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Economic Development

This document discusses key economic concepts related to scarcity and GDP. It notes that: 1) Scarcity means that resources are limited while wants and needs are unlimited, requiring economic choices about how to allocate resources efficiently. 2) GDP is composed of consumption (C), investment (I), government spending (G), and net exports (X-M) and can be measured in real or nominal terms depending on if price changes are accounted for. 3) The basic economic questions are: who gets scarce resources, what is produced with them, and who receives the finished products. Economic systems aim to answer these questions around efficient allocation of scarce resources.

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Jake Mempin
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views

Economic Development

This document discusses key economic concepts related to scarcity and GDP. It notes that: 1) Scarcity means that resources are limited while wants and needs are unlimited, requiring economic choices about how to allocate resources efficiently. 2) GDP is composed of consumption (C), investment (I), government spending (G), and net exports (X-M) and can be measured in real or nominal terms depending on if price changes are accounted for. 3) The basic economic questions are: who gets scarce resources, what is produced with them, and who receives the finished products. Economic systems aim to answer these questions around efficient allocation of scarce resources.

Uploaded by

Jake Mempin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 16

Discussion 1- 1 Key Points Discussion 2.

1 Key Points
scarcity the basic economic problem GDP
, components of

limited in supply and in demand


Expenditure Pov
-

+0mi Prod
Economic system : in
allocating scarce resources
'

y =
Firms Households Government Foreign Purchases
-

scarcity neonates choices ; choices must be made on Y =


I C G EI✓
how to allocate resources efficiently .
Net
Exports cnx)

3 Basic Economic Questions


Real GDP and Nominal GDP
$91 real growth
Nominal GDP
who will get them what will be produced w/ them
Apples / QQ PI
, ,

( nominal
=

1000¥Gppz °" "

#Ég%?,% .tk?-8Yuain7.iYyear/
and who will receive the finished product :
noo prices
GDP
=

/
.

, ①
Qz


----'µ
'
-

models ,
graph ,
mathematics , Formula P =
0.50 Pz =
0.55
,

a,

I

.
Increase does not always equals
'
The circular Ftow Model of a Market Economy '
to productivity , sometimes it may
P, Pz
the Just because of price increase or
Households : Land , Labor ,
capital are three scarce resources
p
more quantities are produced
it contains
.

Resource market :
exchange resources
from households .

Quantity =
1200/0.55
Firms :
they Qa
=
2182

P, =
0.50

www.tneesiadthemcwases?knY-?Fjjgg , g wa ,
t
-
it
Real
prices were held constant
GDP (actual increase]

µ ,m , Resource market touch olds


Year ji GDP in year 1
prices
0
L

these " °"
buy
they
Produce
resources
to
d their Land GDP

}
services Deflator
-

goods a' %resources -

Labor scarce

f-
man profit Max
% Real GDP,
Heart Yearby
-
.
.

resources
utilities capital
-

seu geis for more


-

than the cost in Happiness


'

→ 110
""
"" ^ 100 →

ii.
""

:÷¥¥÷
-

÷ Ñ¥§
e-
_=①? .
.
Nomination
Real Gppz
= II
100
Nominal -

÷ ,
✗ Real

. ..
..
"Ñ& I
to measured in
and genius ""& Real GDP
=

their way
9-
year 1$
GDP -2
Deflator
Year 1
prices
( over 100 ] p
Base year
?
GNH -
economic development
=
happiness
1
Inflation
-

T price inflation
wants q' needs
-

f monetary supply might also lead to price inflation


faint community +
Religion Happiness
-

shock ( oil gas f)


-

supply
zooa 4th Dragon King give up his sovereignty good
-

a little is
-

2008 -

first voted Inflation is measured with :

with Values
Development CPI -
urban consumer Cu )

