‭macroeconomics, sums are referred to as “‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭.”‬ ‭Complementary‬ ‭Insights:‬ ‭Recognizing‬ ‭the‬ ‭intricate‬ ‭interplay‬ ‭between‬ ‭microeconomics‬ ‭and‬ ‭macroeconomics‬ ‭is‬ ‭crucial.‬‭Both‬‭fields‬‭together‬‭form‬‭the‬‭bedrock‬‭of‬‭understanding‬‭economics‬ ‭holistically.‬ ‭Microeconomics‬ ‭provides‬ ‭a‬ ‭keen‬ ‭insight‬ ‭into‬ ‭individual‬ ‭behaviors‬ ‭and‬ ‭smaller‬ ‭interactions‬ ‭,‬ ‭which‬ ‭is‬ ‭invaluable‬ ‭for‬‭understanding‬‭the‬‭nuts‬‭and‬‭bolts‬‭of‬‭the‬‭economy.‬‭On‬‭the‬ ‭other‬‭hand,‬ ‭macroeconomics‬‭equips‬‭us‬‭with‬‭the‬‭tools‬‭needed‬ ‭to‬‭decipher‬‭broader‬‭trends‬‭and‬ ‭influences that shape the economy's larger tapestry.‬

‭Key Macroeconomic Concepts‬

‭Key Microeconomic Concepts‬

‭Economics indicators: Gross Domestic‬ ‭Product, inflation, unemployment‬ ‭Aggregate demand, aggregate supply, and‬ ‭macroeconomic equilibrium‬

‭Elasticity‬

‭Marginal analysis‬

‭Fiscal and monetary policies‬

‭Production theory‬

‭Economic growth‬

‭Forms of market competition‬

‭Balance of payments‬

‭Market failure‬

‭Checkpoint Quiz 1:‬ ‭Classify each of the following topics under‬ ‭macroeconomics‬ ‭or‬ ‭microeconomics‬ ‭.‬ ‭a.‬ ‭The unemployment rate recorded in an economy in a given time period.‬ ‭b.‬ ‭The price that a single firm should set for its product in order to maximize profit.‬

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‭c.‬ ‭A consumer’s decision to substitute a product with a cheaper one.‬

‭(Checkpoint answers are located at the end of the chapter under the review question answers.)‬

‭Economic Models‬ ‭The‬ ‭fundamental‬ ‭economic‬ ‭problem‬ ‭forces‬‭all‬‭economies‬‭to‬‭answer‬‭the‬‭following‬ ‭resource‬‭allocation‬ ‭questions‬ ‭:‬

‭1.‬ ‭What to produce?‬ ‭2.‬ ‭How to produce?‬ ‭3.‬ ‭For whom to produce?‬

‭To‬ ‭deduce‬ ‭how‬ ‭individuals‬ ‭and‬ ‭entities‬ ‭can‬ ‭be‬ ‭incentivized‬ ‭to‬ ‭make‬ ‭choices‬ ‭that‬ ‭lead‬ ‭to‬ ‭the‬ ‭best‬ ‭possible‬ ‭outcomes‬ ‭for‬‭society,‬‭economists‬‭build‬‭and‬‭use‬‭formal‬ ‭models‬ ‭that‬‭simplify‬‭reality‬‭and‬‭make‬ ‭simplifying‬‭assumptions.‬‭This‬‭helps‬‭them‬ ‭predict‬‭outcomes‬ ‭both‬‭at‬‭individual‬‭and‬‭collective‬‭levels‬‭(i.e.,‬ ‭how‬‭different‬‭economic‬‭agents‬‭answer‬‭the‬‭3‬‭above‬‭questions)‬‭and‬‭therefore‬ ‭recommend‬‭policies‬ ‭that‬ ‭maximize efficiency and utility‬ ‭.‬ ‭The‬ ‭Production‬ ‭Possibilities‬ ‭Curve,‬ ‭that‬ ‭will‬ ‭be‬ ‭explained‬ ‭later‬ ‭in‬ ‭this‬ ‭chapter,‬ ‭is‬ ‭an‬ ‭example‬ ‭of‬ ‭an‬ ‭economic model used by economists to construct generalizations.‬ ‭The Method of Economics: Positive vs. Normative Statements‬ ‭In‬ ‭economics,‬ ‭you‬ ‭will‬ ‭come‬ ‭across‬ ‭two‬ ‭types‬ ‭of‬ ‭economic‬ ‭statements‬ ‭and‬ ‭questions:‬ ‭positive‬ ‭and‬ ‭normative.‬

‭Positive‬ ‭statements‬ ‭describe‬ ‭what‬ ‭exists‬ ‭in‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭and‬ ‭how‬ ‭it‬ ‭works‬ ‭without‬‭making‬‭any‬‭judgments‬ ‭.‬‭They‬‭are‬ ‭objective‬ ‭and‬‭involve‬ ‭facts‬‭that‬‭can‬ ‭be tested‬ ‭.‬ ‭Example:‬ ‭The unemployment rate in 2022 is 2%.‬

‭This statement states a fact that can be verified by looking at the data.‬

‭Normative‬ ‭statements‬ ‭,‬ ‭on‬ ‭the‬ ‭other‬ ‭hand,‬ ‭consist‬ ‭of‬ ‭opinions‬ ‭since‬ ‭they‬ ‭analyze‬ ‭economic‬ ‭behavior‬‭and‬ ‭evaluate‬‭whether‬‭they‬‭are‬‭good‬‭or‬‭bad‬ ‭.‬‭They‬ ‭may‬ ‭also‬ ‭suggest‬ ‭courses‬ ‭of‬ ‭action.‬ ‭Normative‬ ‭statements‬ ‭cannot‬ ‭be‬ ‭tested‬ ‭since they are‬ ‭subjective‬ ‭.‬ ‭Example:‬ ‭The‬ ‭government‬ ‭should‬ ‭cut‬ ‭taxes‬ ‭in‬ ‭half‬ ‭to‬ ‭increase‬ ‭disposable‬ ‭incomes.‬ ‭This‬ ‭statement‬ ‭expresses‬ ‭a‬ ‭value‬ ‭judgment‬ ‭that‬ ‭cannot‬ ‭be‬ ‭proven‬ ‭right‬ ‭or‬ ‭wrong.‬ ‭The‬ ‭key‬ ‭word‬ ‭in‬ ‭this‬ ‭statement‬ ‭is‬ ‭“should.”‬ ‭Whenever‬ ‭a‬ ‭statement‬ ‭in‬ ‭economics‬ ‭has‬ ‭terms‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭“should”‬ ‭and‬ ‭“ought”,‬ ‭it‬ ‭can‬ ‭be‬ ‭classified‬ ‭as‬ ‭normative.‬

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‭B. The Economy‬ ‭The‬ ‭economy‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭the‬ ‭system‬ ‭through‬ ‭which‬ ‭goods‬ ‭and‬ ‭services‬ ‭are‬ ‭produced,‬ ‭distributed,‬ ‭exchanged,‬‭and‬‭consumed‬‭within‬‭a‬‭society.‬‭It‬‭encompasses‬‭all‬‭economic‬‭activities‬‭and‬‭interactions‬‭that‬ ‭occur, involving individuals, firms, markets, and governments.‬

‭An economy can be a representation of‬ ‭various scopes, ranging from a nation or‬ ‭region to a singular industry or even a‬ ‭household unit.‬

‭An‬ ‭economic‬ ‭system‬ ‭or‬ ‭structure‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭the‬ ‭way‬ ‭in‬ ‭which‬ ‭production‬ ‭is‬ ‭organized‬ ‭and‬‭choices‬‭are‬ ‭made‬ ‭in‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy.‬ ‭It‬ ‭identifies‬ ‭the‬ ‭means‬ ‭by‬ ‭which‬ ‭households,‬ ‭firms,‬ ‭and‬ ‭governments‬ ‭make‬ ‭decisions‬‭relating‬‭to‬‭the‬‭three‬‭resource‬‭allocation‬‭questions‬‭of‬‭what‬‭to‬‭produce,‬‭how‬‭to‬‭produce,‬‭and‬‭for‬ ‭whom to produce.‬

