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简介
这是曼昆宏观经济学第七版ppt,包括了In this chapter, you will learn,Important issues in macroeconomics,U.S. Real GDP per capita (2000 dollars),Why learn macroeconomics,Economic models,Example of a model: Supply & demand for new cars,The demand for cars,The effects of an increase in income,Endogenous vs. exogenous variables,Prices: flexible vs. sticky,Outline of this book等内容,欢迎点击下载。
曼昆宏观经济学第七版ppt是由红软PPT免费下载网推荐的一款课件PPT类型的PowerPoint.
In this chapter, you will learn:
about the issues macroeconomists study
the tools macroeconomists use
some important concepts in macroeconomic analysis
Important issues in macroeconomics
What causes recessions? What is “government stimulus” and why might it help?
How can problems in the housing market spread to the rest of the economy?
What is the government budget deficit? How does it affect workers, consumers, businesses, and taxpayers?
Important issues in macroeconomics
Why does the cost of living keep rising?
Why are so many countries poor? What policies might help them grow out of poverty?
What is the trade deficit? How does it affect the country’s well-being?
U.S. Real GDP per capita (2000 dollars)
U.S. Inflation Rate(% per year)
U.S. Unemployment Rate(% of labor force)
Why learn macroeconomics?
Why learn macroeconomics?
Why learn macroeconomics?
Economic models
…are simplified versions of a more complex reality
irrelevant details are stripped away
…are used to
show relationships between variables
explain the economy’s behavior
devise policies to improve economic performance
Example of a model: Supply & demand for new cars
shows how various events affect price and quantity of cars
assumes the market is competitive: each buyer and seller is too small to affect the market price
Variables
Qd = quantity of cars that buyers demand
Qs = quantity that producers supply
P = price of new cars
Y = aggregate income
Ps = price of steel (an input)
The demand for cars
demand equation: Q d = D (P,Y )
shows that the quantity of cars consumers demand is related to the price of cars and aggregate income
Digression: functional notation
General functional notation shows only that the variables are related.
Q d = D (P,Y )
A specific functional form shows the precise quantitative relationship.
Example: D (P,Y ) = 60 – 10P + 2Y
The market for cars: Demand
The market for cars: Supply
The market for cars: Equilibrium
The effects of an increase in income
The effects of a steel price increase
Endogenous vs. exogenous variables
The values of endogenous variables are determined in the model.
The values of exogenous variables are determined outside the model: the model takes their values & behavior as given.
In the model of supply & demand for cars,
endogenous: P, Qd, Qs
exogenous: Y, Ps
NOW YOU TRY: Supply and Demand
1. Write down demand and supply equations for wireless phones; include two exogenous variables in each equation.
2. Draw a supply-demand graph for wireless phones.
3. Use your graph to show how a change in one of your exogenous variables affects the model’s endogenous variables.
The use of multiple models
No one model can address all the issues we care about.
E.g., our supply-demand model of the car market…
can tell us how a fall in aggregate income affects price & quantity of cars.
cannot tell us why aggregate income falls.
The use of multiple models
So we will learn different models for studying different issues (e.g., unemployment, inflation, long-run growth).
For each new model, you should keep track of
its assumptions
which variables are endogenous, which are exogenous
the questions it can help us understand, those it cannot
Prices: flexible vs. sticky
Market clearing: An assumption that prices are flexible, adjust to equate supply and demand.
In the short run, many prices are sticky – adjust sluggishly in response to changes in supply or demand. For example:
many labor contracts fix the nominal wage for a year or longer
many magazine publishers change prices only once every 3-4 years
Prices: flexible vs. sticky
The economy’s behavior depends partly on whether prices are sticky or flexible:
If prices sticky (short run), demand may not equal supply, which explains:
unemployment (excess supply of labor)
why firms cannot always sell all the goods they produce
If prices flexible (long run), markets clear and economy behaves very differently
Outline of this book:
Introductory material (Chaps. 1 & 2)
Classical Theory (Chaps. 3-6) How the economy works in the long run, when prices are flexible
Growth Theory (Chaps. 7-8)The standard of living and its growth rate over the very long run
Business Cycle Theory (Chaps. 9-14)How the economy works in the short run, when prices are sticky
Outline of this book:
Policy debates (Chaps. 15-16)Should the government try to smooth business cycle fluctuations? Is the government’s debt a problem?
Microeconomic foundations (Chaps. 17-19)Insights from looking at the behavior of consumers, firms, and other issues from a microeconomic perspective
Chapter Summary
Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole, including
growth in incomes
changes in the overall level of prices
the unemployment rate
Macroeconomists attempt to explain the economy and to devise policies to improve its performance.
Chapter Summary
Economists use different models to examine different issues.
Models with flexible prices describe the economy in the long run; models with sticky prices describe the economy in the short run.
Macroeconomic events and performance arise from many microeconomic transactions, so macroeconomics uses many of the tools of microeconomics.
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