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Macroeconomics: Macroeconomics: concepts and concepts and measurement measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

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Page 1: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Macroeconomics:Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement concepts and measurement

École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC),

MBA Program, October 2001

Page 2: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Macroeconomics: the basic concepts of national accounting

Page 3: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

What macroeconomics is aboutWhat macroeconomics is about Macroeconomics studies the overall performance

of national economies. In order to get a global understanding of how a

national economy works, macroeconomics does four things:– It groups economic agents in broad categories

(households, firms, governments and non-residents).– It merges thousands of individual markets into larger

aggregate markets (the market for goods and services, the labor market, the domestic and foreign financial markets, etc.).

– It focuses on the variables which tend to affect large segments of the national economy (the price of foreign currency, the level of real interest rates, etc.).

– It stresses the interdependence between markets.

Page 4: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

An illustration: the circular flow model An illustration: the circular flow model of income and expenditureof income and expenditure

The circular flow model of income and expenditure

is a good starting point to understand the concepts of

aggregate markets and interdependence.

In its simplest form, the model considers only two

sectors: the households and the firms.

Furthermore, it abstracts from saving considerations.

Here it goes.

Page 5: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

AGGREGATE SPENDING (consumption) (monetary flow)

AGGREGATE INCOME (monetary flow)

HOUSEHOLDSFIRMS

GOODS AND SERVICES(real flow)

PRODUCTIVE SERVICES(real flow)

Page 6: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

In this simple model:In this simple model:

We can identify two markets implying the exchange of a real flow against a monetary flow.– The labor market where households exchange their

productive services (real flow) against an income (monetary flow).

– The market for goods and services where the firms exchange the goods and services they produce (real flow) against an income (the monetary flow).

The two monetary flows are equal:

Aggregate income = Aggregate expenditureAggregate income = Aggregate expenditure

Page 7: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

AGGREGATE SPENDING (consumption) (monetary flow)

GOODS AND SERVICES(real flow)

AGGREGATE INCOME (monetary flow)

HOUSEHOLDSFIRMS

PRODUCTIVE SERVICES(real flow)

Page 8: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The equality between income and The equality between income and expenditure expenditure

Why did we obtain the equality between aggregate income and aggregate expenditure ?– Notice that we did not consider the non-residents. The

firms are therefore owned by the domestic residents and any revenue not paid in wages is necessarily a profit earned by the domestic household sector.

– We did not consider saving: All profits are distributed and all income (wages and profits) is spent on consumer goods and services.

Because of the equality between aggregate income and aggregate expenditure:– Any event affecting the labor market will affect the market

for goods and services and vice versa. Examples ?

Page 9: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

AGGREGATE SPENDING (consumption) (monetary flow)

GOODS AND SERVICES(real flow)

AGGREGATE INCOME (monetary flow)

HOUSEHOLDSFIRMS

PRODUCTIVE SERVICES(real flow)

Discussion in class

Page 10: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Adding complexity: Saving and gross Adding complexity: Saving and gross fixed capital formationfixed capital formation

In general, the firms save a portion of their profits: retained earnings

The households do not consume all of their income: households saving

The sum of these savings can finance another type of

expenditure: gross fixed capital formation

Page 11: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Gross fixed capital formation and Gross fixed capital formation and investment investment

By gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) we mean the purchase of physical assets which increase the productive capacity of the economy (investment goods):– Expenses made to build residential and non-residential

structures, to acquire machinery and equipment, etc. Investment spending is a slightly larger concept as it

also includes the change in the value of final goods inventories (with saving, income earned in one period can be spent in the next period).

Many firms and households finance their investment spending with their own saving.

However, it is the role of financial markets to intermediate between agents who save more than they invest and agents who invest more than they save.

