Chapter 1: Introduction to Macroeconomics

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Chapter 1: Introduction to Macroeconomics Yulei Luo SEF of HKU September 1, 2017 Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 1 / 19

Chapter Outline What macroeconomics is about? What macroeconomists do? Why macroeconomists disagree? Three central concepts around which this course is organized: The short run: What happens to the economy from year to year. The medium run: What happens to the economy over a decade or so. The long run: What happens to the economy over a half century or longer. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 2 / 19

What macroeconomics is about? Macroeconomics: The study of structure and performance of national economies and government policies that a ect economic performance. Issues addressed by macroeconomists: Long-run economic growth Business cycles Unemployment In ation The international economy Macroeconomic policy Aggregation: from microeconomics to macroeconomics. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 3 / 19

Long-run economic growth Figure 1.1: Output of United States since 1869. (Note decline in output in recessions; increase in output in some wars.) Two main sources of growth: Population growth Increases in average labor productivity Average labor productivity: Output produced per unit of labor input. Fig. 1.2 shows average labor productivity for U.S since 1900. Average labor productivity growth: About 2.5% per year from 1949 to 1973; 1.1% per year from 1973 to 1995; 1.7% per year from 1995 to 2011. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 4 / 19

Figure 1.1 Output of the U.S. economy, 1869-2011 Sources: Federal spending and receipts for 1869 1929 from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, p. 1104; GNP 1869 1928 from Christina D. Romer, The Prewar Business Cycle Reconsidered: New Estimates of Gross National Product, 1869 1908, Journal of Political Economy, 97, 1 (February 1989), pp. 22 23; GNP for 1929 from FRED database, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/ series/gdpa; Federal spending and receipts as percentage of output, 1930 2011 from Historical Tables, Budget of the U.S. Government, Table 1.2 Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-5

Figure 1.2 Average labor productivity in the United States, 1900-2011 Sources: Employment in thousands of workers 14 and older for 1900 1947 from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, pp. 126 127; workers 16 and older for 1948 onward from FRED database, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/seri es/ CE16OV. Average labor productivity is output divided by employment, where output is from Fig. 1.1. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-8

Business cycles Business cycle: Short-run contractions and expansions in economic activity. Downward phase is called a recession. During a recession, national output may be falling or perhaps growing only very slowly. Macroeconomists put a lot of e ort into trying to gure out what causes business cycles and deciding what can do or should be done about them. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 5 / 19

Unemployment Unemployment: the number of people who are available for work and actively seeking work but cannot nd jobs. The best-known measure of unemployment is the unemployment rate. U.S. experience shown in Fig. 1.3. Recessions have led to signi cant increases in the unemployment rate in the postwar period. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 6 / 19

Figure 1.3 The U.S. unemployment rate, 1890-2011 Sources: Civilian unemployment rate (people aged 14 and older until 1947, aged 16 and older after 1947) for 1890 1947 from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, p. 135; for 1948 onward from FRED database Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series /UNRATE. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-12

In ation In ation: The prices of goods and services are rising over time. U.S. experience shown in Fig. 1.4. De ation: when prices of most goods and services decline. In ation rate: the percentage increase in the average level of prices. Hyperin ation: an extremely high rate of in ation. High in ation also means that the purchasing power of money erodes quickly. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 7 / 19

Figure 1.4 Consumer prices in the United States, 1800-2011 Sources: Consumer price index, 1800 1946 (1967 = 100) from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, pp. 210 211; 1947 onward (1982 1984 = 100) from FRED database, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/cpiaucsl. Data prior to 1971 were rescaled to a base with 1982 1984 = 100. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-14

The international economy Open vs. closed economies Open economy: an economy that has extensive trading and nancial relationships with other national economies. Today, every major economy is an open economy. Closed economy: an economy that does not interact economically with the rest of the world. An important topic in macro: How international trade and borrowing relationships can help transmit business cycles from country to country. Trade imbalances. U.S. experience shown in Fig. 1.5. Question: Are they bad for U.S. or for the economies of this country s trading partners? Trade surplus: exports exceed imports. Trade de cit: imports exceed exports. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 8 / 19

Figure 1.5 U.S. exports and imports, 1869-2011 Sources: Imports and exports of goods and services: 1869 1959 from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, pp. 864 865; 1960 onward from FRED database, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/b OPX and BOPM; nominal output: 1869 1928 from Christina D. Romer, The Prewar Business Cycle Reconsidered: New Estimates of Gross National Product, 1869 1908, Journal of Political Economy, 97, 1 (February 1989), pp. 22 23; 1929 onward from FRED database, series GDPA. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-17

Macroeconomic policy Macro policies a ect the performance of the economy as a whole. Fiscal policy: government spending and taxation. It is determined at the national, state, and local levels in the U.S. E ects of changes in federal budget. U.S. experience in Fig. 1.6. Relation to trade de cit? Monetary policy: growth of money supply or a nominal interest rate (the federal fund rates); determined by central bank (the Fed in U.S). Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 9 / 19