Basey current

150 ( 1-50%7

60% apples 100

if rice supply is enough anaÉ 18011-80%2


>
,

is it good if we just consume 0.6×1001-0.4×100=100



0.6×1501-0.4×180=16211-62%7
it put to ourselves instead

of exporting fromforeign
countries or
importing rice
us? What do you
from
?
prefer
Macroeconomics deals with the Expansion at fiscal policy
-

increase expenditure decrease taxes


economy 's aggregates
- ,

services ) contractionany fiscal policy


-

decrease expenditure increase taxes


Inflation ( increase of goods ei , unemployment ,
,

economic General appropriation act


-

determine the budget of each


growth and development money supply
department DBCC together with the Office of the Pres
'

AD AS .

AD
.

p As =

Aggregate supply

Gross National Product (GWP) -

R -
- -
- - -
- -

# -

f •

I
- -
-

± l
Po
?
- - - - -
-

,
, per capita GNP =
GNP / Total Population
I ' '
As
1

,

,
AD
'
-
erroneous but a good measurement in terms of measuring the GDP
As , AD
,
'
i ,
and estimates how much a
person earns

Yz Yo Y Y -

Output =
GDP Limitations OF GNP
,
=

-
GNP 100 ; Population 10 -

wrong because Of improper allocation

Inflation
-
A price level of resources to the society .

Demt push
-
GNP Accounting are understated because many small businesses are not

registered in the market .

I t .
The evils of economic development were not included

increase in demand supply problem : decrease in supply


For goods and services
it cost of production increases and the y
Yn×M_,
=
at It G +

budget didn't increase Need tumaas ng Y output


=

bus firm can't shoulder the cost


price .

o =
consumption =
Co t a YD -
MPC -

marginal propensity to consume


(f) b disposable
Yp =
Y -
T 1- TR
income income taxes transfers
GDP summation
of all the goods produced within amount OF
-

Net income .
Gross income

Y= Ct It G t Nx money to consume
a specific period of time .

Y t Investment t Government Expenditure 1- Exports a) t Imports cm )


consumption
=

Buying @ 7111 ej Government spend


-

Residential
-

{
-

( road construction )
Nonresidential
1) Find (a) the reduced form and (b) the numerical value of Y
investment
( firms ) y
=
Otl a) Y :
Ct 1

Laissez Faire 0 co tbyd Y cot bYd t Io


policy
=
let alone
-
=

creates its own demand Ya Y T Y Co t b CY T) t Io


Jay 's law supply
-
- - -
=

I =
Io
'

YÑbY -
BT t IO

Where : 00=100 YFBYTY ) =


co bt + to
countries
-

Absolute scarcity scarcity in both


-

b =
0-06
fbt 1) =
Co -

b Tt Io
Relevant scarcity -

one good is scarce in one country , Io -_


¢0

Y,=G%
"
abundant in the other . 1- =
so

µ..,..*
"
11-0067
=%?¥
tirm§]→ieotion
Macroeconomic circular model reduced form
,

Government Export
=100g;yt4°_

]
expenditure
Investment
Expenditure
""

payments consumption BGovernments Ab✓ad☐


( salaries )
/ / import 0.94

g Net
Net
taxes
expenditure -156.38J
Éifndrawa
>
saving
House
☒ "

spread Lending Rate


= -

money money
④ →
☒ →
☒ saving 's rate
customer
profit
-

financial deficit spread 10%


= -

surplus
raving intermmediay upending =

8I profit OF the bank


-

unit unit
bank
depository
←¥¥
mower
-

interest
?⃝
?⃝
2) y Ct I t Gt X M
-

to =
cot byd Y =
Ct I t G t ✗ -

Yd =
Y -

T = Cot bYd t Io ti y t Got Xotxy -

Mot
my
T Totty co t b (Y T ] t to
tiy t Got Xot xx Not my
-

=
-
=

1- =
Iot iy
=
cot by -
BT t
Io ti y t Got Xo txy -

Mot my

G Go =
cot by b ( Totty ) Io t iy 1- Got ✗ O t
Xy Mot
t
my
= - -

✗ = Xo
txy =
cot by -

b To t
bty t Io t iy
+ GO t Xo t ✗y
-

Mo t
my
M
=
Mo my
-

C- by -1 bty iy - -

Xy -

my 1- Y) =
co -

bio t Io t Go t Xo -

Mo

Y l -

b 1- bt -
i -

X -
m + 1)