‭There are 3 main economic systems:‬

‭●‬ ‭Market‬ ‭Economy‬ ‭(also‬ ‭known‬ ‭as‬ ‭Laissez-Faire‬ ‭or‬‭Free‬‭Market‬‭Economy‬‭and‬‭Capitalism):‬ ‭In‬ ‭this‬‭economic‬‭system,‬‭resources‬‭are‬‭allocated‬‭through‬‭the‬ ‭price‬‭mechanism‬ ‭which‬‭is‬‭based‬‭on‬ ‭the‬ ‭forces‬‭of‬‭demand‬‭and‬‭supply‬ ‭.‬‭This‬‭means‬‭that‬‭households‬‭and‬‭firms‬‭interact‬‭as‬‭buyers‬‭and‬ ‭sellers‬ ‭and‬ ‭make‬ ‭decisions‬‭on‬‭how‬‭to‬‭allocate‬‭resources‬‭to‬‭satisfy‬‭their‬‭wants‬‭and‬‭needs.‬‭The‬ ‭government‬ ‭has‬ ‭little‬ ‭to‬ ‭no‬ ‭control‬ ‭over‬ ‭the‬ ‭process‬ ‭of‬ ‭resource‬ ‭allocation.‬ ‭In‬ ‭addition,‬ ‭productive resources and assets are owned by‬ ‭individuals‬‭and private firms‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭example,‬ ‭when‬ ‭excess‬ ‭supply‬ ‭exists‬ ‭because‬ ‭too‬ ‭much‬ ‭is‬ ‭being‬ ‭produced‬ ‭compared‬ ‭to‬ ‭demand,‬‭goods‬‭stockpile‬‭in‬‭shops‬‭and‬‭warehouses.‬‭In‬‭an‬‭attempt‬‭to‬‭encourage‬‭people‬‭to‬‭buy‬‭and‬ ‭clear‬‭the‬‭stock,‬‭firms‬‭reduce‬‭prices.‬‭This‬‭may‬‭clear‬‭the‬‭excess‬‭supply;‬‭however,‬‭some‬‭firms‬‭might‬ ‭choose‬ ‭to‬ ‭stop‬ ‭producing‬ ‭at‬ ‭lower‬ ‭prices.‬ ‭With‬ ‭less‬ ‭suppliers‬ ‭in‬ ‭the‬ ‭market,‬ ‭the‬ ‭price‬ ‭rises.‬ ‭Assuming‬‭no‬‭change‬‭in‬‭demand‬‭occurs,‬‭firms‬‭may‬‭decide‬‭to‬‭re-enter‬‭the‬‭market‬‭leading‬‭to‬‭a‬‭fall‬ ‭in‬ ‭price‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭whole‬ ‭process‬ ‭will‬ ‭continue.‬ ‭This‬ ‭shows‬ ‭that‬ ‭prices‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭self-interest‬ ‭of‬ ‭individuals‬ ‭and‬ ‭firms‬‭guide‬‭the‬‭decisions‬‭in‬‭a‬‭market‬‭economy‬‭without‬‭the‬‭need‬‭for‬‭government‬ ‭intervention.‬

‭The United States is one of the closest examples of a market economy globally.‬

‭●‬ ‭Command‬‭Economy‬‭(also‬‭known‬‭as‬‭a‬‭Planned‬‭or‬‭Centrally‬‭Planned‬‭economy):‬ ‭Contrary‬‭to‬‭a‬ ‭market‬ ‭economy,‬ ‭in‬ ‭a‬ ‭planned‬ ‭economy‬ ‭the‬ ‭government‬ ‭has‬ ‭a‬ ‭significant‬ ‭role‬ ‭in‬ ‭making‬ ‭decisions‬ ‭related‬ ‭to‬ ‭resource‬ ‭allocation.‬ ‭In‬ ‭principle,‬ ‭all‬ ‭choices‬ ‭made‬ ‭in‬ ‭terms‬ ‭of‬ ‭what‬ ‭to‬

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‭produce,‬‭how‬‭to‬‭produce,‬‭and‬‭for‬‭whom‬‭to‬‭produce‬‭are‬‭controlled‬‭by‬‭the‬‭state.‬‭In‬‭addition,‬‭the‬ ‭state‬‭has‬‭ownership‬‭of‬‭productive‬‭resources‬‭and‬‭property,‬‭meaning‬‭that‬‭the‬‭market‬‭has‬‭no‬‭real‬ ‭role in the allocation of resources.‬

‭North Korea and Cuba are as close to planned economies as the theory suggests.‬

‭It‬‭is‬‭important‬‭to‬‭avoid‬‭the‬‭common‬‭misconception‬‭that‬‭the‬‭classification‬‭of‬‭economies‬‭is‬‭exact‬‭because‬ ‭both‬‭market‬‭and‬‭planned‬‭economies‬‭in‬‭their‬‭true‬‭forms‬‭only‬‭exist‬‭in‬‭theory.‬‭Instead,‬‭a‬‭mixed‬‭economy‬‭is‬ ‭the typical economic system.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Mixed‬ ‭Economy:‬ ‭In‬ ‭a‬ ‭mixed‬ ‭economic‬ ‭system,‬ ‭both‬ ‭the‬ ‭private‬ ‭sector‬ ‭(individuals‬ ‭and‬ ‭private‬ ‭firms)‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭public‬ ‭sector‬ ‭(the‬ ‭government)‬ ‭have‬ ‭a‬ ‭role‬ ‭in‬ ‭allocating‬ ‭resources.‬ ‭Decisions‬‭consist‬‭of‬‭an‬‭interaction‬‭between‬‭individuals,‬‭private‬ ‭firms,‬‭labor,‬‭and‬‭the‬‭government.‬‭There‬‭is‬‭private‬‭ownership‬‭of‬ ‭assets as well as some public ownership.‬ ‭C. Factors of Production‬ ‭When‬ ‭defining‬ ‭economics,‬ ‭there‬ ‭is‬ ‭always‬ ‭a‬ ‭mention‬ ‭of‬ ‭the‬ ‭allocation‬ ‭of‬ ‭scarce‬ ‭resources‬ ‭to‬ ‭satisfy‬ ‭needs and unlimited wants; but what are these resources?‬ ‭The‬‭resources‬‭available‬‭in‬‭an‬‭economy‬‭are‬‭referred‬‭to‬‭as‬‭the‬ ‭factors‬‭of‬‭production‬ ‭.‬‭They‬‭are‬‭the‬‭means‬ ‭by which an economy produces goods and services.‬

‭There are 4 main types of factors of production:‬

‭Land:‬ ‭This‬‭refers‬‭to‬‭all‬ ‭natural‬‭resources‬ ‭used‬‭in‬‭production,‬‭such‬‭as‬‭minerals,‬ ‭forests,‬ ‭water‬ ‭bodies,‬‭and‬‭agricultural‬‭land,‬‭as‬‭well‬‭as‬‭other‬‭resources‬‭like‬‭oil‬ ‭and‬‭natural‬‭gas.‬‭Land,‬‭as‬‭a‬‭factor‬‭of‬‭production,‬‭plays‬‭a‬‭vital‬‭role‬‭in‬‭the‬‭creation‬ ‭of‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services.‬‭It‬‭provides‬‭the‬ ‭raw‬‭materials‬ ‭necessary‬‭for‬‭production,‬ ‭serving‬ ‭as‬ ‭the‬ ‭foundation‬ ‭upon‬ ‭which‬ ‭economic‬ ‭activities‬ ‭are‬ ‭built.‬ ‭Natural‬ ‭resources‬ ‭derived‬ ‭from‬ ‭land‬ ‭are‬ ‭transformed‬ ‭into‬ ‭intermediate‬ ‭or‬ ‭finished‬ ‭goods through various production processes.‬

