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AP Macro Review Flashcards

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6599920122Aggregate Spending (GDP)The sum of all spending from four sectors of the economy. GDP = C+I+G+Xn0
6599920123Aggregate Income (AI)The sum of all income earned by suppliers of resources in the economy. AI=GDP1
6599920124Nominal GDPthe value of current production at the current prices2
6599920125Real GDPthe value of current production, but using prices from a fixed point in time3
6599920126Base yearthe year that serves as a reference point for constructing a price index and comparing real values over time.4
6599920127Price indexa measure of the average level of prices in a market basket for a given year, when compared to the prices in a reference (or base) year.5
6599920128Market Basketa collection of goods and services used to represent what is consumed in the economy6
6599920129GDP price deflatorthe price index that measures the average price level of the goods and services that make up GDP7
6599920130Real rate of interestthe percentage increase in purchasing power that a borrower pays a lender.8
6599920131Expected (anticipated) inflationthe inflation expected in a future time period. This expected inflation is added to the real interest rate to compensate for lost purchasing power.9
6599920132Nominal rate of interestthe percentage increase in money that the borrower pays the lender and is equal to the real rate plus the expected inflation10
6599920133Business cyclethe periodic rise and fall (in four phases) of economic activity11
6599920134Expansiona period where real GDP is growing.12
6599920135Peakthe top of a business cycle where an expansion has ended.13
6599920136Contractionthe period where real GDP is falling14
6599920137Recessiontwo consecutive quarters of falling real GDP.15
6599920138Troughthe bottom of the business cycle where a contraction has stopped.16
6599920139Depressiona prolonged, deep contraction in the business cycle17
6599920140Consumer Price Index (CPIthe price index that measures the average price level of the items in the base year market basket. This is the main measure of consumer inflation.18
6599920141Inflationthe percentage change in the CPI from one period to the next.19
6599920142Wealth effect/Real Balance Effectas the avg. PL rises, the purchasing power of wealth and savings begins to fall. High prices therefore tend to reduce the quantity of domestic output purchased.20
6599920143Determinate of AD:Ad is a function of the four components of domestic spending (C+I+G+Xn) If any of these components increases or decreases, holding the others constant, AD shifts right or left.21
6599920144Aggregate Supply AS:the positive relationship between the level of domestic output produced and the avg. price level of that output.22
6599920145Macroeconomic short run:a period of time during which the prices of goods and services are changing their respective markets, but the input prices have not yet adjusted to those changes in the product markets. During the SR, the AS curve has three stages - horizontal, upward sloping and vertical.23
6599920146Macroeconomic long run:a period of time long enough for input prices to have fully adjusted to market forces. In this period, all product and input markets are in a state of equilibrium and the economy is operating at FE. Once all markets in the economy have adjusted and there exists this long-run equilibrium, the AS curve is vertical at GDPr.24
6599920147Determinates of AS:(RAP) Resource Prices, Actions of Government, Productivity If these factors make it easier, or less costly, for a nation to produce, AS shifts to the right. If these factors make it more difficult, or more costly, for a nation to produce, then AS shifts to the left.25
6599920148Macroeconomic Equilibrium:occurs when the Q of real output demanded is equal to the Q of real output supplied. Graphically this is at the intersection of AD and AS.26
6599920149Recessionary Gap:The amount by which full-employment GDP exceeds equilibrium GDP27
6599920150Inflationary Gap:the amount by which equilibrium GDP exceeds full-employment GDP.28
6599920151Demand-pull inflation:this inflation is the result of stronger C from all sectors of AD as it continues to increase in the upward sloping range of AS. The PL begins to rise and inflation is felt in the economy.29
6599920152Deflation:a sustained falling PL, usually due to weakened AD and a constant AS.30
6599920153Recession:in the AD and AS model, this is described as falling AD with a constant AS curve. GDPr falls far below FE levels and the U% rises.31
