Review. Overarching Concepts 12/1/2017 4:42 PM. OUTLINE December 4 & 6, Production Possibilities Frontier. Review of Material.

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OUTLINE December 4 & 6, 2017 Review of Material Order of file is Micro (pp. 3-33) Then macro (pp. 34-52) We ll go as far as we can Monday & finish on Wednesday PPF Economic Growth Gains from Trade Supply & Demand Elasticity Consumer & Producer Surplus Profit-Maximization Market Failure Externalities Monopoly & Monopolistic Competition Asymmetric Information Distribution Review Macro definitions: GDP, Unemployment, Inflation Keynesian Model Y = C + I + G + EX - IM Spending Multipliers Investment Fiscal Policy International finance Phillips Curve Inflation & the Fed Monetary policy Overarching Concepts Counterfactual To properly evaluate effect of policy, don t compare the policy s results across time because factors other than the policy could have changed, too. Compare the policy s results (eg, today s economy) with what the same time period would have hypothetically have been like without the policy in effect (eg, today without the policy, which is the counterfactual ) Production Possibilities Frontier General characteristics of possible combinations of output that an economy can produce Simplification: 2 types of output Key assumption: No deliberate waste Implication: no unemployment when on PPF On PPF is equivalent to full employment economy Related to potential output 1

How can we consume beyond PPF? [1] Economic Growth Sources of growth more resources greater productivity Shifts out PPF [2] Specialization & Trade Comparative advantage Allows consumption beyond PPF but doesn t shift PPF [3] Aid Allows consumption beyond PPF but doesn t shift PPF Long-run economic growth Productivity increases with improvements in Education Research and Development Financial Institutions Transportation Networks Political Institutions Property Rights Judicial System Demand & Supply Model Question: What determines the price & quantity of a product? Assumptions: Homogeneous product Lots of buyers & sellers No barriers to entry / exit Full information Everyone is maximizing something: Buyers maximize utility Sellers maximize profit Note this model is for perfect competition (but results generalize) Movements Along vs Shifts Δ price Y MOVE ALONG curve Δ anything else Y SHIFT OF curve Demand shifters income of buyers wealth of buyers all other prices buyer preferences buyer expectations Supply shifters input costs technology prices of related products # of sellers 2

Consumer & Producer Surplus Consumer Surplus compares What we are willing to pay What we actually pay Producer Surplus compares Minimum price sellers are willing to accept Price sellers actually receive When price is determined by the market, surplus is maximized Loss of surplus when there s a market intervention called deadweight loss Occurs with price ceilings, price floors, excise taxes Price Ceilings & Floors Ceiling max price allowed Binds if p* > p ceiling Floor Min price allowed Binds if p* < p floor Need non-price mechanism to determine buyers (ceiling) or sellers (floor) Sales or excise tax on an item increases its price But not by the full amount of the tax Who bears the burden of the tax? Burden = ( price paid or retained) / tax Buyers Burden (P 2 P 1 )/T = % of tax buyers pay Sellers Burden (P 1 (P 2 T))/T = % of tax sellers pay Burden of a Tax Elasticity Elasticity of A with respect to B How much does A change when B changes? percent change of A elasticity percent change of B Price-Elasticity of Demand Income Elasticity of Demand Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Price-Elasticity of Supply 3

Price Elasticity of Demand Determinants Availability of Substitutes Share of Total Spending Time Horizon Total Revenue Effect What happens to TR when price rises? Price-Elastic Price-Inelastic Marginal benefit vs marginal cost Compare marginal benefit & marginal cost Ignore sunk costs MB > MC: do it MB < MC: don t do it MB = MC: that s the best you can do Unitary Price Elasticity Profit Max: choose q where MR=MC Profit ( ) Economic Profit = Accounting Profit Opportunity Cost Accounting Profit = Total Revenue Total Accounting Costs Opportunity Cost = what could owner(s) earn elsewhere with their time plus what could owner(s) earn elsewhere with the assets ($) they sunk into the company Long Run Technique can be changed Entry & exit are possible Exit Decision Stay in Industry Technique is fixed Entry & exit are impossible Decision (if planning to exit) Short Run Produce Shut Down Decision (if planning to stay, or if not shutting down): how much to produce? 4

Law of Diminishing Returns As quantity of variable input (labor) increases, all else constant, marginal product decreases (=diminishes) Implication To increase output by constant amount requires ever more variable input (labor) And implication of that... Marginal cost increases as amount of output increases Profit Max: choose q where MR=MC Rule is always true Market structure determines firm s demand and MR curves How much profit? π = TR TC = p*q ATC*q Long-run & Short-run & profit Short-run π > 0? Firms enter industry in the long run Short-run π < 0? Some firms exit industry in the long run Free Entry Drives Profit to 0 Market Firm If π < 0 & firm will exit in the long run, what about short run? If revenue > variable costs, then produce in SR Firm is covering all its variable costs, and more If revenue < variable costs, then shut down in SR Firm loses less by just paying fixed costs Supply curve is MC curve above minimum Average Variable Cost 5