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‭From‬ ‭an‬ ‭economic‬ ‭viewpoint,‬ ‭"land"‬ ‭takes‬ ‭on‬ ‭a‬ ‭specialized‬ ‭definition‬ ‭beyond‬ ‭its‬ ‭literal‬ ‭meaning.‬ ‭In‬ ‭economics,‬ ‭"land"‬ ‭is‬ ‭not‬ ‭limited‬ ‭to‬ ‭physical‬ ‭terrain‬ ‭but‬ ‭encompasses‬ ‭all‬ ‭natural‬ ‭resources‬ ‭used‬ ‭in‬ ‭production‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭example,‬ ‭water‬ ‭used‬ ‭in‬ ‭corn‬ ‭farms‬ ‭to‬ ‭grow‬ ‭crops‬ ‭is‬ ‭an‬ ‭example‬ ‭of‬‭land,‬‭whereas‬‭an‬ ‭office building is not.‬ ‭Land‬ ‭rewards‬ ‭its‬ ‭owner‬ ‭with‬ ‭rent‬ ‭,‬ ‭which‬ ‭is‬ ‭the‬‭payment‬‭made‬‭for‬‭the‬‭use‬‭of‬‭land‬‭and‬‭its‬‭associated‬ ‭natural resources.‬

‭Labor:‬ ‭Labor‬ ‭represents‬ ‭the‬ ‭human‬ ‭effort‬ ‭and‬ ‭work‬ ‭that‬ ‭goes‬‭into‬ ‭production.‬‭It‬‭includes‬‭both‬ ‭physical‬‭and‬‭mental‬‭contributions‬ ‭from‬ ‭workers.‬‭Labor‬‭encompasses‬‭not‬‭only‬‭the‬‭quantity‬‭of‬‭workers‬‭but‬‭also‬ ‭their skills, education, intellectual contributions, and expertise.‬

‭The‬‭compensation‬‭individuals‬‭receive‬‭for‬‭their‬‭labor‬‭is‬‭a‬‭reflection‬‭of‬ ‭the‬‭value‬‭they‬‭contribute‬‭to‬‭the‬‭production‬‭of‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services.‬‭The‬ ‭reward for labor is the wage or earnings‬ ‭paid for their services.‬ ‭The‬‭efficiency‬‭and‬‭productivity‬‭of‬‭labor‬ ‭are‬‭critical‬‭considerations‬‭in‬ ‭economics.‬‭How‬‭efficiently‬‭labor‬‭is‬‭utilized‬‭impacts‬‭the‬‭overall‬‭output‬ ‭and‬ ‭economic‬ ‭growth.‬ ‭Factors‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭education,‬ ‭training,‬ ‭and‬ ‭technological‬‭advancements‬ ‭can‬‭influence‬‭the‬‭productivity‬‭and‬‭quality‬‭of‬‭labor,‬‭enabling‬‭individuals‬‭to‬ ‭produce more output with the same amount of effort.‬ ‭Labor also plays a role in determining‬ ‭wages and income‬ ‭distribution within an economy. The demand‬ ‭for different types of labor, influenced by factors like skill level and demand for specific jobs, affects‬ ‭wage levels. The supply of labor, influenced by factors such as population and participation rates, also‬ ‭contributes to wage dynamics.‬ ‭Capital:‬ ‭Capital‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭any‬ ‭physical‬‭product‬‭made‬‭by‬‭humans‬ ‭to‬‭help‬‭with‬‭the‬‭production‬‭of‬‭other‬ ‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬‭such‬‭as‬‭the‬‭tools,‬‭equipment,‬‭machinery,‬‭information‬‭technology,‬‭and‬‭infrastructure‬ ‭used‬ ‭in‬ ‭the‬ ‭production‬ ‭process.‬ ‭It‬ ‭helps‬ ‭generate‬ ‭income,‬ ‭increase‬ ‭the‬ ‭value‬ ‭of‬ ‭a‬ ‭business,‬ ‭and/or‬ ‭increase the efficiency and output of labor.‬

‭There are 2 different types of capital:‬

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‭Chapter 2:‬ ‭Measurement of Economic‬ ‭Performance‬ ‭Overview‬

‭This‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭introduces‬ ‭the‬ ‭world‬ ‭of‬ ‭national‬ ‭income‬ ‭accounting‬ ‭by‬ ‭providing‬ ‭the‬ ‭tools‬ ‭to‬ ‭analyze‬ ‭and‬ ‭understand‬ ‭a‬ ‭nation’s‬ ‭economic‬ ‭performance.‬ ‭It‬ ‭uses‬ ‭the‬ ‭circular‬ ‭flow‬‭model‬‭to‬ ‭illustrate‬ ‭how‬ ‭money‬ ‭and‬ ‭products‬ ‭move‬ ‭between‬ ‭different‬ ‭economic‬ ‭agents‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭households,‬ ‭firms,‬ ‭governments,‬ ‭and‬ ‭foreign‬ ‭sectors.‬‭Then‬‭the‬‭stage‬‭for‬‭measuring‬‭the‬‭size‬‭of‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭using‬ ‭the‬ ‭gross‬ ‭domestic‬ ‭product‬ ‭(GDP).‬

‭This‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭also‬ ‭delves‬ ‭into‬ ‭understanding‬ ‭economic fluctuations through two crucial indicators: inflation and unemployment.‬ ‭Learning Objectives‬

‭By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:‬

‭●‬ ‭Understand how economic activity is measured through national income accounting.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Understand how money and products move in an economy using the circular flow model.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Define and calculate GDP using different approaches.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Define, calculate, and analyze inflation and unemployment as indicators of economic‬ ‭performance.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Distinguish nominal from real economic values.‬ ‭A. Introduction to Economic Performance‬

‭A‬ ‭fundamental‬ ‭question‬ ‭that‬ ‭often‬ ‭arises‬ ‭in‬ ‭economics‬ ‭pertains‬ ‭to‬ ‭the‬ ‭relationship‬‭between‬‭a‬ ‭nation's‬‭economic‬‭activity‬ ‭and‬‭the‬ ‭well-being‬‭of‬ ‭its‬‭individuals‬ ‭.‬‭Specifically,‬‭does‬‭the‬‭overall‬‭rise‬‭in‬‭a‬‭country's‬‭economic‬ ‭activity,‬‭accompanied‬‭by‬‭an‬ ‭increased‬‭capacity‬‭for‬‭people‬‭to‬‭purchase‬ ‭goods‬ ‭and‬ ‭services‬ ‭,‬ ‭translate‬ ‭into‬ ‭greater‬ ‭happiness‬ ‭among‬ ‭its‬ ‭citizens?‬‭This‬‭query‬‭looks‬‭into‬‭the‬‭intricate‬‭interplay‬‭between‬‭economic‬ ‭indicators‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭subjective‬ ‭experience‬ ‭of‬ ‭well-being.‬ ‭To‬ ‭address‬‭this‬ ‭question,‬‭economists‬‭must‬‭navigate‬‭the‬‭challenge‬‭of‬‭measuring‬‭both‬‭the‬ ‭intangible‬ ‭concept‬ ‭of‬ ‭"happiness"‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭quantifiable‬ ‭metrics‬ ‭of‬ ‭a‬ ‭nation's‬ ‭economic‬ ‭performance.‬ ‭In‬ ‭this‬ ‭exploration,‬ ‭we‬ ‭will‬ ‭delve‬ ‭into‬

