Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Macroeconomics: The study of
phenomena, inflation,
unemployment and economic
growth
- Monetary Policy
- The bank of Canada has the power to increase or decrease the ,number of dollars in the Economy
- Real vs Potential Output
- The Output is the quantity of goods and services actually produced within a given time period
- Potential Output: highest potential refers to the real Gdp within a close period
- Aggregate Demand: The demand for a GDP of a country
- Reserve: Deposits the banks recieved but cannot loan out
- Banks don't hold 100 percent reserves because then it wont influence the supply of money
- Increase: Must hole reserves means they loan out less of each dollar that is deposited
- Raises reserve Ratio: lowers the money multiplier and decreases money supply
- Decrease in Reserve Ratio: Raises the money multiplier and increases money supply
- Open Market Operations: Purchase of sale of government bonds by the bank of Canada
- Increase the supply of money in circulation: by buying something
- Demand Increases: Higher level of prices
- Decrease: The supply of money by: seliing something
- Sterilization: The process of offsetting foreign
exchange market operations with open market
operations so the effect on money supply is
cancelled out
- Overnight Rate: The rate of interest on very short term loans between commercial banks
- Raising: reduces the money supply
- Lowering: Increases the money supply
- Money Supply
Imperfect: banks loan
out money some of their
deposits which increases
the money in the
economy
- Counterfeit Bills: Will increase the money supply which will
increase spending, employment, nations GDP, rate of inflaion
and Bank of Canada may raise overnight rate
- Keyness Effect: Higher Price level implies lower
real money supply meaning higher interest rates
which means lower investments spending, new
capital,lower quantity of goods being demanded
- Multiplier Effect: Circulation of money
- Macroeconomics Measures
- Consumer Price Index
- Prices paid by consumers (households) over periods of times to compare
- CPI does not consider subsitution
- Macroeconomics: Measures the total income of everyone in the
economy and the expenditure of the economic output
of goods and servi es
- GDP: market value of all final goods and services within a country during a period of time
- Includes: Final Goods, Intermediate goods when
sold as is, Goods and Services and Exports and
Imports (Consumption), Business investment in
equipment (Investment), Government expenditure
of final goods and services-weapons (Government)
- Not Included: Intermediate goods because its already included in the final sale, the resale of an item,
Items produced in different country, exchanges of items, Non-market transactions, Welfare,
Exchanges in Stock and Bond, Black Market Transactions
- Real GDP: The measure of an amount produced that is not affected in the changes of prices, how it prevailed in the past
- Nominal GDP: The production of goods and services valued at current prices
- Net Exports: Spending on domestically produced goods by
foreigners (exports) minus spending on foreign goods by
domestic residents (imports)
- GDP Deflator: The measure of the price level calculated by the ratio
- Nominal GDP/Real GDP * 100
- Inflation: Increase of the overall price level or erosion in economy currency
- If inflation increases by 10% consumers will buy 10% less goods
- Inflation Rate :(B-A)/B*100
- Inflation not considered in CPI
- Helped: Companies who can raise prices without raising wages and borrowers who are repaying debt with less valuable money
- Hurt by Inflation: Workers those on a fixed income and people who are saving money
- Fiscal Period
- Expansionary Policy: a policy of increasing the money supply and reducing interest rates
- Decreases taxes (injection) leads to more
consumption, employment, output, more gov't
spending
- Contractionary Policy: A policy of decreasing the money supply and increasing interest rates to dampen economy
- Inflation: Increase taxes (leakage) decrease in spending, decrease gov't spending (leakage)
- The use of government taxation and spending policies(expenditure, borrowing)
to influence the circular flow of income and to acheive macroeconomic goals
and alter direction of the economy
- Keyness Proposed
- Injection: Government Spending
- Leakage: Taxes
- Stagflation: stagnating economic growth high unemployment and high inflation
- Cause: (short Term) Supply shock
- Limitations
- TIme Lags, Government having difficulties changing spending and taxation, conflicts between governments
- In the 1930s economists thought
recessions were apart of life and
could not be fixed ("Lassiez faire"
theory began functions well on its
own gov't invovlvment unnecessary)