YYIIFIE.is#.mm-=co-bTotIotGotxo-moCl-btbT -
i -

X
-

m )

÷÷÷÷÷
*

I0 I0 I0
X
Gross Domestic Product market value of all final goods Ei services produced within a country in a
given period
-

All goods measured in same unit .

Things that don't have a market value are excluded .

-
it excludes illicit goods and items consumed and produced at home .

it includes
tangible goods and intangible services
-

it includes currently produced goods


by citizen
measures value production whether done its own
-

of ,
or

foreigners located here .

per year or quarter 13 months ]

Final goods -

are consumed by the end user ( only included]

Intermediate goods used in the production of other goods


-

Consumption (c) Investment 117

Household spending Goods that will be used to produce


'
For renters ,
includes rental payments .
-
Business capital
'
For homeowners ,
includes the imputed
-
Residential capital
rental value of the house but not Inventory
'

, accumulations

purchase price 1
mortgage payments
Not included
purchases of new housing
'
:

Nominal GDP has no base year


Real GDP needs base year
TYPES OF INFLATION
Monetary policy Monetary bank or BSP in Philippines
-

the circulation
contraction any monetary policy decrease money in
-

Expansionary monetary policy


Hyperinflation -

inflation at extremely high rates ( 1000 ,


1M percent a year]

must then
to
stop this ,
we
stop producing money apply contraction any

Galloping Inflation -

at a rate of 50 Or 100 or 200 percent annually .

Moderatein Elation inflation at a price level increases


-

Deflation the general level of prices


fall
-

a in

GDP Deflator measures the average price of all GNP


-

( N°pIa;%%☐ )
GDP Deflator =

✗ 100

Inflation
(GDPDq=lator2-GDPDq=1at0r#
=

✗ too
GDP Deflator I

X=_

F-
Inflation
consumer 's Price Index measures the average price of goods consumed by urban wage earners
-

compute the
purchasing power of worker 's
peso
-

1. Bureau of labor statistics ( BLS ) conducts survey to find out what includes the typical consumer 's basket

2. Find the prices of all goods in the basket

3.
compute total cost

4. Choose base
a year

cpi-wstot-basketinulrrenty.ee# ✗ 100%
Cost of basket in base year

5.
Compute the inflation rate
Inflation Rate =CPlnew_CPl01d_ ✗ 100
CPI old

solution :

A. 5×10=50 Volution :
beep
5×20=1-00chicken A. 2006 Household Basket
\ 150 9 ✗5 =
45

CPI =

✗ 100% 6×25=151
195

B. 9×10=90 CPI

10oz
CP1=125@ 2005

6×20--11
19,30-150-+1002
B. Rate of increase =

210 CPI = 175 2006

Inflation Rate = =
302
✗ 100%
125 40%
Inflation rate from previous problem
=

lcpllnt.la/-ion--401--/-

Problems with the CPI

1. substitution Bias CPI misses this substitution because it uses a fixed basket of goods
-

2. Introduction Of New Goods

3. Unmeasured Quality Change Improvements in quality increases the value of goods quality is hard to measure
-

These problems increases the CPI and overstates inflation by about 52 every year .

Contrasting the CPI and GDP Deflator comparing Dollar Figures From Different Times

Imported consumer goods Amount in


=
Amount in

Pñcetweltoday
included in CPI 1- do , ,a , Price level in
year 1-
today 's dollars
.

year
excluded in GDP Deflator $ 7.78 1 15 X
21€
.
= .