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‭the‬ ‭complexities‬ ‭of‬ ‭this‬ ‭connection,‬ ‭considering‬ ‭how‬ ‭economic‬ ‭factors‬ ‭and‬ ‭individual‬ ‭satisfaction‬ ‭intertwine to shape our understanding of human prosperity.‬ ‭Macroeconomics,‬ ‭the‬ ‭study‬ ‭of‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭as‬ ‭a‬ ‭whole,‬ ‭studies‬ ‭the‬ ‭various‬ ‭aspects‬ ‭that‬ ‭collectively‬ ‭define‬‭a‬‭nation's‬‭economic‬‭health.‬ ‭Economic‬‭performance‬‭can‬‭be‬‭measured‬‭using‬‭different‬‭indicators‬ ‭such‬‭as‬‭gross‬‭domestic‬‭product,‬‭the‬‭inflation‬‭rate,‬‭and‬‭the‬‭unemployment‬‭rate.‬ ‭The‬‭study‬‭of‬‭GDP‬‭is‬ ‭part‬ ‭of‬ ‭national‬ ‭income‬ ‭accounting‬ ‭that‬ ‭measures‬ ‭a‬ ‭country’s‬ ‭total‬ ‭output‬ ‭to‬ ‭assess‬ ‭its‬ ‭economy’s‬ ‭performance.‬ ‭B. National Income Accounts‬ ‭Circular Flow‬ ‭One‬‭of‬‭the‬‭methods‬‭used‬‭to‬‭assess‬‭an‬‭economy’s‬‭performance‬‭is‬‭measuring‬‭economic‬‭activity‬‭in‬‭terms‬ ‭of the country’s output. This is referred to as‬ ‭national‬‭income accounting‬ ‭.‬ ‭In‬ ‭macroeconomics,‬ ‭gross‬ ‭domestic‬ ‭product‬ ‭(GDP)‬ ‭is‬ ‭the‬ ‭most‬ ‭widely‬ ‭used‬ ‭measure‬ ‭of‬ ‭national‬ ‭income‬ ‭and‬‭it‬‭stands‬‭as‬‭a‬‭cornerstone‬‭indicator‬‭of‬‭economic‬‭performance.‬‭It‬‭represents‬‭the‬ ‭total‬ ‭value‬ ‭of‬‭all‬‭finished‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬‭produced‬‭within‬‭a‬‭country's‬‭borders‬‭over‬‭a‬‭specific‬‭period‬‭of‬‭time‬ ‭.‬ ‭When defining GDP, always remember the following:‬ ‭“‬ ‭G‬ ‭ross” means total‬ ‭“‬ ‭D‬ ‭omestic” refers to the home economy‬ ‭“‘‬ ‭P‬ ‭roduct” means output‬ ‭For‬‭example,‬‭Argentina’s‬‭GDP‬‭in‬‭2022‬‭measures‬‭the‬‭total‬‭value‬‭of‬‭output‬‭(goods‬‭and‬‭services)‬‭produced‬ ‭by the factors of production (land, labor, capital, enterprise) based in Argentina in 2022.‬ ‭To‬‭be‬‭able‬‭to‬‭measure‬‭GDP,‬‭we‬‭must‬‭first‬‭understand‬‭how‬‭goods,‬‭services,‬‭and‬‭money‬‭move‬‭around‬‭in‬ ‭an economy.‬ ‭The Simple Circular Flow Diagram‬ ‭A‬ ‭simple‬ ‭circular‬ ‭flow‬ ‭of‬ ‭incomes‬ ‭and‬ ‭expenditures‬ ‭diagram‬ ‭illustrates‬ ‭the‬ ‭flows‬ ‭of‬ ‭goods‬ ‭and‬ ‭services,‬ ‭money,‬ ‭and‬ ‭factors‬ ‭of‬ ‭production‬ ‭between‬ ‭only‬ ‭two‬ ‭economic‬ ‭agents:‬ ‭households‬ ‭and‬ ‭firms.‬ ‭Macroeconomics‬‭considers‬‭this‬‭circular‬‭flow‬‭as‬‭a‬‭foundational‬‭model‬‭to‬‭understand‬‭the‬‭broader‬ ‭dynamics of economic transactions and the connections between various economic agents.‬ ‭The‬‭simple‬‭circular‬‭flow‬‭diagram‬‭reflects‬‭the‬ ‭interdependence‬‭between‬‭households‬‭and‬‭firms‬ ‭in‬‭what‬ ‭is‬‭known‬‭as‬‭a‬ ‭two-sector‬‭economy‬ ‭.‬‭Households‬‭supply‬‭factors‬‭of‬‭production‬‭(such‬‭as‬‭labor)‬‭to‬‭firms‬‭in‬ ‭return‬‭for‬‭rewards‬‭(such‬‭as‬‭wages).‬‭Firms‬‭use‬‭these‬‭factors‬‭of‬‭production‬‭to‬‭produce‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬ ‭and sell them to households in return for revenue, creating a circular flow of income and expenditure.‬

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‭Chapter 3:‬ ‭National Income and Price‬ ‭Determination‬ ‭Overview‬

‭This‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭explores‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭demand‬ ‭and‬‭aggregate‬‭supply‬‭as‬‭core‬‭mechanisms‬ ‭shaping‬ ‭economic‬ ‭fluctuations.‬ ‭Factors‬ ‭influencing‬ ‭them,‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭consumer‬ ‭spending,‬ ‭business‬ ‭investment,‬ ‭government‬ ‭policies,‬ ‭and‬ ‭international‬ ‭influences, are examined.‬

‭The‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭demand-aggregate‬ ‭supply‬ ‭(AD-AS)‬ ‭model‬ ‭provides‬‭a‬‭key‬‭framework‬ ‭for‬ ‭analyzing‬ ‭these‬ ‭interactions.‬ ‭Shifts‬ ‭in‬ ‭the AD and AS curves reveal how changes in different determinants impact output and price levels.‬ ‭Further,‬ ‭the‬ ‭chapter‬‭dives‬‭into‬‭the‬‭business‬‭cycle,‬‭characterized‬‭by‬‭recurring‬‭periods‬‭of‬‭expansion‬‭and‬ ‭contraction. The multiplier effect, amplifying the impact of initial spending changes, is analyzed.‬ ‭The‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭distinguishes‬ ‭between‬ ‭inflationary‬ ‭gaps‬ ‭and‬ ‭recessionary‬ ‭gaps,‬ ‭introducing‬ ‭insights‬ ‭into‬ ‭potential policy responses.‬ ‭Finally,‬ ‭the‬ ‭concept‬ ‭of‬ ‭long-run‬ ‭self-adjustment,‬‭the‬‭tendency‬‭of‬‭an‬‭economy‬‭to‬‭return‬‭to‬‭its‬‭potential‬ ‭output‬‭level‬‭after‬‭a‬‭shock,‬‭is‬‭explored.‬‭This‬‭provides‬‭a‬‭deeper‬‭perspective‬‭on‬‭the‬‭long-term‬‭dynamics‬‭of‬

‭economic fluctuations.‬ ‭Learning Objectives‬

‭By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:‬

‭●‬ ‭Understand aggregate demand, short-run aggregate supply, long-run aggregate supply, and their‬ ‭determinants.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Use the AD-AS model to analyze changes in the economy.‬

‭●‬ ‭Analyze the different stages of a business cycle.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Identify inflationary and recessionary output gaps.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Understand how the self-adjustment mechanism works.‬

‭One‬‭of‬‭the‬‭most‬‭commonly‬‭used‬‭models‬‭in‬‭economics‬‭is‬‭the‬‭aggregate‬‭demand-aggregate‬‭supply‬‭model‬ ‭(AD-AS‬‭model).‬‭This‬‭model‬‭represents‬‭the‬‭relationship‬‭between‬‭the‬‭price‬‭level‬‭and‬‭aggregate‬‭output‬‭in‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭and‬ ‭illustrates‬ ‭how‬ ‭output,‬ ‭employment,‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭price‬ ‭level‬ ‭respond‬ ‭to‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭changes and shocks. To understand this model, let’s start by breaking down its components.‬

