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Summary - Intermediate Macroeconomics chapter 0-5

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This document provides summary of chapter 0-5 of Intermediate Macroeconomics for Business and Economics. Including graphs and made through the slides.

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0. Introduction
1. What is Macroeconomics?
3.The Macroeconomic Models
2 Types of Models
Exogenous Variables VS Endogenous Variables
4.History of macroeconomic thought
Before the 1930ʼs Classical View)
1930ʼs  Great Depression & Birth of MacroEco)
1940s  1960s Post-war Keynesian Synthesis)
1970s Challenges to Keynesianism)
1980s-…
2010s-…  Modern Business Cycles Models)
Conclusions


1. What is Macroeconomics?
Macroeconomics

 The study of the economy of a country, society or region as a whole

 It looks at aggregate variables computed over the households or individuals in an area.
e.g. Output or Income GDP, Inflation, ST & LR interest rates, Wealth

What do you study in macroeconomics?

What are the driving forces behind business cycle fluctuations
(economic growth, inflation, interest rates)?

How are short-run and long-run interest rates determined?

Is long-run economic growth desirable in the midst of climate
change and biodiversity loss?





3.The Macroeconomic Models
2 Types of Models
 Empirical Models
 Start with empirical data and than draw conclusion

 Theoretical models
 Models are built through logical thinking, than test it to the empirical data

 The 2 types are complementary and communicating

Exogenous Variables VS Endogenous Variables




0. Introduction 1

, Exogenous Variables

 These variables are determined outside the model, “Inputsˮ

Endogenous Variables

 These variables are determined in the model, “Outputsˮ

Example

Exogenous: AD, AS


Endogenous: Equilibrium, Equilibrium price,
Equilibrium Quantity




 Models explaining the same things can result in different predictions and conclusions
Keep track of 3 main things when dealing with Macro Models

 The Model Assumptions

 Which Variables are Exogenous and which are Endogenous

 Questions that can help us understand the model


4.History of macroeconomic thought
Before the 1930ʼs (Classical View)
Agg Production depends only on Supply

Dynamics driven by shocks to input of classical Production function
Labor, Capital, Tech)

Changes in Agg production was seen as temporary supply shocks and not important

Policy makers should guarantee full price & wage flexibility
 No need for fiscal or monetary policy




Negative shock according to “classical viewˮ


1930ʼs ( Great Depression & Birth of MacroEco)



0. Introduction 2

, The Great Depression
 U.S. Unemployment rates around 25%, their production fell by almost 30%, it spread to other countries
 The Unemployment and decline in output challenged the “Classical View CVˮ

The Cv didnʼt allow structural unemployment as long as wages & prices were flexible, but even
after declining prices & wages → unemployment
 This was contradictory to the CV

The Birth of Macroeconomics

Policymakers needed theories & policy recommendations to get out of the economic downturn 
Macroeconomics was born!

 John Maynard Keynesʼ General Theory  1936  is often seen as the true
birth of MacroEco science.

He discusses that…

Animal spirits & volatile business investment creates business cycles

Agg Demand matters

Fiscal & Monetary policy is required to stabilise economy

Prices & wages arenʼt flexible but partially rigid




Keynesian View


1940s - 1960s (Post-war Keynesian Synthesis)
 After WWII, Keynesʼ business cycle theories were extended

ISLM Model by Hicks, Modigliani
 A model of the demand side

Phillips-Curve 1958
→ a model of Inflation & unemployment

Post Keynesianism
 More radical interpretations




0. Introduction 3

, ISLM Model on the left, Phillips-Curve on the right


 Economist started constructing formalised model of LR economic growth
e.g. Solow Model & Swan Model 1956

1970s (Challenges to Keynesianism)
 Keynesian Phillips Curve theories couldnʼt explain stagflation.
Monetarism & Milton Friedman challenged Keynesianism in multiple ways

 Quantity theory of money
 Inflation is a monetary phenomenon → this is contradictory to the Phillips curve

 Permanent income hypothesis
 Consumption is driven by permanent income and not disposable income

 The Lucas Critique
 Econometric Keynesian models are structurally flawed

1980s-…
Quantitative Model of the business cycle

Real business cycle RBC models 1980s  1990s)

Quantitative models where business cycles are driven by supply-side shocks
Kydland & Prescott)

New Keynesian models 1990s-…)

Extension of the RBC-models with Keynesian elements, mostly wage and price inflexibility
Gali)

Modern long-run growth theories

2 Types

 Endogenous Growth Theory 1980s 1990s)
e.g. Endogenous technical progress(Romer, 1990,Human Capital(Romer-Manwik-Weil model),…

 Climate Growth Models 1990s)
⇒ extensions of LR growth models by incorporating greenhouse gas emissions & climate damages
e.g. Nordhaus-models

2010s-… ( Modern Business Cycles Models)
 New Keynesian models couldnʼt account for the Great Financial Crisis of ‘08ʼ09, led to the creation of…

Heterogeneous-agent New Keynesian-models




0. Introduction 4

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