MGG 9 - Mankiw - ch03-GNP-GDP - Rev1
MGG 9 - Mankiw - ch03-GNP-GDP - Rev1
MGG 9 - Mankiw - ch03-GNP-GDP - Rev1
National Income:
N. Gregory Mankiw
PowerPoint® Slides
by Ron Cronovich
Introduction
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The Neoclassical model
Neoclassical model
The macroeconomy involves three types of markets:
1. Goods (and services) Market
2. Factors Market or Labor market , needed to
produce goods and services
3. Financial market
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Three Markets – Three agents
Labor Market hiring
work
Financial Market
saving borrowing borrowing
production
government
consumption spending investment
Goods Market
Neoclassical model
1) Goods market:
Supply: firms produce the goods
Demand: by households for consumption,
government spending, and other firms demand
them for investment
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Neoclassical model
2) Labor market (factors of production)
Supply: Households sell their labor services.
Demand: Firms need to hire labor to produce the
goods.
3) Financial market
Supply: households supply private savings:
income less consumption
Demand: firms borrow funds for investment;
government borrows funds to finance
expenditures.
Neoclassical model
We will develop a set of equations to charac-
terize supply and demand in these markets
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Part 1: Supply in goods market:
Production
Supply in the goods market depends on
a production function:
denoted Y = F (K, L)
Where
K = capital: tools, machines, and structures
used in production
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Assumptions of the model
1. Technology is fixed.
2. The economy’s supplies of capital and
labor are fixed at
K K and L L
Determining GDP
Output is determined by the fixed
factor supplies and the fixed state
of technology:
Y F (K , L )
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Part 2: Equilibrium in the factors market
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Demand in factors market
Assume the market is competitive:
Each firm is small relative to the market,
so its actions do not affect the market
prices.
It takes prices in markets as given - W,R,
P.
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Demand in the factors market
Increasing hiring of L will have two effects:
1) Benefit: raise output by some amount
2) Cost: raise labor costs at rate W
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Exercise: compute & graph MPL
a. Determine MPL at each
L Y MPL
value of L 0 0 n.a.
1 10 ?
b. Graph the production 2 19 ?
function 3 27 8
c. Graph the MPL curve 4 34 ?
with MPL on the 5 40 ?
vertical axis and 6 45 ?
L on the horizontal axis 7 49 ?
8 52 ?
9 54 ?
10 55 ?
CHAPTER 3 National Income slide 18
answers:
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Output (Y)
60
10
50
8
40
6
30
20 4
10 2
0 0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Labor (L) Labor (L)
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Return to firm problem: hiring L
Firm chooses L to maximize its profit.
How will increasing L change profit?
D profit = D revenue - D cost
= P * MPL - W
If this is: > 0 should hire more
< 0 should hire less
= 0 hiring right amount
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Real wage
Think about units:
W = $/hour
P = $/good
W/P = ($/hour) / ($/good) = goods/hour
The amount of purchasing power, measured
in units of goods, that firms pay per unit of
work
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Outline of model
A closed economy, market-clearing model
Goods market:
DONE Supply side: production
Next Demand side: C, I, and G
Factors market
DONE Supply side
DONE Demand side
Loanable funds market
Supply side: saving
Demand side: borrowing
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Consumption, C
def: disposable income is total income minus
total taxes: Y – T
Consumption function: C = C (Y – T )
Shows that (Y – T ) C
def: The marginal propensity to consume
(MPC) is the increase in C caused by an increase
in disposable income.
So MPC = derivative of the consumption function
with respect to disposable income.
MPC must be between 0 and 1.
C (Y –T )
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Consumption function cont.
Suppose consumption function:
C=10 + 0.75Y
MPC = 0.75
For extra dollar of income, spend 0.75
dollars consumption
Marginal propensity to save = 1-MPC
Investment, I
The investment function is I = I (r ),
where r denotes the real interest rate,
the nominal interest rate corrected for
inflation.
The real interest rate is
the cost of borrowing
the opportunity cost of using one’s
own funds
to finance investment spending.
So, r I
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The investment function
r
Spending on
investment goods
is a downward-
sloping function of
the real interest rate
I (r )
Government spending, G
G includes government spending on
goods and services.