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‭A. Aggregate Demand (AD)‬ ‭In‬ ‭economics,‬ ‭the‬ ‭term‬ ‭“aggregate”‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭total‬ ‭.‬ ‭While‬ ‭demand‬ ‭is‬ ‭a‬ ‭microeconomic‬ ‭concept,‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭demand‬ ‭(AD)‬ ‭is‬ ‭a‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭concept‬ ‭that‬ ‭describes‬ ‭the‬ ‭relationship‬ ‭between‬ ‭the‬ ‭general‬ ‭price‬ ‭level‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭total‬ ‭spending‬ ‭or‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭output‬ ‭demanded‬ ‭by‬ ‭households,‬ ‭firms,‬ ‭governments, and the foreign sector.‬ ‭In‬‭other‬‭words,‬‭aggregate‬‭demand‬‭is‬‭the‬ ‭total‬‭demand‬‭for‬‭an‬‭economy’s‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬‭at‬‭a‬‭given‬ ‭price‬ ‭level‬ ‭in‬ ‭a‬ ‭given‬ ‭period‬ ‭of‬ ‭time‬ ‭.‬ ‭It‬ ‭is‬ ‭made‬ ‭up‬ ‭of‬ ‭four‬ ‭components:‬ ‭consumption,‬ ‭investment,‬ ‭government‬‭spending,‬‭and‬‭net‬‭exports.‬‭This‬‭should‬‭sound‬‭familiar‬‭since‬‭these‬‭are‬‭the‬‭same‬‭components‬ ‭used‬‭to‬‭calculate‬‭real‬‭GDP‬‭using‬‭the‬‭expenditure‬‭approach!‬‭(Recall‬‭Chapter‬‭2‬‭Section‬‭B:‬‭Components‬‭of‬ ‭Gross Domestic Product and Approaches to Measure it ). Therefore,‬ ‭AD = C + I + G + (X − M)‬ ‭.‬ ‭Aggregate Demand Curve (AD Curve)‬ ‭The‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭demand‬ ‭curve‬ ‭(AD‬ ‭curve)‬ ‭illustrates‬ ‭the‬ ‭different‬ ‭quantities‬ ‭of‬ ‭total‬ ‭demand‬ ‭for‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy’s‬‭products‬‭at‬‭different‬‭price‬‭levels.‬‭The‬‭price‬‭level‬‭is‬‭plotted‬‭on‬‭the‬‭y-axis‬‭and‬‭the‬‭real‬‭GDP‬‭is‬ ‭plotted‬‭on‬‭the‬‭x-axis.‬‭Note‬‭that‬ ‭real‬‭GDP‬ ‭and‬ ‭real‬‭output‬ ‭can‬‭be‬‭used‬‭interchangeably‬‭as‬‭a‬‭label‬‭on‬‭the‬ ‭x-axis.‬

‭The‬‭AD‬‭curve‬‭is‬ ‭downward‬‭sloping‬ ‭indicating‬‭an‬ ‭inverse‬‭relationship‬ ‭between‬‭the‬‭price‬‭level‬‭and‬‭real‬ ‭output.‬

‭Study Tip‬ ‭All demand and supply curves can be drawn as straight lines or curves.‬

‭The inverse relationship between the price level and real GDP can be attributed to‬‭three main effects:‬

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‭Chapter 4:‬ ‭Financial Sector‬ ‭Overview‬ ‭This‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭delves‬ ‭into‬ ‭the‬ ‭core‬ ‭building‬ ‭blocks‬ ‭of‬ ‭the‬ ‭financial‬ ‭system,‬ ‭exploring‬ ‭various‬ ‭types‬ ‭and‬ ‭functions‬‭of‬ ‭money,‬‭stocks,‬‭and‬‭bonds.‬‭We‬‭dissect‬‭the‬‭concept‬‭of‬‭time‬ ‭value‬ ‭of‬ ‭money,‬ ‭understanding‬ ‭how‬ ‭its‬ ‭present‬ ‭value‬ ‭differs from its future worth.‬ ‭The‬‭chapter‬‭distinguishes‬‭between‬‭commercial‬‭and‬‭central‬ ‭banks,‬ ‭analyzing‬ ‭their‬ ‭roles‬ ‭and‬ ‭structures.‬ ‭It‬ ‭further‬ ‭examines‬‭the‬‭fractional‬‭reserves‬‭banking‬‭system,‬‭revealing‬ ‭how banks create credit, impacting the money supply.‬

‭Financial‬ ‭markets‬ ‭like‬ ‭the‬ ‭money‬ ‭market‬ ‭and‬ ‭loanable‬ ‭funds‬ ‭market‬ ‭are‬ ‭introduced,‬ ‭highlighting‬ ‭their‬ ‭functions‬ ‭in‬ ‭facilitating‬ ‭the‬ ‭flow‬ ‭of‬ ‭funds‬ ‭between‬ ‭borrowers and lenders.‬ ‭Finally,‬‭the‬‭chapter‬‭examines‬‭monetary‬‭policy,‬‭the‬‭tools‬‭used‬‭by‬‭central‬‭banks‬‭to‬‭influence‬‭interest‬‭rates‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭money‬ ‭supply,‬ ‭aiming‬ ‭to‬ ‭achieve‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭objectives‬ ‭like‬ ‭price‬ ‭stability‬‭and‬‭economic‬ ‭growth.‬ ‭Learning Objectives‬ ‭●‬ ‭Differentiate between barter, stocks, bonds, and the different types and functions of money.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Understand and calculate the time value of money.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Distinguish commercial from central banks and understand how the fractional-reserves banking‬ ‭system works.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Understand and analyze changes in the money market and the loanable funds market.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Identify the meaning, tools, and limitations of monetary policy and understand the quantity‬ ‭theory of money.‬ ‭A. Definition of Financial Assets: Money, Stocks, and Bonds‬ ‭How‬‭did‬‭people‬‭exchange‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬‭before‬‭money‬‭existed?‬‭Why‬‭were‬‭shell‬‭beads‬‭accepted‬‭as‬ ‭a‬‭means‬‭of‬‭payments‬‭in‬‭certain‬‭cultures?‬‭In‬‭this‬‭section,‬‭we‬‭will‬‭examine‬‭what‬‭qualifies‬‭an‬‭asset‬‭to‬‭be‬ ‭considered as “money” and define other types of financial assets.‬ ‭Barter vs. Money‬ ‭Before‬ ‭the‬ ‭money‬ ‭as‬‭we‬‭know‬‭it‬‭today‬‭existed,‬‭people‬‭“bartered”‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services.‬ ‭Barter‬ ‭refers‬‭to‬ ‭the‬‭direct‬‭exchange‬‭of‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services‬‭without‬‭using‬‭money‬‭as‬‭an‬‭intermediary‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬‭example,‬‭a‬ ‭By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:‬