Page 12: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

AGGREGATE SPENDING (monetary flow)

GOODS AND SERVICES(real flow)

AGGREGATE INCOME (monetary flow)

HOUSEHOLDSFIRMS

PRODUCTIVE SERVICES(real flow)

Households saving Firms saving

Gross fixed capital formation + inventories

Page 13: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

What has changed ?What has changed ? Fundamentally we have added a third aggregate

market, the financial market whose role is to channel excess savings towards investment.

Within the aggregate market for goods and services, we have introduced a distinction between consumer goods and investment goods (productive physical assets).

The equality between aggregate income and aggregate expenditure remains but the latter is now defined as the sum of consumption, gross fixed capital formation and inventories.

Page 14: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Adding the government sectorAdding the government sector Here we state the general principles without spelling

out the details onto the diagram. What does it change to add the government sector ?

(excluding public enterprises which we have included in the firms sector):– Not all income earned by the firms and the households is

available for “private” consumption or saving. The government is taking its share by taxing firms and households.

– On the other hand, the government is transferring part of its tax revenues back to the households and firms.

– Net government revenue is equal to the difference between taxes and transfers.

– The government is using its net revenue (plus the funds it borrows in case of a budget deficit) to finance public consumption and public gross capital formation.

Page 15: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Adding the government sectorAdding the government sector– The equality between aggregate income and aggregate

expenditure is not affected except that we must now include government expenditures (public consumption and public gross capital formation) in the definition of aggregate expenditure.

It’s time to sum up before introducing the non-residents sector:– Let’s denote private consumption by C, public consumption

by G and gross fixed capital formation (public and private) plus inventories by I.

– When there are no relations with the non residents: Aggregate expenditure is equal to C + I + G Aggregate expenditure is equal to aggregate income

– The introduction of the non-residents changes these results.

Page 16: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Introducing the non-residents: Introducing the non-residents: the balance of paymentsthe balance of payments

The transactions between the residents of a country and the residents of the rest of the world are recorded into the balance of payments.

We make a distinction between two general types of transactions:– Current transactions (recorded in the current account).– Capital and financial transactions (recorded in the capital

and financial account).

For now we will consider only the current account, the capital and financial account will be treated in more details later in the course.

Page 17: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current accountThe current account The current account of a country constitutes its

consolidated statement of income and expenditure. A country receives an income from the non-

residents whenever:– It exports goods and services.– The non-residents pay for the use of the factors of

production (capital and workers) owned by the residents. – Transfers are received from the non-residents.

The same country spends whenever:– It imports goods and services.– The residents pay for the use of the factors of production

(capital and workers) owned by the non-residents– Transfers are made to the non-residents.

Page 18: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current accountThe current account The current account (CA) results from the

consolidation of these sources of income and expenditure:

CA = NX + NFP + NT– where NX (net exports) is the difference between all

exports of goods and services and all imports of goods and services.

– NFP (net factor payments) is the difference between the factor payments (payments made to workers and capital owners) received from and made to the non-residents.

– NT (net transfers) is the difference between the transfers received from and the transfers paid to the non-residents.

Page 19: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Canada’s current account

2000 (Can$ m, source: Statistics Canada’s Web site)Revenues

Exports goods 422 559

Exports services 55 291

Factor (investment) income earned 42 336

Current transfers earned 6 043Expenditure

Imports goods 363 281

Imports services 62 005

Factor (investment) income paid 69 458

Current transfers paid 4 591

Current account + 26 894 NX + 52 564 NFP - 27 122 NT + 1 452

Page 20: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current account and the The current account and the equality between aggregate income equality between aggregate income

and expenditureand expenditure Before considering the non-residents, we had found

that aggregate expenditure was equal to C+I+G. These expenditures were made by the domestic

residents only. Therefore and from now on, we will define C+I+G as domestic absorption (DA):– DA = C + I + G

Let’s add net exports to domestic absorption:– DA + NX = C + I + G + NX

How should we interpret this sum ?

Page 21: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current account and the The current account and the equality between aggregate income equality between aggregate income

and expenditureand expenditure NX is the difference between all exports (X) and all

imports (M). We can re-arrange the terms of the equation defining

DA + NX in the following way: DA + NX = [ (C+I+G)-M ] + X. The term in square brackets is domestic spending on

goods and services from which we have netted out imports. These are the expenditures made by the domestic residents to buy domestic production only.