Figure 1.6 U.S. Federal government spending and tax collections, 1869-2011 Sources: Federal spending and receipts for 1869 1929 from Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, p. 1104; GNP 1869 1928 from Christina D. Romer, The Prewar Business Cycle Reconsidered: New Estimates of Gross National Product, 1869 1908, Journal of Political Economy, 97, 1 (February 1989), pp. 22 23; GNP for 1929 from FRED database, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/s eries/gdpa; Federal spending and receipts as percentage of output, 1930 2011 from Historical Tables, Budget of the U.S. Government, Table 1.2. Copyright 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1-19

Aggregation Aggregation: summing individual economic variables to obtain economywide totals. Micro: focuses on individual consumers, workers, and rms, each of which is too small to have an impact on the national economy. Macro focuses on national totals. Distinguishes microeconomics (disaggregated) from macroeconomics (aggregated). Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 10 / 19

What macroeconomists do? Macroeconomic forecasting Forecasting is a minor part of what macroeconomists do. Relatively few economists make forecasts. Forecasting is very di cult: (1) our understanding of how the economy works is imperfect; (2) it is impossible to take into account all the uncertain factors (many of them are not strictly economic) that might a ect future economic trends. Rather than predicting what will happen, most macroeconomists are engaged in analyzing and interpreting events as they happen (macro analysis) or in trying to understand the structure of the economy in general (macro research). Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 11 / 19

Macroeconomic analysis Macroeconomic analysis Private sector economists: try to determine how general economic trends will a ect their employers nancial investments, their opportunities of expansions, the demand for their products, and so on. Public sector (national and regional governments and international agencies) economists: to assist in policymaking for example, by writing reports that assess various macro problems and by identifying and evaluating possible policy options. The world bank, international money fund, and the federal reserve banks. Does having many economists ensure good macroeconomic policies? No, since politicians, not economists, make major decisions. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 12 / 19

Macro research Goal: to make general statements about how the economy works. Macro research proceeds primarily through the formulation and testing of theories. Economic theory: a set of ideas about the economy, organized in a logical framework. Economic model: a simpli ed description of some aspect of the economy. Theoretical and empirical research are necessary for forecasting and economic analysis. Usefulness of economic theory or models depends on reasonableness of assumptions, possibility of being applied to real problems, empirically testable implications, theoretical results consistent with real-world data. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 13 / 19

In touch with data and research: developing and testing an economic theory 1 State the research question. 2 Make provisional assumptions that describe the econ setting and the behavior of the economic actors. 3 Work out the implications of the theory. 4 Conduct an empirical analysis to compare the implications of the theory with the data. 5 Evaluate the results of your comparisons: If the theory ts the data well: Use the theory to predict what would happen if the economic setting or econ policies change. If the theory ts the data poorly: Starts from developing a new model and repeats steps 2-5. If the theory ts the data moderately well: Either do with a partially successful theory or modify the model with additional assumptions and then repeats steps 2-5. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 14 / 19

Positive vs. normative analysis Positive analysis: examines the economic consequences of a policy but does not address the question of whether those consequences are desirable. Normative analysis: determines whether a policy should be used. For example, consider evaluating the e ects on the economy of a 5% increase in the income tax. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 15 / 19

Classicals vs. Keynesians. (1) The classical approach The economy works well on its own. The invisible hand (Adam Smith (1776): The Wealth of Nations): the idea that if there are free markets and individuals conduct their economic a airs in their own best interests, the overall economy will work well. Wages and prices adjust rapidly to get to equilibrium Equilibrium: a situation in which the quantities demanded and supplied are equal. Changes in wages and prices are signals that coordinate people s actions Result: Government should have only a limited role in the economy Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 16 / 19

(2) The Keynesian approach The Great Depression: Classical theory failed because high unemployment was persistent. Keynes (1936): The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. Keynes: Persistent unemployment occurs because wages and prices adjust slowly, so markets remain out of equilibrium for long periods. Conclusion: Government should intervene to restore full employment. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 17 / 19

The evolution of the classical-keynesian debate Keynesians dominated from WWII to 1970. Stag ation led to a classical comeback in the 1970s. Last 30 years: excellent research with both approaches. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 18 / 19

A uni ed approach to macroeconomics This course will use a single model to present both classical and Keynesian ideas. It draws heavily from both the classical and Keynesian traditions. Individuals, rms, and the government interact in three markets: goods, assets, and labor markets. The model s macro analysis: starts with microfoundations: individual optimizing behavior (consumer s utility maximization and rm s pro t maximization). Both agree that in the long run: wages and prices are perfectly exible. Short run: Classical case exible wages and prices; Keynesian case wages and prices are slow to adjust. These two assumptions can be incorporated into the model. This aspect allows us to compare classical and Keynesian conclusions and policy recommendations. Luo, Y. (SEF of HKU) ECON2220B: Intermediate Macro September 1, 2017 19 / 19