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‭farmer‬‭might‬‭exchange‬‭10‬‭oranges‬‭for‬‭five‬‭pencils.‬ ‭This‬‭system‬‭served‬‭as‬‭an‬‭alternative‬‭to‬‭the‬‭monetary‬ ‭economy‬ ‭we‬ ‭have‬ ‭today.‬ ‭However,‬ ‭it‬ ‭had‬ ‭limitations‬ ‭that‬ ‭ultimately‬ ‭led‬‭to‬‭the‬‭creation‬‭of‬‭money.‬‭The‬ ‭main‬‭limitation‬‭to‬‭barter‬‭is‬‭the‬‭need‬‭for‬‭a‬ ‭double‬‭coincidence‬‭of‬‭wants‬ ‭:‬‭In‬‭a‬‭barter‬‭trade,‬‭both‬‭parties‬ ‭need‬‭to‬‭have‬‭what‬‭the‬‭other‬‭wants,‬‭and‬‭both‬‭must‬‭desire‬‭what‬‭the‬‭other‬‭has.‬‭In‬‭complex‬‭societies‬‭with‬‭a‬ ‭wide‬‭variety‬‭of‬‭goods‬‭and‬‭services,‬‭barter‬‭exchanges‬‭become‬‭almost‬‭impossible‬‭due‬‭to‬‭the‬‭substantial‬ ‭effort‬ ‭required‬ ‭to‬ ‭find‬ ‭a‬ ‭perfect‬ ‭match.‬ ‭Consider‬ ‭the‬ ‭challenge‬ ‭of‬ ‭trading‬ ‭3‬ ‭red‬ ‭shirts‬ ‭and‬ ‭a‬ ‭coffee‬ ‭machine‬‭for‬‭a‬‭chicken‬‭and‬‭a‬‭plant.‬‭The‬‭odds‬‭of‬‭finding‬‭someone‬‭who‬‭not‬‭only‬‭has‬‭a‬‭chicken‬‭and‬‭a‬‭plant‬ ‭but also wants exactly 3 red shirts and a coffee machine are extremely low!‬ ‭As‬‭societies‬‭became‬‭more‬‭complex‬‭and‬‭economies‬‭grew,‬‭people‬‭understood‬‭the‬‭need‬‭for‬‭a‬‭medium‬‭of‬ ‭exchange‬ ‭that‬ ‭eliminates‬ ‭the‬ ‭problem‬ ‭of‬ ‭the‬ ‭double‬ ‭coincidence‬ ‭of‬ ‭wants.‬ ‭This‬ ‭medium‬ ‭of‬ ‭exchange‬ ‭evolved‬ ‭throughout‬ ‭history,‬ ‭from‬ ‭beads‬ ‭to‬ ‭crops,‬ ‭stones,‬ ‭animals,‬ ‭and‬ ‭even‬ ‭tobacco,‬ ‭until‬ ‭humans‬ ‭adopted today’s monetary system that relies on the use of various financial assets.‬ ‭Money‬ ‭is‬ ‭not‬ ‭only‬ ‭about‬ ‭coins‬ ‭and‬ ‭bills.‬ ‭It‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭any‬ ‭asset‬ ‭that‬ ‭can‬ ‭serve‬ ‭the‬ ‭three‬ ‭following‬ ‭functions‬ ‭:‬

‭1.‬ ‭Medium‬ ‭of‬ ‭Exchange:‬ ‭The‬ ‭primary‬ ‭function‬ ‭of‬ ‭money‬ ‭is‬ ‭its‬ ‭ability‬ ‭to‬ ‭be‬ ‭used‬ ‭to‬ ‭buy‬ ‭something‬ ‭else.‬ ‭For‬ ‭instance,‬ ‭one‬ ‭can use a $100 bill to buy a concert ticket.‬ ‭2.‬ ‭Store‬ ‭of‬ ‭Value:‬ ‭Another‬ ‭function‬ ‭of‬ ‭money‬ ‭is‬ ‭transporting‬ ‭purchasing‬‭power‬‭from‬‭one‬‭time‬‭period‬‭to‬‭another,‬‭allowing‬ ‭it‬ ‭to‬ ‭become‬‭a‬‭medium‬‭of‬‭exchange‬‭later‬ ‭.‬‭In‬‭other‬‭words,‬‭it‬ ‭should‬‭allow‬‭its‬‭holders‬‭to‬‭save‬‭for‬‭later.‬ ‭For‬‭instance,‬‭one‬‭may‬ ‭decide‬ ‭to‬ ‭save‬ ‭the‬ ‭$100‬ ‭in‬ ‭a‬ ‭safe‬ ‭to‬‭buy‬‭a‬‭concert‬‭ticket‬‭next‬ ‭year.‬

‭People‬‭can‬‭store‬‭money‬‭and‬‭accumulate‬‭wealth‬‭in‬‭various‬‭forms,‬‭such‬‭as‬‭gold,‬‭real‬‭estate,‬‭and‬ ‭other‬‭assets.‬‭However,‬‭a‬‭financial‬‭asset‬‭has‬‭an‬‭advantage‬‭over‬‭other‬‭forms‬‭of‬‭money‬‭when‬‭it‬‭is‬ ‭more‬ ‭liquid‬ ‭.‬ ‭Liquidity‬ ‭refers‬ ‭to‬ ‭the‬ ‭ease‬ ‭with‬ ‭which‬ ‭an‬ ‭asset‬ ‭can‬ ‭be‬ ‭converted‬ ‭into‬ ‭cash‬ ‭without‬ ‭losing‬ ‭purchasing‬ ‭power‬ ‭.‬ ‭Cash‬ ‭and‬ ‭demand‬ ‭deposits‬ ‭are‬ ‭the‬ ‭most‬ ‭liquid‬ ‭form‬ ‭of‬ ‭money.‬ ‭Cash‬ ‭can‬ ‭be‬ ‭used‬ ‭immediately‬ ‭,‬ ‭and‬ ‭demand‬ ‭deposits‬ ‭,‬ ‭also‬ ‭referred‬ ‭to‬ ‭as‬ ‭bank‬ ‭deposits,‬‭refer‬‭to‬ ‭money‬‭kept‬‭in‬‭a‬‭bank,‬ ‭like‬‭checking‬‭accounts.‬‭Banks‬‭are‬‭usually‬‭required‬‭to‬ ‭provide access to this money‬ ‭immediately on demand‬ ‭;‬‭therefore, they are highly liquid too.‬ ‭3.‬ ‭Unit‬ ‭of‬ ‭account‬ ‭(also‬ ‭known‬ ‭as‬ ‭a‬ ‭measure‬ ‭of‬ ‭value):‬ ‭Money‬ ‭should‬ ‭enable‬ ‭comparisons‬ ‭between‬ ‭the‬ ‭value‬ ‭of‬ ‭different‬ ‭items‬ ‭that‬ ‭are‬ ‭expressed‬ ‭in‬ ‭money‬ ‭terms‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭instance,‬ ‭a‬ ‭concert ticket that sells for $100 is said to be worth 10 times as much as a book that sells for $10.‬ ‭Types of Money‬ ‭The‬ ‭forms‬ ‭of‬ ‭money‬ ‭used‬ ‭throughout‬ ‭history‬ ‭varied‬ ‭across‬ ‭time‬ ‭periods‬ ‭and‬ ‭cultures;‬ ‭however,‬ ‭economists usually classify the types of money under three main categories:‬

