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How do economists measure a nation’s economic health?

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Presentation on theme: "How do economists measure a nation’s economic health?"— Presentation transcript:

1 How do economists measure a nation’s economic health?
Measuring the Economy Chapter 13 Essential Question: How do economists measure a nation’s economic health?

2 How big is the economy? To measure “how big”…snake (inches/feet), steer (pounds), baseball production (batting average), academic production (GPA), doctor’s office (ht, wt, BP, temp, pulse) but how to measure an economy? We use GDP = gross domestic product – value of all goods & services produced in a country during a time period (usually a quarter, or year) GDP formula… C + I + G + (X – I) = GDP C = consumption I = investments G = government spending (X – I) = (eXports – Imports). Also called NX = net exports.

3 What about inflation? Inflation – yearly rise in prices – makes it hard to compare this year vs. say 20 years ago. Two measures… Nominal GDP – measures GDP in “current dollars” (today’s prices) Inflation is NOT pulled out, so comparing to other years is hard. Real GDP – does NOT use current dollars, but uses “constant dollars”. This means they use a base year to pull out inflation. GDP can then be compared from year to year.

4 Notice the base year…2000, Q1.

5 Per capita GDP = GDP ÷ population
What about population? What if a country has lots of people vs. a country with just a few? We use per capita GDP. Per capita – per person, so it’s… Per capita GDP = GDP ÷ population Left = nominal GDP Right = per capita GDP

6 Unemployment Unemployment helps measure the economy. Low = good, high = bad Unemployment rate -- % of labor force seeking employment Employed – people in labor force & have a job Unemployed – people in labor force who are jobless but looking Not in labor force – eligible for labor force but not working or not looking (also students, retired, disabled, etc.) Usual unemployment rate is 4 to 6% Right now, it is states/unemployment-rate

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8 4 types of unemployment Frictional – when you’re “between jobs”
Structural – changes outdate your job or skills (new technology) Seasonal – some jobs have slow periods Cyclical – the economy has good times and hard times

9 Inflation Inflation is the rise in prices.
Inflation rate -- % increase in average price of goods/services per month or year To measure this, we use CPI = Consumer Price Index CPI uses a “market basket”, a group of common items purchased, to measure % changes Suppose last year – CPI was $205 Suppose this year – CPI is $213 % change formula is (N – O) ÷ O N=new number, O=old number, so… 213 – 205 = ÷ 205 = (.039 x 100 is 3.9%)

10 Cont. We also use a “cost of living” index.
Nominal cost of living – cost for basic goods people need in today’s prices Real cost of living – has inflation taken out, so now we can compare to earlier years Inflation types Creeping inflation – a slow steady rise, average is 3.4% per year Hyperinflation – fast inflation, rare in U.S. Deflation – drop in prices; good news is things are cheap, bad news is it’s bad for business What’s the current U.S. inflation rate?

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