6599920154Circular Flow of Economic Activity:a model that shows how households and firms circulate resources, goods and incomes though the economy. This basic model is expanded to include the G and Foreign sector.32
6599920156AggregateAMOUNTING TO A WHOLE; TOTAL, V. TO COLLECT INTO A MASS, N. COLLECTIVE MASS OR SUM33
6599920157Gross Domestic Product:the market value of the final goods and services produced within a nation in a given year.34
6599920158Final goods:goods that are ready for their final use by consumers and firms.35
6599920159Intermediate goods:goods that require further modification before they are ready for final use.36
6599920161Second hand sales:final goods and services that are resold. Even if they are resold many times, final goods and services are only counted once, in the year in which they were produced.37
6599920162Non-market transactions:household work or do-it-yourself jobs are missed by GDP accounting. The same is true of G transfer payments and purely financial transactions.38
6599920163Underground economy:these include unreported illegal activity, bartering, or informal exchange of cash.39
6599920164Balance sheeta tabular way to show the assets and liabilities of a bank40
6599920165Asset of a bankanything the bank owans41
6599920166liability of a bankanything owned by depositors or lenders (things the bank owes)42
6599920167money multiplierthis measures the maximum amount of new checking deposits that can be created by a single dollar of excess reserves. 1/required reserve43
6599920168expansionary monetary policydesigned to fix a recession and increase AD, lower the U%, and increase GDPr44
6599920169contractionary monetary policydesigned to avoid inflation by decreasing AD, which lowers the PL and GDPr45
6599920170open market operrationsa tool of monetary policy, it involves the Fed'S buying or selling of securities/bonds to or from commercial banks46
6599920171Federal funds rate:the interest rate paid on short terms loans made from one bank to another.47
6599920172Discount ratethe interest rate commercial banks pay on short term loans from the Fed48
6599920173Quantity Theory of moneya theory that asserts that the Q of money determines the PL and that the growth rate of money determines the rate of inflation. (explains why inflation is caused by printing money)49
6599920175Velocity of moneythe average number of times that a dollar is spent in a year. V is defined as PQ/M.50
6599920176Stocka certificate that represents a claim to, or share of, the ownership of a firm51
6599920177Fiscal PolicyDeliberate changes in government spending and net tax collection to affect economic output, unemployment, and the price level. Fiscal policy is typically designed to manipulate AD to "fix' the economy.52
6599920178Expansionary Fiscal PolicyIncreases in government spending or lower net taxes meant to shift the aggregate expenditure function upward and shift AD to the right.53
6599920179Contractionary fiscal policyDecreases in government spending or higher net taxes meant to shift the aggregate expenditure function downward and shift AD to the left.54
6599920180Sticky pricesIf price levels do not change, especially downward, with changes in AD, then prices are thought of as sticky or inflexible. Keynesians believe the price level does not usually fall with Contractionary policy.55
6599920181Budget deficitExists when government spending exceeds the revenue collected from taxes.56
6599920182Budget surplusExists when government spending is less than revenue collected from taxes.57
6599920183Automatic stabilizersMechanisms built into the tax system that automatically regulate, or stabilize, the macroeconomy as it moves through the business cycle by changing net taxes collected by the government. These stabilizers increase a deficit during a recessionary period and increase a budget surplus during an inflationary period, without any discretionary change on the part of the government.58
6599920184Crowding out effectWhen the government borrows funds to cover a deficit, the interest rate increases and causes Investment to decrease, causing AD to decrease59
6599920185Net export effectA rising interest rate increases foreign demand for U.S. dollars. The dollar then appreciates in value, causing net exports from the U.S. to fall. Falling net exports decreases AD, which lessens the impact of the expansionary fiscal policy.60
6599920186ProductivityThe quantity of output that can be produced per worker in a given amount of time.61
6599920187Human capitalThe amount of knowledge and skills that labor can apply to the work they do and the general level of health that the labor force enjoys.62
6599920190TechnologyA nation's knowledge of how to produce goods in the best possible way.63