Capital Goods 31-3


-
excluded from CPI

-
included in GDP deflator ( domestically produced]
Use this technique to convert a time series of current dollar
-

the Basket ( nominal ) figures into constant


-

dollar (real ] figures .

i
CPI uses fixed basket

.
GDP deflator uses basket of currently produced goods -

1986-87 :$ 1,414 ( 1986 CPI =


109.67 =
1,414 11203£
( matter if different prices are changing ) -

2006-07 : $5,834 (2006401--203-8) 109.6


=
2,629.32

Tuition are much lower in 1986


fee .
Indexation
-

a dollar is indexed for inflation if it is automatically corrected for inflation by law or in contract .

Real and Nominal Interest Rates

Nominal

interest that are not connected for inflation

growth rate in the dollar value of a deposit or debt


-

Real

corrected for inflation


-

( nominal interest rate ) -

( inflation rate )

I o
Fo #
PRODUCTION Ei GROWTH

Economics prosperity varies substantially around the world

measured by GDP per person .

Growth rates of real GDP also varies ,


the relative

positions of countries can change dramatically


overtime .

standard of living depends the


on
economy 's
ability to produce outputs .

Productivity depends on the physical capital ,

human capital ,
natural resources ,
and

technological knowledge available to workers .

Government the 's


policies can
influence economy
growth rate :

encourage savings Ei investment



investment from abroad
'

foster education

promote good health


'

political stability
-

free trade
'

'
research and development of new technologies .

Diminishing returns the capital economy has


-

more an ,

the less additional output the economy gets from


'

an

extra unit of capital This makes countries


.

poorer
grow faster because of catch up effect
-

EFFECT OF POPULATION GROWTH

1- Rapid population growth may lower productivity


by stretching the supply and reducing the amount
of capital available .

2. A larger population may enhance technological


there are scientist and
process because more

engineers .
EMPLOYMENT

underemployed

prefer to be
time
workers who highly skilled but working in low skill
jobs and part time workers who would full
-

are
-
.

Unemployed
total lack OF work at given point in time People who want work and are able take suitable but can't find them
-

a .
to jobs .

Over employment

those who work long hours in jobs which provide very low earnings
-

soft employment
"
rights
"
less descent employment those which provides security of tenure, social security benefits and very limited
-

or no no

canteen workers

Not in the Labor Force

includes students homemakers and retirees


full time
-
.

Labor Force =

employed t unemployed
Labor Force rate Labor Force / Adult 100%
=

Population ✗

Bureau of Labor and statistics ( BLS ) measures unemployment rate They conduct survey and categorize adult population
-
.

those who are 16 years old and above .

Unemployment rate decreases means businesses are doing well

TYPES OF UNEMPLOYMENT Market power of unions when unions push the wages in unionized industries
-

Frictional Unemployment above the equilibrium level , they create a surplus Of labor .

Temporary dislocation
-

Theory of efficiency firms find it


profitable to
pay wages above
-

wages
-

Resign to work in another Firm


equilibrium level .

High wages improves worker 's life


-

Out
of work because OF unavoidable sickness
-

structural unemployment classical unemployment


New tech dislocates the workers to be out work
-

of -

refers to keeping the minimum above equilibrium wage .

Job mismatch Natural rate of unemployment


-

cyclical unemployment -

normal rate , the sum of total frictional and structural


Product of business cycle unemployment
-

Rod berths
'
Cure
Unemployment Rate É
( Employed t unemployed ) Increase labor share in national income
-

Establish a normal working day

H3.o%?%, Average production for wage


=
value
-

Prices should be fixed


-

=
7.642 Rent ! Price of labor cost
product
-
=

Price of raw material price OF product


=

REASONS WHY UNEMPLOYMENT EXIST


Minimum wage has a
flaw because it
underpays overqualified workers
-

Discourage workers
Minimum wage law is different population ; city all relies
based on in
people
-

people who do not want to work


-

on work while in province people has their own land / livestock which helps
people who gave up looking for a job
-
,

Frictional unemployment
reduce their cost of living ( self-sufficiency )
.

the time it takes workers to search for a job .