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‭●‬ ‭Commodity‬‭money:‬ ‭This‬‭refers‬‭to‬‭items‬‭used‬‭as‬ ‭money‬‭while‬‭also‬‭having‬‭an‬‭intrinsic‬‭value‬‭in‬ ‭some‬ ‭other‬ ‭use‬ ‭.‬ ‭Gold‬ ‭is‬ ‭a‬ ‭form‬ ‭of‬ ‭commodity‬ ‭money‬ ‭and‬ ‭it‬‭was‬‭used‬‭for‬‭years‬‭to‬‭directly‬‭buy‬ ‭things,‬ ‭while‬ ‭also‬ ‭having‬ ‭other‬ ‭uses,‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭making‬ ‭jewelry‬ ‭and‬ ‭dental‬ ‭fillings.‬ ‭Cigarettes‬‭are‬ ‭another‬ ‭form‬ ‭of‬ ‭commodity‬ ‭money‬ ‭used‬ ‭by‬ ‭prisoners‬ ‭of‬ ‭war‬ ‭who‬ ‭used‬ ‭to‬‭purchase‬‭goods‬‭with‬ ‭cigarettes,‬ ‭quote‬ ‭prices‬ ‭in‬ ‭terms‬ ‭of‬‭cigarettes,‬‭and‬‭hold‬‭their‬‭wealth‬‭in‬‭the‬‭form‬‭of‬‭accumulated‬ ‭cigarettes‬ ‭.‬‭However,‬‭the‬‭problem‬‭with‬‭commodity‬‭money‬‭is‬‭that‬ ‭its‬‭value‬‭can‬‭change‬‭when‬‭the‬ ‭demand‬ ‭for‬ ‭it‬ ‭as‬ ‭an‬ ‭item‬ ‭falls‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭example,‬ ‭if‬ ‭no‬ ‭one‬ ‭in‬‭the‬‭prison‬‭smoked,‬‭cigarettes‬‭would‬ ‭have been useless.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Fiat‬‭money:‬ ‭By‬‭contrast,‬‭fiat‬‭money,‬‭also‬‭known‬‭as‬ ‭token‬‭money‬ ‭,‬‭is‬‭intrinsically‬‭worthless.‬‭The‬ ‭money‬ ‭used‬ ‭in‬ ‭the‬ ‭U.S.‬ ‭today‬ ‭(i.e.,‬ ‭cash‬ ‭money)‬ ‭is‬ ‭mostly‬ ‭fiat‬ ‭money,‬ ‭but‬ ‭what‬ ‭is‬ ‭the‬ ‭actual‬ ‭value‬ ‭of‬‭$1,‬‭$20,‬‭or‬‭$50‬‭bills?‬‭Zero.‬‭How‬‭else‬‭can‬‭we‬‭use‬‭small‬‭green‬‭pieces‬‭of‬‭paper?‬‭Why‬‭do‬ ‭people‬ ‭accept‬ ‭them?‬ ‭Because‬ ‭the‬‭government‬‭declares‬‭its‬‭money‬‭as‬ ‭legal‬‭tender‬ ‭.‬‭That‬‭is,‬‭the‬ ‭government‬‭ensures‬‭that‬ ‭this‬‭money‬‭is‬‭accepted‬‭by‬‭declaring‬‭it‬‭as‬‭an‬‭acceptable‬‭medium‬‭of‬ ‭debt‬ ‭settlement‬ ‭.‬ ‭This‬ ‭is‬ ‭achieved‬ ‭through‬ ‭passing‬ ‭laws‬ ‭that‬ ‭define‬ ‭certain‬ ‭pieces‬ ‭of‬ ‭paper,‬ ‭printed using certain ink and certain plates, as legal tender.‬ ‭It‬‭is‬‭important‬‭to‬‭understand‬‭that‬ ‭fiat‬‭money‬‭is‬‭not‬ ‭backed‬ ‭by‬ ‭any‬ ‭commodity‬ ‭,‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭gold‬ ‭or‬ ‭silver.‬ ‭That‬ ‭is‬ ‭another‬ ‭type‬ ‭of‬ ‭money‬ ‭referred‬ ‭to‬ ‭as‬ ‭commodity-backed‬ ‭money.‬ ‭Fiat‬ ‭money‬ ‭is‬ ‭the‬ ‭outcome‬ ‭of‬ ‭a‬ ‭measure‬ ‭taken‬ ‭by‬ ‭the‬ ‭government‬ ‭through‬ ‭the‬ ‭Fed‬ ‭(central‬ ‭bank).‬ ‭In‬ ‭addition,‬ ‭the‬ ‭supply‬‭of‬‭fiat‬‭money‬‭has‬‭to‬‭be‬‭controlled‬‭wisely‬‭to‬ ‭avoid‬ ‭risking‬ ‭its‬ ‭value‬ ‭in‬ ‭what‬ ‭is‬ ‭known‬ ‭as‬ ‭currency‬ ‭debasement‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭instance,‬ ‭excessive‬ ‭printing/supply‬ ‭of‬ ‭money‬ ‭to‬ ‭finance‬ ‭government‬ ‭expenditure makes money lose its value and leads to inflation (will be discussed later).‬ ‭●‬ ‭Commodity-backed‬‭money:‬ ‭This‬‭is‬ ‭money‬‭that‬‭has‬‭no‬‭inherent‬‭value‬‭but‬‭can‬‭be‬‭secured‬‭by‬‭a‬ ‭promise‬ ‭that‬ ‭it‬ ‭can‬ ‭be‬ ‭converted‬ ‭into‬ ‭something‬ ‭of‬ ‭value‬ ‭.‬ ‭For‬ ‭instance,‬ ‭the‬ ‭U.S.‬ ‭dollar‬‭was‬ ‭backed‬‭by‬‭gold‬‭until‬‭1973.‬‭Any‬‭form‬‭of‬‭currency,‬‭such‬‭as‬‭peanuts,‬‭that‬‭can‬‭be‬‭exchanged‬‭for‬‭its‬ ‭equivalent‬ ‭value‬ ‭in‬ ‭a‬ ‭valuable‬ ‭commodity,‬ ‭such‬ ‭as‬ ‭silver,‬ ‭would‬ ‭be‬ ‭considered‬ ‭as‬ ‭commodity-backed money.‬ ‭Stocks and Bonds‬ ‭Financial‬ ‭assets‬ ‭other‬ ‭than‬ ‭cash‬ ‭and‬ ‭demand‬ ‭deposits,‬ ‭exist‬ ‭and‬ ‭earn‬ ‭a‬ ‭return.‬ ‭Under‬ ‭financial‬ ‭economics,‬‭which‬‭this‬‭chapter‬‭is‬‭all‬‭about,‬‭investment‬‭refers‬‭to‬‭the‬‭purchase‬‭of‬‭financial‬‭assets,‬‭such‬‭as‬ ‭stocks and bonds.‬ ‭A‬ ‭stock‬ ‭represents‬ ‭a‬‭slice‬‭of‬‭ownership‬‭in‬‭a‬‭company‬‭and‬‭pays‬‭dividends‬ ‭(a‬‭portion‬‭of‬‭the‬‭company’s‬ ‭profits)‬ ‭to‬ ‭its‬ ‭owner.‬ ‭For‬ ‭instance,‬ ‭if‬ ‭individual‬ ‭A‬ ‭owns‬ ‭10‬ ‭shares‬‭of‬‭a‬‭company‬‭that‬‭has‬‭1,000‬‭stocks,‬ ‭individual‬‭A‬‭owns‬‭1%‬‭of‬‭that‬‭company.‬ ‭Stocks,‬‭sometimes‬‭referred‬‭to‬‭as‬‭equity,‬‭are‬‭issued‬‭by‬‭companies‬ ‭to‬ ‭exchange‬‭cash‬‭for‬‭ownership‬‭stake‬‭in‬‭the‬‭company‬ ‭.‬‭Another‬‭way‬‭for‬‭a‬‭stockholder‬‭to‬‭make‬‭a‬‭return‬

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‭Chapter 5:‬ ‭Inflation, Unemployment, and‬ ‭Stabilization Policies‬ ‭Overview‬

‭In‬ ‭intertwined‬ ‭phenomena‬‭of‬‭inflation‬‭and‬‭unemployment‬‭lie‬ ‭at‬ ‭the‬ ‭heart‬ ‭of‬ ‭economic‬‭policy‬‭and‬‭analysis.‬ ‭These‬ ‭two‬ ‭economic‬ ‭indicators‬ ‭often‬ ‭appear‬ ‭to‬ ‭be‬‭at‬‭odds,‬‭and‬‭managing‬‭them‬‭effectively‬ ‭is‬ ‭a‬ ‭key‬ ‭challenge‬ ‭for‬ ‭policymakers‬ ‭worldwide.‬‭Unlike‬‭the‬‭New‬‭Classical‬‭view‬‭that‬ ‭perceives‬ ‭government‬ ‭intervention‬ ‭to‬ ‭close‬ ‭output‬ ‭gaps‬ ‭as‬ ‭not‬ ‭necessary,‬ ‭Keynesians‬ ‭believe‬ ‭that‬ ‭in‬ ‭this‬ ‭complex‬ ‭economic‬ ‭landscape,‬‭stabilization‬‭policies‬‭play‬‭a‬‭pivotal‬ ‭role‬ ‭in‬ ‭steering‬ ‭an‬ ‭economy‬ ‭towards‬ ‭sustainable‬ ‭growth‬ ‭and‬ ‭stability.‬ ‭In‬ ‭this‬ ‭exploration‬ ‭of‬ ‭inflation,‬ ‭unemployment,‬ ‭and‬ ‭stabilization‬ ‭policies,‬ ‭this‬ ‭chapter‬ ‭will‬ ‭delve‬ ‭macroeconomics,‬ ‭the‬

