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intermediate macroeconomics VUB summary

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This macroeconomics summary is designed to help you understand the core concepts without getting overwhelmed by excessive detail. It focuses on explaining ideas in a clear, structured, and accessible way, making it ideal for self-study, revision, or building a solid foundation before exams or lectures. Rather than memorizing long explanations, this summary helps you grasp how the main macroeconomic concepts connect and work together. The content is concise but complete enough to give you a strong conceptual understanding, perfect if you want to quickly learn or refresh topics

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​Intermediate macroeconomics​
​0 INTRODUCTION : CH1 & 2​
​MACROECONOMIC MODELS​
​Exogenous variables -> model -> endogenous variables​
​Ex. : simple model with S , D and E​
​- >exogenous: aggregate income (Y) + price of materials​
​- >endogenous: equilibrium P and Q curves​


​BRIEF HISTORY OF MACROECONOMIC THOUGHT​
​Prior to 1930s : ‘the classical view:​
​−​ ​T he economy’s total production/(GDP)/AS comes only from the supply side: shifts in the​
​AS driven by how much labor, capital and technology is available​
​−​ ​D was seen as irrelevant because they believed D will always adjust to equal S: the​
​income from produced goods gives people the purchasing power​
​- >you didn’t need to worry about “not enough demand” because it was assumed to​
​a utomatically match production​
​=>Policymakers should not interfere much (with monetary or fiscal policy: as long as they​
​g uarantee price and wage flexibility, the market will adjust on its own​

,1​930s – Great Depression and ‘birth of macroeconomics’ ​
​U .S. unemployment rates around 25%, U.S. production fell by nearly 30%, with a spread to other​
​countries ->challenge the classical view: despite declining prices and wages, unemployment kept​
​on rising and U.S. production kept on falling​
​➢​ ​need of theories and policy recommendations to get out of the economic downturned:​
​macroeconomics arose as a seperate field within economics​
​➢​ ​J ohn Maynard Keynes’ publication of the General Theory (1936) = often seen as the true​
​birth of macroeconomics​
​- ​ ​AD matters​
​- ​ ​F iscal and monetary policy needed to stabilize the economy​
​- ​ ​Prices & wages are not flexible but:​
​W ages are sticky: workers don’t always accept pay cuts + prices are sticky:​
​businesses might keep them fixed for long periods​
​- >instead of the economy automatically adjusting unemployment + recessions​


​1940s – 1960s – ‘post-war Keynesian synthesis’ ​
​●​ A
​ fter World War II, Keynes’ business cycle theories were extended and formalized:​
​- ​ ​IS-LM model (Hicks, Modigliani): a model of the demand side​




​IS=investment-saving ; LM= Liquidity preference-Money Supply​
​R : interest rates -> here demand for money (how much cash people want to hold)​
​e quals the supply of money provided by the CB​
​- ​ ​Phillips-curve (1958): inflation and unemployment​
​- ​ ​Post-Keynesianism: more radical interpretation of Keynes’ theory​


​●​ ​+ economists started constructing formalized models of long-run economic growth: Solow​
​model + swan model​

,​C hallenges to Keynesianism​
​●​ ​Stagflation: high inflation and low economic growth/high unemployment Keynesian​
​Phillips-curve theories were unable to explain this​
​●​ ​Monetarism and Milton Friedman:​
​- ​ ​quantity theory of money: Inflation = a monetary phenomenon Phillips-curve​
​- ​ ​permanent income hypothesis: Consumption is driven by permanent income, not​
​disposable income​
​- ​ ​the Lucas critique: Econometric Keynesian models are structurally flawed, they don’t​
​reliably predict the effects of new policies because economic agents’ expectations​
​a nd behavior change in response to policy shifts​

​Q uantitative models of the business cycle (1980s – …)​
​●​ ​R eal business cycle (RBC) models: quantitative models where business cycles are driven​
​by supply-side shocks (e.g. Kydland & Prescott paper)​
​●​ ​New Keynesian (NK) models (1990s – …): extension of the RBC models with Keynesian​
​e lements, primarily wage and price rigidities (e.g. Gali)​
​●​ ​Heterogeneous-agent NK-models (2010s – …): people in the economy are different from​
​e ach other (heterogeneous), might have different levels of income, wealth, or preferences.​
​U nlike older models where everyone is assumed to be the same. This matters for​
​business cycle dynamics and demand- and supply- side shocks​
​Modern long-run growth theories (1980s – …)​
​●​ E
​ ndogenous growth theory (1980s – 1990s):e conomic growth happens from within the economy​
​itself, rather than relying solely on external factors (like new discoveries or natural​
​resources)​
​- ​ ​Endogenous Technical Progress (Romer): technical progress (innovation and technology​
​improvements) comes from within the economy itself, rather than being something​
​e xternal​
​- ​ ​human capital (Romer-Mankiw-Weil model): education and skills of workers are critical​
​f or long-term economic growth, its not just about having more workers​
​- ​ ​Schumpeterian Creative Destruction Dynamics: old technologies or industries are​
​destroyed or replaced by new and better ones (ex. Smartphones, which keeps the​
​e conomy dynamic​
​●​ ​C limate growth models (1990s): extensions of long-run growth models by incorporating​
​g reenhouse gas emissions and climate damages (e.g. Nordhaus-models)​

, ​Modern business cycle models (2010s – …)​
​●​ N
​ ew Keynesian models (NK) could not account for the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 –>​
​2009 Introduction of financial frictions and behavioral elements into the New Keynesian​
​f ramework​


​1 NATIONAL INCOME: CH 3 & 4​
​SUPPLY OF GOODS AND SERVICES​
​F actors of production: L (Labor), K (capital)​


​Properties of production functiuon: Y = F(K,L):​
​- ​ ​C onstant returns to scale: an increase in the factors of​
​production of x% causes an increase in production of x%:​
​zY = F(zK,zL)​
​- ​ ​Diminishing marginal products: the increase in production​
​f rom raising labor or capital declines as the labor or capital​
​s tock is higher​


​C obb-Douglas production function​
​A = technology, K = capital, L = labor​


​INCOME ACROSS THE FACTORS OF PRODUCTION​
​National income= value of produced goods and services (GDP)​
​- >is distributed across K and L​


​Empirical measurement: Macroeconomists assume that the share of L and K in NI is constant​
​over time, which is true for after WWII -> ! some economists claim that the rise of AI will change​
​this in the future​


​(The capital share has equaled around 25% sinceWWII. The labor share iscalculated as the​
​residual (=around 75%))​

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Subido en
17 de diciembre de 2025
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81
Escrito en
2025/2026
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