IE - 2(5,9) Flashcards
What is macroeconomics?
The study of the economy as a system.
What is GNP?
Gross National Product measures the income of an economy (what its citizens earn), the quantity of goods and services the economy can afford to purchase.
What is the difference between GDP and GNP?
GDP refers to the domestic levels of production. GNP measures the production of any person or corporation of a country. GNP includes entities outside the country.. GDP will include companies that work within a country but don’t actually come from the respective country.
What is the business cycle?
Refers to swings in output around an economy’s trend rate of growth.
What is economic growth?
A rise in real GNP.
What is the labour force?
People at work or looking for work.
What is the unemployment rate?
The fraction of the labour force without a job.
What is the inflation rate?
The percentage increase in the average price of goods and services.
When was the golden age of unemployment and why did it end?
During 1950-1960 unemployment stated at around 2%. Unemployment also stayed low during 1960-1970. This was due to rapid growth and low inflation. In the 1970s OPEC quadrupled the oil price, there was high inflation, low growth and increasing unemployment.
How did Thatcher influence inflation.
In the 1980s, the Thatcher government reduced inflation but lost control in the late 1980s when it let the economy grow to rapidly, leading to more inflation.
What is the circular flow?
Shows how real resources and financial payments flow between firms and households. Households provide factor services to firms who use the factors to make output. Households receive factor incomes from firms who in turn rent factor services from households. Households buy output from firms leading to firms selling output to households.
What are factor incomes for households?
Wages, rent and profits.
Why is the circular flow model flawed?
It assumes households spend all of their income on real resources and that all output from firms is sold.
What relationship is assumed to be shared by all factors in the circular flow model?
Economic activity can be measured by valuing total spending, total output or total earnings. All three methods give the same answer.
What does the circular flow between firms and households leave out?
Savings and investment, government spending and taxes, transactions between firms with the rest of the world?
What is GDP?
Measures the output made in the domestic economy, regardless of who provided the production inputs.
What is value added?
The increase in the value of goods as a result of the production process.
What are final goods?
Goods purchased by the ultimate user, either households buying consumer goods or firms buying capital goods such as machinery.
What are intermediate goods?
Partly finished goods that form inputs to a subsequent production process that then uses them up.