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What do the following have in common? They are all forecasting something! Bracketology The Weather Channel Wall Street.

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Presentation on theme: "What do the following have in common? They are all forecasting something! Bracketology The Weather Channel Wall Street."— Presentation transcript:

1 What do the following have in common? They are all forecasting something! Bracketology The Weather Channel Wall Street

2 Brainstorm 3 predictions about YOUR economic future: Things to consider….your skills, education, job possibilities, and future living conditions…..BE SPECIFIC!

3 Measuring our Nation’s output - GDP GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is the end result and it is the most important measure of a how a country is performing. It is the total amount of goods and services produced in a country in a given year. GDP per capita is average salary for a country.

4 So what does it really mean? If GDP is up, then the economy is strong and people are HAPPY If GDP is down, then the economy is weaker and people are SAD

5 GDP over GNP GDP represents total production WITHIN (domestic) a nation’s borders…..so a US company that has a factory in Spain does not count for our GDP… that is GNP (Gross National Product) --but a Spanish company in the US would count toward our GDP! GNP calculates total production by US labor (including a US company abroad) Therefore, most modern economists prefer GDP over GNP because GDP only measures a nation’s production within its geographic borders.

6 Components of GDP 1.Measurement Personal consumption expenditures [C] + gross investment [I] +gov’ t purchases of goods and services [G] + exports – imports [X-M] = GDP This is the formula to calculate GDP….C + I + G + [X-M] = GDP 2. Sampling and Survey Method Gov’t uses estimates that are compiled in surveys to compute GDP….Although not perfect, the figures are reasonably complete 3. Intermediate Products These are products that are used to make other products….they are not counted twice **Sales of used goods are NOT included in GDP

7 Factors that reduce reliability 1.Reporting Delays So much data to process…it is done quarterly (every 3 months) ….so a gap exists between actual GDP and reported GDP 2.Composition Output What are we making? Schools vs. nuclear warheads…but both count 3. Quality of Life 5,000 homes may be built but where and cost? 4.Exclusion of Nonmarket Activities Lawn mowing business that is paid under the table 5.Illegal Activities Gambling, prostitution, drugs, gun running…….all lucrative, all illegal!

8 What is inaccurate about GDP? Major problem with GDP : distortions because of inflation (inflation can make output appear to grow without actually doing so) Price index (indices) are used to reduce distortion of inflation Consumer Price Index (CPI) – a measure of inflation The gov’t measures inflation via the CPI Reports on price changes for about 90,000 items in 364 categories Prices for goods/services currently sampled is taken from 85 geographically distributed areas around the country The CPI is compiled monthly by Bureau of Labor Statistics They look at a market basket (a fixed list of commonly used items used to track inflation)

9 Calculating CPI The gov’t looks at a market basket (a fixed list of commonly used items used to track inflation). We are going to use Thanksgiving Dinner as an example. Market Basket for current yr Market Basket for base year CPI= x 100 Market Basket item 1998 16 lb turkey 14 oz package of stuffing $13.71 $2.36 1 gallon of milk 3lb of sweet potatoes $2.63 $2.10 12 oz package of rolls 8 oz carton whipping cream $1.42 $1.10 1 lb of celery/carrots 30oz pumpkin pie mix $0.74 $1.58 12 oz package cranberries Package of 2 nine inch pie shells $2.00 $1.37 16 oz package of frozen green peas Misc items (coffee, other ingred.) $1.05 $3.04 TOTAL cost of market basket $33.09 Base year = $28.74 for 12 Thanksgiving Dinner items in 1986

10 Figure these out! Market Basket for current yr Market Basket for base year 1.What is the CPI for 1998? ___________ 2.Did inflation or deflation occur for the price of Thanksgiving meal between 1986 and 1998? 3.What is the CPI for 2000 if the market basket is $32.37? 4.Did inflation or deflation occur between 1998 and 2000? 5.What is the CPI for 2002 if the market basket is $34.56? 6.What is the CPI for 2004 if the market basket is $35.68? 7.What is the CPI for 2006 if the market basket is $38.10? 8.Did inflation or deflation occur between 2000 and 2006? CPI= x 100

11 Current vs. Real GDP 1.Current/Nominal GDP not adjusted for inflation….it is measure in current dollars 2.Real GDP after adjustments for inflation. You will see this on the final…….Real income is measured in terms of constant dollars (at a fixed rate)

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13 Ch 16 INFLATION Definition: rise in general price level…negative effects on economy…tends to rise near end of EXPANSION Three Degrees of Inflation: 1.Creeping – range of 1-3%/yr 2.Galloping – range of 100-300%/yr (form Soviet bloc countries…early 1990’s) 3.Hyperinflation- 500%/yr (former Soviet Union) 5 possible explanations for Inflation 1.Demand Pull – as demand continues to increase, price of goods is “pulled” even higher 2.Gov deficit – inflation is blamed on federal deficit 3.Cost-push – increased production costs “push” producers to raise prices even if demand hasn’t increased 4.Wage price spiral – no one is to blame…it is a self perpetuating spiral that is tough to stop 5.Excessive monetary growth – money supply grows faster than real GDP


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