6599920193Aggregate Demand ADThe inverse relationship between all spending on domestic output and the average price level of that output. AD measures the sum of consumption spending by households, investment spending by firms, government purchases of goods and services, and the net exports bought by foreign customers.64
6599920194Foreign sector substitution effectWhen the avg. price of U.S. output increases, consumers naturally begin to look for similar items produced elsewhere.65
6599920195Interest rate effectIf the avg. price level rises, consumers and firms might need to borrow more money for spending and capital investment, which increases the interest rate and delays current consumption. This postponement reduces current consumption of domestic production as the price level rises.66
6599920197Demand curveA graphical depiction of the D schedule.67
6599920198Determinates of demandThe external factors that shift D to the left or right.68
6599920199Normal goodsA good for which higher income increases D.69
6599920200Inferior goodsA good for which high income decreases D.70
6599920201Substitute goodsTwo goods are consumer substitutes if they provide essentially the same utility to the consumer.71
6599920202Opportunity CostThe value of the sacrifice made to pursue a course of action.72
6599920203MarginalThe next unit or increment of an action.73
6599920204Marginal Benefit (MB)The additional benefit received from the consumption of the next unit of a good or service74
6599920205Marginal Cost (MC)The additional cost incurred from the consumption of the next unit of a good or service.75
6599920206Marginal AnalysisMaking decisions based up weighing the marginal benefits and costs of that action.76
6599920207Production PossibilitiesDifferent quantities of goods that an economy can produce with a given amount of scarce resources.77
6599920208Nominal IncomeToday's income measured in today's dollars. These are dollars unadjusted by inflation.78
6599920209Real IncomeToday's income measured in base year dollars.79
6599920215Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)The change in consumption caused by a change in disposable income, or the slope of the consumption function. MPC = ▲C/▲DI.80
6599920216Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)The change in saving caused by a change in disposable income, or the slope of the saving function. MPS = ▲S/▲DI81
6599920219Real Rate of InterestThe cost of borrowing to fund an investment. This can be thought of as the marginal cost of an investment project.82
6599920221Investment DemandThe inverse relationship between the real interest rate and the cumulative dollars invested. Like any demand curve, this is drawn with a negative slope.83
6599920223Market for Loanable FundsThe market for dollars that are available to be borrowed for investment projects. Equilibrium in this market is determined at the real interest rate where the dollars saved (supply) is equal to the dollars borrowed (demand)84
6599920224Demand for Loanable FundsThe negative relationship between the real interest rate and the dollars invested by firms.85
6599920227Supply of Loanable FundsThe positive relationship between the dollars saved and the real interest rate.86
6599920228Law of increasing opportunity coststhe more of a good that is produced, the greater the opportunity cost of producing the next unit of that good.87
6599920229Absolute Advantageexists if a producer can produce more of a good than all other producers.88
6599920230Comparative Advantagea producer has comparative advantage if he can produce a good at lower opportunity cost than all other producers.89
6599920231Specializationwhen firms focus their resources on production of goods for which they have comparative advantage, they are said to be specializing.90
6599920232Productive Efficiencyproduction of maximum output for a given level of technology and resources. All points on the PPF are productively efficient.91
6599920233Allocative Efficiencyproduction of the combination of goods and services that provides the most net benefit to society.92
6599920234Economic Growthoccurs when an economy's production possibilities increase.93
6599920235Market Economy (Capitalism)an economic system based upon the fundamentals of private property, freedom, self-interest, and prices.94
6599920250Stagflationa situation in the macroeconomy when inflation and the unemployment rate are both increasing.95
6599920251Supply shocksa supply shock is an economy-wide phenomenon that affects the costs of firms, and the position of the AS curve, either positively or negatively.96
6599920252Phillips curveA graphical device that shows the relationship between inflation and the unemployment rate.97

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