Minimum laws
wage
-

the wage of unskilled and inexperienced workers ,


-

raising
this law increase the quantity of labor supplied and

reduce the quantity demanded .


Karl Rod berths

Theory of crisis
-

-
Decrease in purchasing power
'
Decrease in consumption

-
Paradox Of Thrift it majority of the people saves more
-

money than it can less


consuming , cause production for
firms and decrease profit which will result in unemployment
Law Of Decreasing
MONEY Ei FINANCIAL SYSTEM

Financial Market

capital Market ( Long term)


-
-

money market ( short term )


-
-

stock Market stook share Of ownership


-

YOU can sell it whenever you need money


voting power
-

dividends : stook and cash dividend

two types Of share

1. common share
-

more voting rights ,


less dividends ( Mara Ming besesmakakaboto peso less important ? )

Preferred voting rights ( they can't vote in affairs rarely lang maka boto)
2. share more dividends less
company's
-
-

, ,

Y④ IID
BNl⑨ p m> Mr
wmpar①
Fee depends on the stock you purchase

Arbitrage opportunity
-

happens back when we have two stock exchange buying of , stock in one ✓ took exchange market in a

lower price then selling it in a higher price to the other market .

Blue chip stocks huge and successful companies ; good to invest to but the stocks high
-

are .

Bond certificate of indebtedness


-

Government -

treasury bills (short)

treasury bonds ( long]

treasury notes

Corporation commercial papers Cohort) 27019 months


-

corporate bonds ( long]


To increase the money or income they have or
for expansionary purposes

Mutual funds investment company that collects money from the public then the manager will allocate the funds to different
-

securities to avoid risk .


( long term )
-

You need to wait several years to get the benefits they promised you .

Divini tied investment -

investing in different securities

Liquidity Butter
-

You don't put your whole money in stocks , if the stock market

plummeted you'll still have the money to start over again .

Y Ct l t G t ✗ M
Open
-

economy
:
Loanable Funds Market

Closed Y =
c t l t G real int
economy
: .

rate
I y c G
- -
-
.

I =
I depositors
r
9
- - -
-

✓ LF
- - -
=

Private savings =
Y -
C T -

HD DLF =
borrowers
I →
Dirt

public savings
=
G -
T D budget vurp 1W (
t) sit .

; the

budget deficit C- ) Q Of loanable


Q .

Funds
?⃝
Money medium of exchange
-

Nominal money

value in terms of money itself


Real money

value of money accounts for inflation


after a week . the price level increased at 10¥

1%1,002 90,909.0%
=

Functions of money

medium of exchange
'

most important job


unit of account
-

measures goods ei services


-

common denominator
-
standard deterred payment
'

borrowing a lending easier


-

'
store of value
-

financial asset that can be used to

store wealth .

Kinds of money

commodity money l gold standard )

Fiat no intñasis value


money managed Pap currency
' - -
'

AGGREGATE 9 SUPPLY DEMAND

Economic threats are unpredictable ( Pandemic )

Recession
negative quarters of GDP and GNP
-

Two

Classical Economic Theory


-

Nominal variable doesn't affect real variable

money ripply and Price level


output q
'

employment
-

Accurate for the long-run but not the short run


-

AS / AD Model

basic macroeconomic tool for studying output fluctuations


-

and determination the level and the inflation


the of price
rate .

AD
AS
P
Aggregate supply
← ID
for each given price level its the quantity of
R
- ,
- - - -
-

1-
po • equilibrium
willing
- - - -

- -
→ I
1
As
=
AD
output firms are to supply -

pz
-

I
1
I →
1
I - Overall supply
1 ←
I ,
1
I
upward sloping : firms willing to
supply
-
i are
Yz Yo Yi Y
at higher prices -

Note :
If AD increases , both Y and P

increases
Aggregate Demand
.