Definitions of Wealth & Income Distribution of Income Wealth (or, Net Worth) = Assets Liabilities Assets: what you own Real Assets Financial Assets Liabilities: what you owe to others Evaluated as of a particular date (e.g., as of today) Income What you receive Evaluated over a period of time (e.g., per year) Sources of Income Labor income Property income Transfer payments Gini Coefficient: A measure of evenness of distribution Gini = 0 means perfectly equal distribution Gini = 1 means perfectly unequal distribution Income = what we earn annually Includes labor income & property income Income inequality is as high (bad) today as in 1920s Somewhat due to property income But largely due to inequality in labor income 6

Market Failure If any of these assumptions isn t satisfied perfect competition profit maximization utility maximization private property rights full information then markets fail...... to produce q* where p = MC One firm No close substitutes Barriers to entry Patents Government franchises Owning scarce resource Economies of scale Illegal means Max profit when choose q so that MR = MC Long run: π can be > 0 Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Comparing Industry Forms Lots of firms No barriers to entry/exit Heterogeneous product Max profit when choose q so that MR = MC Long Run: profit = 0 Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition Monopoly Short Run Transition Long Run > 0 Entry ( S) = 0 = 0 No change = 0 < 0 Exit ( S) = 0 > 0 Entry ( D) = 0 = 0 No change = 0 < 0 Exit ( D) = 0 > 0 No change > 0 = 0 No change = 0 < 0 Exit 7

Externalities Internalizing Externalities Your activity affects someone else Negative externality Cost borne by someone else Positive externality Benefit received by someone else Coase Theorem: Government intervention required to move market to social optimum unless Well-defined property rights No costs to bargaining Only a few people Otherwise: government intervention People have no incentive to take external benefit or cost into account So private optimum differs from social optimum But if government can change the private costs so that they include the external cost (or benefit), then the private optimum can become equal to the social optimum If government implements a tax equal to marginal damage cost, then private market produces socially optimal quantity Tax too small market equilibrium quantity > socially optimal quantity Tax too big market equilibrium quantity < socially optimal quantity (Pos externality): If government implements a subsidy equal to marginal external benefit, then private market produces socially optimal quantity Negative Externality: A Tax Positive Externality: A Subsidy 8

Asymmetric Info When one party to a transaction has relevant info but doesn t share it with the other party Effect: markets fail (to produce the quantity where p = MC = minimum ATC) Adverse Selection (before transaction) When the selection of goods offered for sale is not a random selection but is instead an adverse (unfavorable) selection Can be addressed with screening Moral Hazard (during contract) When one party to a contract changes behavior after the contract is signed, typically due to incentives contained in the contract itself Can be addressed with monitoring Behavioral Concepts Risk aversion People (which includes businesspeople) consider not just the mean of a distribution but also its variance Risk averse people dislike wide variance Might make irrational (not profit maximizing) decisions in order to avoid or reduce risk Loss aversion People consider not just the mean of a distribution but also whether its range includes possible losses Loss averse people dislike incurring losses Might make irrational (not profit maximizing) decisions in order to avoid incurring a possible loss Macroeconomics Three main topics Unemployment Out of work & looking for work; current rate = 4.1% Inflation Annual rate of increase of CPI; current rate = +2.0 %; Core rate (all items less food & energy) = +1.8% (Long-run) Economic Growth (This was PPF) Rate of growth of real GDP ; current ~ 3.3 % Or, rate of growth of real GDP per capita; current ~ 2.6 % Unemployment is determined by employment which is determined by output produced which is determined by aggregate demand for output Gross Domestic Product (GDP) GDP Total annual economic output in a nation Omissions from GDP Non-market activities Unreported cash income Illegal activities Measurement system: National Income & Product Accounts Expenditure Side of NIPA Consumption spending C Investment spending I Government spending G Export spending EX Import spending IM mpc = how households respond to a change in disposable income mpc < 1 usually 9

Aggregate Expenditure Aggregate Expenditure = C + I + G + EX IM Why subtract imports? Because C, I, G include both domestic & foreign output AE (or, AD) = total expenditure for only domestic output Consumption Purchases of domesticallyproduced consumer goods and services Purchases of foreign-produced consumer goods and services Investment Purchases of domesticallyproduced machines & buildings Purchases of foreignproduced machines & buildings Government Purchases of domesticallyproduced goods and services Purchases of foreignproduced goods and services Exports Purchases by foreigners of domesticallyproduced goods and services Equilibrium Y E (equilibrium output) may not equal Y FE (full employment output) Unemployment Equilibrium exists when Y E < Y FE Y FE - Y E = output gap Consumption Spending Investment Spending C depends upon YD interest rates (i) expectations wealth credit availability mpc = how households respond to a change in disposable income mpc < 1 usually Simplest models assume mpc constant, but is it? Bunker (#18): mpc decreases as household wealth increases Business spending for construction new equipment Δ value of inventory holdings Profit maximizing decision Compare expected rate of return on investment project (rr e ) with interest rate on financial assets or loans ( i ) Assumes no risk aversion, no loss aversion Interest Rates (i) matter i Investment i Investment Expected rates of return ( rr e ) matter rr e Investment rr e Investment In a credit crisis, credit availability matters Credit availability Investment Credit availability Investment 10

