Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

ECO 212 PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS REVIEW ..., Exams of Microeconomics

ECO 213 PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS REVIEW SHEET. GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP). GDP is the economy wide measure of economic income during a specific time.

Typology: Exams

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/07/2022

nabeel_kk
nabeel_kk 🇸🇦

4.6

(66)

1.3K documents

1 / 2

Toggle sidebar

Related documents


Partial preview of the text

Download ECO 212 PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS REVIEW ... and more Exams Microeconomics in PDF only on Docsity! Development of this review sheet was made possible by funding from the US Department of Education through South Dakota’s EveryTeacher Teacher Quality Enhancement grant. UNIVERSITY OF SIOUX FALLS ECO 213 PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS REVIEW SHEET GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP) GDP is the economy wide measure of economic income during a specific time period. It is the measure of final goods/service sold. GDP is made up of four components: consumption, investment, government and net exports. GDP can be stated in nominal terms (i.e. current prices) or real terms (constant prices). Real GDP is adjusted for changes in the price level over time, and is a more accurate way of comparing economic activity and measuring economic growth. UNEMPLOYMENT AND INFLATION There are three types of unemployment: frictional, structural and cyclical. Full employment includes frictional and structural unemployment, so deviations from full employment are due to cyclical unemployment. The economic cost of unemployment is that resources are not producing output, and is approximated by Okun’s Law. Inflation is measured by using a price index and measuring the changes in the index over a period of time. Inflation is categorized by demand-pull or cost-push. A big economic problem of inflation is that it arbitrarily re-distributes wealth. BASIC MACROECONOMICS The multiplier is the impact that a change in investment has on the overall economy, since a small change in investment leads to a large change in GDP since people tend to consume a large portion of their income (Marginal Propensity to Consume). AGGREGATE DEMAND (AD) & AGGREGATE SUPPLY (AS) Aggregate demand is the total demand for an economies goods and services and aggregate supply is the total supply of an economies goods and services. Aggregate demand is downward sloping. In the short-run AS is upward-sloping and in the long-run AS is vertical. The intersection of AD and AS (similar to supply and demand) determine the equilibrium price level and real GDP of an economy. Factors changing AD, AS or both will lead to changes in either the price level, real GDP or both. With AD shifting right, this is an example of demand-pull inflation, and with AS shifting left, this is an example of cost-push inflation. FISCAL POLICY One of the ways that government can stimulate economic growth is to employ expansionary fiscal policy (i.e. Federal government increases in spending, decreases in taxes, or both). Expansionary fiscal policy shifts the AD curve to the right, increasing real GDP and the price level. Depending on where the AD curve intersects the AS curve will determine how much of the expansion goes to real GDP and how much is offset by a higher price level. The crowding out effect is if expansionary fiscal policy leads to higher interest rates which will shift the AD to the left. Additionally, the net export effect is if expansionary fiscal policy leads to a decline in net exports, again shifting AD to the left.
Docsity logo



Copyright © 2024 Ladybird Srl - Via Leonardo da Vinci 16, 10126, Torino, Italy - VAT 10816460017 - All rights reserved