'
Note It AD shifts to the left it level in
output
:
combination of price level 9
-

decreases and both X and P declines which


'
.

goods q money markets are


simultaneously
in the equilibrium
higher prices reduces money supply which reduces
-

demand output
for

AD AS
p
it
Reasons why changes :

← →
-

political
Pz - - -
-

1-
po Economic
- -
- -

1- •
P +
- -

,

1
I I -

Endemic / Pandemic
→ ,
1 I
1 1
,
1

12 Yo Yi
Y

Note :
It AS turns left ,
it increases .

Price increases .
output decreases .

If As turns right ,
it decreases .

Price decreases Output increases . .


AGGREGATE DEMAND

Poni ble why it shifts :


'
AD AD Maroni
p
Policy measures
-

up

monetary policy ( Bank Ei interest rate)


R
)
- -
- - -

fiscal policy ( Expenditures


-

government related
-

Po - - - -
-
- ! ,

1
Changes → G. T ,
Money supply
I -
Consumer ed investor confidence ( why is it downward sloping )
1 level raises
Wealth effect price the value
of money holdings
Y
Yo and stimulates consumers
'

spending
it depends on the real
-

money supply interest rate effect lower


price level reduces the quantity of money
-
value of money policed by the household demand

central bank banking system .

Exchange rate effect reduction of interest rate ,


dollar depreciation or

in
E- nominal money supply appreciation the market .
It stimulates the NX .

P price level
=
Y =
Ct It Gt X -

4M → fr & I 4 AD T T T
Interest
r wealth exchange
4 -M→ H t I BAD WD C. Y P rate effect
,

effect
rate effect
P
investment saving curve ( is )
p
Downward sloping because there is an

inverse relationship between interest rate Ei


investment .

Ex When
.
r
drops , many will invest . This means that many
people will borrow

just to invest
- money .

Investment

Why is it downward sloping ? KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE DEMAND

will result P Initial taeilibriwm (E)


'
level of M
'
in a
given , higher prices AD AD

the value As AD
money supply
=
in low real or
of
=L AD
dollars / pesos is low will also result in low AD .
E IF the policies increases ,

Po • • A,
9ms
I
'

,
4G lot
'
Quantity theory of Money 1 A new equilibrium will
correspond on
1 :
w/ This will also
money MV =
PY Output
Y, Y
a higher output .

I 1 YO
velocity price increase employment .

Velocity
-
no .

Of times an average = Nominal GDP ( PY) Keynesian

peso is change hand in a total money spent in a AD


policy
year
-

year .
-

Keynesian supply curve

money
-

money supply provided by the CB classical

-
AD Policy
Let alone policy
-

NO government interference in the market

when Great Depression happened they realized that this set up


-

is wrong .

-
Classical supply curve

As schedule is vertical at full employment level of output .

This means that not all resources are utilized .

P As
Pi - - - - -
-
• E
" AJ=AD_ IF firms hire more

)
/ LEWD Prime
workers , wit of production
Po • E • E also increase they need
- -
- - - - -

HAD -

FP to increase price to

'
not in output AD keep up -

AD
y
y
side economics As as a major driver of economy
supply
-

supply side policies encourage growth in the potential output


-

AD AD As
p
supply ride policy encourage growth in the potential output ( increase supply]
-

Policy 1 Remove unnecessary regulation

]
Pi -
- - -
-
.

Po -
- -
-

• ' ' t tax =


b income work gov't
Easier for business to open q create supply
I 1
of govt
.

expenditll
Policy
'

Maintaining efficient legal system


'
11 .
§
I 1
AD
minimize
1 ! Policy 111
Technological progress income
.

on

Yo 4 deficit
Yp Y
I 1
actual potential Politicians use side economics by wilting taxes it will increase As enough
supply
-

output output
that tax collection will increase
actually
p AD AD Potential output rather than fall .

