Monday, April 4, 2016

Unit 4 Monetary Policy Video (Problem #1)

Here was the problem I worked out in the video:
I. Assume that the reserve requirement is 5 percent and banks hold no excess reserves.
A. Assume that Ally Sheedy deposits $400 of cash into her checking account at Wells Fargo. Calculate each of the following.
1. The maximum dollar amount that Wells Fargo can initially lend.
2. The maximum total change in demand deposits in the banking system.
3. The maximum change in the money supply
B. Assume that the Federal Reserve buys $5 million in government bonds on the open market. As a result of the open market purchase, calculate the maximum increase in the money supply in the banking system.




Thursday, March 3, 2016

MPC & MPS



Fiscal Policy & More

Fiscal policy
changes in the expenditures or tax revenues of the federal government
2 tools of fiscal policy
taxes: government can increase or decrease taxes
spending: government can increase or decrease spending

Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt
balanced budget: revenue = expenditures
budget deficit: revenues < expenditures
budget surplus: revenues > expenditures
government debt: (sum of all debts) - (sum of all surpluses)
government must borrow money when it runs a budget deficit
individuals
corporations
financial institutions
foreign entities or foreign governments

Fiscal policy
Discretionary Fiscal Policy (action)
expansionary fiscal policy (easy) : think deficit; combat a recession, increase government spending, decrease taxes
contractionary fiscal policy (tight) : think surplus; combat inflation, decrease government spending, increase taxes
Non-Discretionary Fiscal Policy (no action)
Discretionary
Increasing or decreasing government spending and/or taxes in order to return the economy to full employment. Discretionary policy involves policy makers doing fiscal policy in response to an economic problem.
Automatic
Unemployment compensation and marginal tax rates are examples of automatic policies that help mitigate the effects of recession and inflation. Automatic fiscal policy takes place without policy makers having to respond to current economic problems.






Automatic or Built-In Stabilizers
Anything that increases the government's budget deficit during a recession and increases its budget surplus during inflation without requiring explicit action by policymakers
Economic importance
Taxes reduce spending and aggregate demand
Reductions in spending are desirable when the economy is moving toward inflation
Increases in spending are desirable when the economy is heading toward recession
Transfer Payments
medicare, medicaid, social security, unemployment, food stamps, welfare

Taxes
Progressive tax system
average tax rate (tax revenue/GDP) rises with GDP
Proportional tax system
average tax rate remains constant as GDP changes
Regressive tax system
average tax rate falls with GDP

Investment Demand Curve


Interest Rates & Investment Demand/ Real (r%) v. Nominal (i%)

a. What is investment? Money spent or expenditures on:
1. New plants (factories)
2. Capital punishment (machinery)
3. Technology (hardware & software)
4. New Homes
5. Inventories (goods sold by producers)

b. Expected Rates of Return
How does business make investment decisions? Cost/ benefit analysis
How does business determine the benefits? Expected rates of return
How does business count the cost? Interest costs

How does business determine the amount of interest they undertake?
         -compare expected rate of return to interest cost
         * if expected return > interest cost, then invest
         * if expected return < interest cost, don't invest



Real (r%) v. Nominal (i%)
What's the difference? Nominal is the observable rate of interest. Real subtracts out inflation and is known as an ex post facto.






SRAS (Short Run Aggregate Supply)


Nominal wages vs. Real and Sticky Wages: 
Nominal wages: amount of money they work or receive per unit of time 
Ex: ( tips waitress makes) 
Real Wages: amount of goods and services a worker can purchase with their nominal wage 
( real wages purchasing power of nominal wages) Determines what you can and can't buy
Sticky Wages-  Nominal wage level is set according to an initial price level and doesn't vary due to labor contracts or other restrictions ( Keynesian) 


Price
Wages
Employment Level
Implications
Keynesian Range
Recession
Fixed
Fixed
Flexible
Output depends upon changes in employment levels
Intermediate

Flexible
Fixed
Flexible
Output depends upon changes in price and the employment level.
Classical Range
Inflation
Flexible
Flexible
Fixed
Output independent of changes in the price level

Recessionary & Inflationary Gap

Recessionary Gap
A recessionary gap exists when equilibrium occurs below full employment output
  

Inflationary Gap
When equilibrium occurs beyond full employment output