Government Spending Fiscal Policy Tools G: Government spending -- direct fiscal policy TR: Transfer payments -- indirect fiscal policy TA: Taxes -- indirect fiscal policy Budget Deficit = (G + TR) TA; measured annually Expansionary fiscal policy Shifts AD up increase GDP G or TR or TA Increases deficit Contractionary fiscal policy Shifts AD down decrease GDP G or TR or TA Decreases deficit How gov t spends money matters! ΔY E = (spending multiplier) * (initial Δ spending) Direct Policy Action: ΔG So, initial Δspending = ΔG and ΔY E = ΔG * multiplier Indirect Policy Action: ΔTR or ΔTA So, initial Δspending = mpc * ΔTR (or mpc * ΔTA) and ΔY E = ΔTR * mpc * multiplier Government spending has a greater effect on GDP than do changes in taxes or transfer payments (if initial ΔC < ΔYD) assuming same mpc relevant to ΔY and ΔTR or ΔTA Deficits and Debt Government outlays = G + TR Government receipts = TA If, in one year, G + TR > TA: budget deficit If, in one year, TA > G + TR: budget surplus Structural deficit How big the deficit would be if the economy were at full employment Cyclical deficit How much larger the deficit is because unemployment is above 5 % Issues related to deficit & debt Decreasing structural deficit is contractionary But concern is sustainability of structural deficit Demand & Supply of Foreign Currency (FX) D FX Those with $ who want FX Depends on U.S. demand for foreign goods & services foreign financial assets S FX Those with FX who want $ Depends on foreign demand for U.S. goods & services U.S. financial assets 11

Interest rates affect exchange rates If interest rates in U.S. foreign demand for U.S. financial assets Which S FX offered in exchange for dollars U.S. demand for foreign assets Which D FX by people & institutions that hold dollars supply & demand have same price effect: P FX (dollar stronger) If interest rates in U.S. foreign demand for U.S. financial assets: S FX U.S. demand for foreign assets: D FX S & D have same price effect: P FX (dollar weaker) From P FX to Imports & Exports If P FX falls (dollar stronger) fewer $ per FX imports less expensive, so IM rise and exports more expensive, so EX fall If P FX rises (dollar weaker) more $ per FX imports more expensive, so IM fall and exports less expensive, so EX rise Multiplier Process Any initial Δspending results in a much larger ΔY E because 1) Δspending Δoutput 2) Δoutput ΔY 3) ΔY ΔYD ΔC and ΔY ΔIM Definition & one possible formula: What about Inflation? Expectations-augmented Phillips Curve Tradeoff between unemployment & inflation Due to effect of labor market slack on wage inflation Terms of trade-off shift with changes in... Inflationary expectations... Productivity growth rate... Cost shocks due to supply or non-us demand shifts Fed bases its policy on this relationship Tries to avoid shifts of the Phillips Curve Exploits trade-offs through its policy decisions Offers forward guidance as effort to stabilize inflationary expectations 12

Phillips Curve Monetary Policy Fed does expansionary policy if they want to... Increase GDP growth & decrease unemployment Increase inflation rate Expansionary policy: target a lower interest rate Traditional method: increase reserves through FOMO New method: pay banks a lower rate on their excess reserves Fed does contractionary policy if they want to... Decrease GDP growth & increase unemployment Decrease inflation rate Contractionary policy: target a higher interest rate Traditional method: decrease reserves through FOMO New method: pay banks a higher rate on their excess reserves Fed has only one tool: interest rates If goals are consistent, strategy straightforward Consistent Goal: Increase GDP growth (lower unemployment) and increase inflation rate target lower interest rate Consistent Goal: Decrease GDP growth (higher unemployment) & decrease inflation rate target higher interest rate But if goals are inconsistent, choice required Inconsistent Goals: Increase GDP growth (lower unemployment) and decrease inflation rate can t do both at once Inconsistent Goals : Decrease GDP growth (higher unemployment) and increase inflation rate can t do both at once Choice depends on how FOMC members rank unemployment vs inflation as problems (doves vs. hawks) Inflation Hawks And Doves Taylor Rule Fed reacts to inflation and unemployment Target value of interest rate = neutral value of interest rate + A*(actual goal inflation rate) - β*(actual goal unemployment rate) Inflation hawk very focused on inflation. Value of A very large relative to value of β Inflation dove focused on unemployment as well as inflation. Value of A smaller for doves than for hawks. 13

2008-2015 Issues in Fed Policy Fed lowered FFR to essentially 0 in December 2008 zero lower bound Yield Curve: LT rates didn t follow ST rates in 2008-9 Fed implemented QE starting in 2009 Bought LT Treasuries & MBS to lower LT rates Fed entered normalization period Dec 2015, gradually returning FFR target to neutral rate (perhaps 4%??) Challenges today Source: Janet Yellen speech, Oct. 2016 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20161014a.htm 1. Can shortfalls in AD trigger drop in potential GDP? 2. Should we disaggregate C (or I )? 3. What s role of finance in determining AD? 4. What determines inflation? 5. How are different economies connected? 14