*
It tax decreases AD will increases because will
, more
people
E
"
demand with their disposable income .


R
your taxes ]

-


-

incentives to senior citizen will cut


-

( Ex Giving
- -
-
-

E cutting taxes is incentive .

* YOU
actual should not decrease tax (G income) and increase spending
output

Yo
Demand side will increase the supply cohort
-

hen]
Meanwhile , the policies has permanent effect .

AD
p AJ
,o Also Ado Ago
sticky wage Theory
'

Py Po •
-

when wage increases ,


employment 9 labor reduces
=
-

É? = =•
-


ooAD sticky price theory
w,
nigh selling price
90
AD -

unexpected price fall , firms hill have sales reduction ei will cut off their production
80AD

HAD
Misperceptions Theory
Yo Y -
When suppliers see the price fall producers ,
will stop their production assevmming that their
product will have

'
a lower telling price
AJ
AD
p AS

P, - - -
- -
-

¢
1- • + Dts =
top
Po
-
- - - -

- - - - -
- -

l• ,
pz
1
! I
141
AJ 1
1 I
1 I 1
,

Yikyo Y
9095100
MONETARY POLICY Ei THE CENTRAL BANK

Money Reserve Requirement


M1 currency + Demand Deposits Banks reserve percentage of the money you deposited
-
=
a

m2
=
MI t
savings and Time Deposits will go to the BVP vault and can't be used .

M3 M2 +
Deposit substitutes This is done to prepare if customer suddenly pull out
=
a
-
-

Rediscount Rate

Nominal VJ . Real Money Supply


Nominal value is value in terms money itself
Real value is MIP

Monetary Policy
Expansionary contractionany

to RR 4 RR
Characteristics Of Money Reserve requirement

to Red B- & Red rate


1. Durability Rediscount rate
.

tell
2. Portability Open Market Operations Buy

be broken down ) t to
3. Divisibility ( can moral suasion
'
As
4. Hard to counterfeit p
AD AD

EMP
g. Must be generally accepted by a population Ap
" →

I
6. Valuable ( holds value overtime ) P F- -


- - -
,

• I
po
- -
- - -
-

-
- -
so 1 1 →
pz
-

I 1
91 AD
'
Functions Of Money I 1 ←
cop ,
I 1 I
Medium Of Exchange
Yz Yo Y, Y

store Of Value Fiscal Policy


'

spending a taxing government


-

power of
EFP CFP

to tax 4 spending ttax tr spending


4 Income
Unit Of Account
t
gov't expenditures

Phillips curve

inflation a unemployment
'

standard of Deterred Payment


-

negative relationship between


After stagnation happened :

K Unemployment t inflation AUGMENTED PHILLIPS CURVE


8 4 t
unemployment inflation
t income FAD

9 consumption
Why 4 output
Central Bank reorganized ?
* price level Cinflation )
the capital flights removed their investments in the pH during
( short-run ) ( long -

run )
Manos regime .
to avoid capital outflow , they released CDUI

to partially organize payment . Central Bank was


bankrupt
prompting them to make R A. 7653
.
-
the new central bank .
DISCUSSION 6 .
1

Monetary policy government's way of controlling money supply


-

Federal Reserve system ( 1913 ) Central Bank

control inflation ei encourage full employment


Functions : checks
1 .

Clearing
supplying actual
2.
currency
3. setups rules for other bank

4. Lends other banks and control interest rate


money to
Lower rate < More banks will borrow < More in circulation
money
Bank reserve requirement -
amount Of money a bank can hold

hiwaeay pa to ✓a
mga deposited money

Philips Wwe
high inflation
inflation
L# low
unemployment
A- -
long

Fun " •
short
employ
recessing
-

-
*
✓ RPC
low inflation

51
Unemployment
.

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