‭into‬ ‭the‬ ‭definitions,‬ ‭causes,‬ ‭consequences,‬ ‭and‬ ‭policy‬ ‭tools‬ ‭related‬ ‭to‬ ‭these‬ ‭critical‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭factors.‬ ‭Understanding‬ ‭how‬ ‭these‬ ‭elements‬ ‭interact‬ ‭is‬ ‭essential‬ ‭for‬ ‭crafting‬ ‭demand-side‬ ‭and/or‬ ‭supply-side policies‬ ‭that promote economic well-being‬‭and prosperity for societies around the globe.‬ ‭Learning Objectives‬

‭By the end of this chapter, you should be able to:‬

‭●‬ ‭Understand the tools and effects of fiscal, supply-side, and monetary policies, as well as the role‬ ‭of automatic stabilizers.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Define the government budget and national debt and understand how government borrowing‬ ‭leads to crowding out.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Analyze the reserve market model, the Laffer curve, and the Phillips curve model.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Interpret the macroeconomic policy mix and illustrate economic changes on the PPC, AD-AS,‬ ‭and Phillips curve models.‬ ‭●‬ ‭Understand different economic philosophies.‬ ‭A. Fiscal Policy‬ ‭Government‬ ‭policies,‬ ‭including‬ ‭fiscal‬ ‭policy,‬ ‭were‬ ‭listed‬ ‭as‬ ‭one‬ ‭of‬ ‭the‬ ‭indirect‬ ‭components‬ ‭affecting‬ ‭aggregate‬‭demand‬‭AD‬‭(Chapter‬‭3‬‭Section‬‭A).‬‭This‬‭implies‬‭that‬‭fiscal‬‭policy‬‭affects‬‭the‬‭AD-AS‬‭model‬‭and‬ ‭can‬ ‭therefore‬ ‭be‬ ‭used‬ ‭as‬ ‭a‬ ‭stabilization‬ ‭policy‬ ‭to‬ ‭affect‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭equilibrium.‬ ‭Governments‬ ‭implement‬‭fiscal‬‭policies‬‭to‬‭achieve‬‭macroeconomic‬‭goals‬ ‭such‬‭as‬‭full‬‭employment‬‭or‬‭price‬‭stability‬

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‭by‬ ‭influencing‬ ‭macroeconomic‬ ‭aggregates‬ ‭that‬ ‭include‬ ‭aggregate‬ ‭demand,‬ ‭real‬ ‭output,‬ ‭and‬ ‭the‬ ‭price‬ ‭level.‬ ‭Since‬ ‭fiscal‬‭policy‬‭impacts‬‭aggregate‬‭demand‬ ‭,‬‭it‬‭is‬‭considered‬‭a‬ ‭demand-side‬‭policy‬ ‭.‬ ‭Its‬‭tools‬ ‭include‬‭government‬‭spending‬‭and‬‭taxes‬‭(or‬‭transfers).‬ ‭It‬‭is‬‭also‬‭referred‬‭to‬‭as‬‭a‬ ‭discretionary‬‭policy‬ ‭,‬ ‭meaning‬ ‭that‬ ‭it‬ ‭is‬ ‭one‬ ‭actively‬ ‭implemented‬ ‭by‬ ‭the‬ ‭government‬ ‭to‬ ‭affect‬ ‭AD.‬ ‭For‬ ‭example,‬ ‭the‬ ‭U.S.‬ ‭Federal‬ ‭Government‬ ‭needs‬ ‭the‬ ‭approval‬ ‭of‬ ‭the‬ ‭Congress‬ ‭to‬ ‭use‬ ‭fiscal‬ ‭policy‬ ‭tools‬ ‭to‬ ‭achieve‬ ‭macroeconomic objectives.‬ ‭Government Spending and Taxes‬ ‭Recall‬ ‭that‬ ‭government‬ ‭spending‬ ‭(or‬ ‭government‬ ‭expenditure)‬ ‭is‬ ‭an‬ ‭injection‬ ‭into‬ ‭the‬ ‭economy‬ ‭that‬ ‭directly‬ ‭affects‬ ‭AD‬ ‭(component‬ ‭of‬ ‭AD),‬ ‭whereas‬ ‭taxes‬ ‭are‬‭leakages‬‭out‬‭of‬‭the‬‭economy‬‭that‬‭indirectly‬ ‭affect AD by influencing consumption (C), a component of AD.‬

‭The following table lists the various areas and items of government spending and taxes in the U.S.‬

‭Table 1: The Tools of Fiscal Policy in the U.S.‬ ‭Areas of Government Spending‬

‭Types of Tax‬

‭Education‬

‭Personal income tax which affects disposable‬ ‭income by reducing consumption.‬ ‭Corporate tax imposed on firms’ profits, reducing‬ ‭their investment spending.‬ ‭Sales tax imposed on goods or services and‬ ‭collected from their suppliers.‬

‭National defense‬

‭Healthcare coverage for those who are 65 years‬ ‭old and above‬

‭Social security such as retirement pensions‬

‭Property tax imposed on the value of‬ ‭privately-owned property.‬

‭Other transfer payments such as unemployment‬ ‭benefits‬

‭Social insurance tax collected from‬ ‭self-employed individuals and payrolls to support‬ ‭those who are 65 years old and above. This‬ ‭affects wages and the costs of production.‬

‭B. Demand-Side Effects of Fiscal Policy‬ ‭Output‬‭gaps‬‭occur‬‭when‬‭the‬‭economy‬‭is‬‭operating‬‭in‬‭the‬‭short-run‬‭equilibrium‬‭either‬‭below‬‭or‬‭above‬‭the‬ ‭level‬ ‭of‬ ‭full‬ ‭employment‬ ‭(below‬ ‭or‬ ‭above‬ ‭LRAS).‬‭In‬‭the‬‭short‬‭run,‬‭fiscal‬‭policy‬‭can‬‭be‬‭implemented‬‭to‬ ‭affect real GDP and the price level by influencing AD.‬ ‭Expansionary Fiscal Policy‬ ‭As‬ ‭observed‬‭in‬‭the‬‭business‬‭cycle,‬‭a‬‭recession‬‭is‬‭an‬‭economic‬‭downturn‬‭associated‬‭with‬‭a‬‭decrease‬‭in‬ ‭the‬ ‭price‬ ‭level,‬ ‭real‬ ‭output,‬ ‭and‬ ‭an‬ ‭increase‬ ‭in‬ ‭unemployment.‬ ‭This‬ ‭indicates‬ ‭that‬ ‭the‬ ‭economy‬ ‭is‬ ‭experiencing‬‭a‬‭recessionary‬‭gap,‬‭where‬‭the‬‭short-run‬‭equilibrium‬‭(intersection‬‭of‬‭AD-SRAS)‬‭is‬‭below‬‭the‬ ‭full‬‭employment‬‭output‬‭(LRAS).‬‭To‬‭address‬‭this,‬‭the‬‭government‬‭may‬‭implement‬‭an‬ ‭expansionary‬‭fiscal‬

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