G excludes transfer payments
Assume government spending and total
taxes are exogenous:
G G and T T
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The market for goods & services
Agg. demand: C (Y T ) I (r ) G
Agg. supply: Y F (K , L)
Equilibrium: Y = C (Y T ) I (r ) G
The real interest rate adjusts
to equate demand with supply.
We can get more intuition for how this works
by looking at the loanable funds market
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Types of saving
private saving = (Y –T ) – C
public saving = T –G
national saving, S
= private saving + public saving
= ( Y –T ) – C + T–G
= Y – C – G
digression:
Budget surpluses and deficits
• When T > G ,
budget surplus = (T – G ) = public saving
• When T < G ,
budget deficit = (G –T )
and public saving is negative.
• When T = G ,
budget is balanced and public saving = 0.
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The special role of r
r adjusts to equilibrate the goods market and
the loanable funds market simultaneously:
If L.F. market in equilibrium, then
Y–C–G =I
Add (C +G ) to both sides to get
Y = C + I + G (goods market eq’m)
Thus,
Eq’m in
L.F. market Eq’m in goods
market
Algebra example
Suppose an economy characterized by:
Factors market supply:
– labor supply= 1000
– Capital stock supply=1000
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Algebra example continued
Given the exogenous variables (Y, G, T), find the
equilibrium values of the endogenous variables (r,
C, I)
Find r using the goods market equilibrium
condition:
Y=C+I+G
5000 = 250 + 0.75(5000-1000) +1000
-5000r + 1000
5000 = 5250 – 5000r
-250 = -5000r so r = 0.05
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Digression: mastering models
To learn a model well, be sure to know:
1. Which of its variables are endogenous and
which are exogenous.
2. For each curve in the diagram, know
a. definition
b. intuition for slope
c. all the things that can shift the curve
3. Use the model to analyze the effects of
each item in 2c .
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CASE STUDY
The Reagan Deficits
Reagan policies during early 1980s:
increases in defense
spending: DG > 0
big tax cuts: DT < 0
G S T C S
1. The increase in r S2 S1
the deficit
reduces saving…
r2
2. …which causes
the real interest
r1
rate to rise…
3. …which reduces I (r )
the level of I2 I1 S, I
investment.
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Are the data consistent with these results?
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An increase in investment demand
r S
An increase
…raises the in desired
interest rate. r2 investment…
r1
But the equilibrium
level of investment I2
cannot increase I1
because the
supply of loanable
S, I
funds is fixed.
CHAPTER 3 National Income slide 46
Chapter summary
1. Total output is determined by
how much capital and labor the economy has
the level of technology
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Chapter summary
4. The economy’s output is used for
consumption
(which depends on disposable income)
investment
(depends on the real interest rate)
government spending
(exogenous)
5. The real interest rate adjusts to equate
the demand for and supply of
goods and services
loanable funds
Chapter summary
6. A decrease in national saving causes the
interest rate to rise and investment to fall.
An increase in investment demand causes
the interest rate to rise, but does not affect
the equilibrium level of investment
if the supply of loanable funds is fixed.
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TUGAS 1: P 77 No. 9 Edisi 7
Consider an economy described by the following equations:
Y=C+I+G
Y = 5,000
G = 1,000
T = 1,000
C = 250 + 0.75(Y − T)
I = 1,000 − 50 r.
a. In this economy, compute private saving, public saving, and national saving.
b. Find the equilibrium interest rate.
c. Now suppose that G rises to 1,250. Compute private saving, public saving,
and national saving.
d. Find the new equilibrium interest rate.
TUGAS 2: KELOMPOK
Bagaimana cara menghitung Produk
Domestik Bruto (PDB) atau Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) di Indonesia? Ada berapa
pendekatan?
Berikan data PDB (untuk semua
pendekatan) di Indonesia untuk tahun
sesuai pada slide berikut.
Untuk menjawab pertanyaan ini Anda bida
membuka website BPS – https://bps.go.id
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Data per Kelompok
Kelompok Data PDB Harga Kelompok Data PDB Harga
Kontan Berlaku
1 Tahun 2010 dan 2011 6 Tahun 2010 dan 2011
2 Tahun 2012 dan 2013 7 Tahun 2012 dan 2013
3 Tahun 2014 dan 2015 8 Tahun 2014 dan 2015
4 Tahun 2016 dan 2017 9 Tahun 2016 dan 2017
5 Tahun 2018 dan 2019 10 Tahun 2018 dan 2019
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