Page 22: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current account and the The current account and the equality between aggregate income equality between aggregate income

and expenditureand expenditure The second term is the expenditure made by the non-

residents to acquire domestic goods. Summing the two terms we thus obtain the value of all

expenditures made to acquire domestic production. The value of DA + NX is therefore equal to the value of domestic production.

The value of domestic production is a very important concept in macroeconomics. We call it Gross Domestic Product (GDP). We just learnt that we can measure GDP by summing domestic absorption and net exports:

GDP = C + I + G + NXGDP = C + I + G + NX

Page 23: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

A breakdown of Canada's nominal GDP (2000, by expenditure type)

18,2%

20,3%0,9%

44,5%

-39,9%56,1%

C G GFCF Inventories X M

Page 24: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current account and the The current account and the equality between aggregate income equality between aggregate income

and expenditureand expenditure GDP, the value of domestic production, is the

primary source of income for domestic residents. However, as we have seen with the current

account, this is not the only source of income. For this reason, we can non longer say that

aggregate expenditure (now DA+NX) is equal to aggregate income.

The two remaining components of the current account (NFP and NT) must be added to GDP in order to obtain aggregate income.

Page 25: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The current account and the The current account and the equality between aggregate income equality between aggregate income

and expenditureand expenditure Summing NFP to GDP:

– GDP + NFP = (C + I + G) + (NX +NFP)– We call this new term Gross National Product (GNP)– Conceptually, GNP is the value of the income earned

by the domestic residents from the use of their factors of production.

Summing NT to GNP– GNP + NT = GDP + NFP + NT – GNP + NT = (C + I + G) + (NX + NFP +NT)– GNP + NT = DA + CA– We call this new term Gross National Disposable

Income (GNDI).– Conceptually GNDI is the total revenue a nation can

use either for consumption or for saving purposes.

Page 26: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

A useful interpretation of the current account

GNDI = (C + I + G) + CA Subtract C and G from both sides: (GNDI - C - G ) = I + CA The portion of GNDI which is not consumed

(either C or G) is called national saving (S). We obtain ( S - I ) = CA Interpretation ?

Page 27: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Summing up Summing up GDP is the value of domestic production and the

primary source of income for the residents of a country.– GDP can be measured as DA + NX, that is (C+I+G)+NXGDP can be measured as DA + NX, that is (C+I+G)+NX.

GNP is the value of the income earned by the domestic residents from the use of their factors of production (which can either be used domestically (GDP) or abroad (NFP).– GNP = GDP + NFPGNP = GDP + NFP

Gross national disposable income is the value of the revenue a nation can use either for consumption or for saving purposes.– GNDI = GNP + NT = (C+I+G) +CAGNDI = GNP + NT = (C+I+G) +CA

The current account can be interpreted as the difference between national saving and investment– CA = S - I

Page 28: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Macroeconomics: Measurement issues

Page 29: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Among the indicators used to assess a country’s performance, three are particularly important:

The growth rate of GDP

The rate of inflation

The unemployment rate

The unemployment rate will be addressed later in the course. We start with the first two indicators.

Page 30: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

GDP and its growth rate

We saw that we could measure GDP by summing DA

(C+I+G) and NX (X-M).

We now mention that only the expenditures which buy final

goods and services are to be included.

Purchases of intermediate goods (intermediate from the

point of view of the domestic economy) should not be

counted because this would result in the overestimation of

the value of production.

Why ? (A few examples ?)

Page 31: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

GDP and its growth rate Now, there is a trickier problem.

Since GDP is the value of domestic production, it can increase for two reasons:

The volume of production increases

Prices increase

Economic growth refers to the growth in the volume of production, not the growth in the level of prices which would be pure inflation.

We solve this problem by constructing two GDP series

One in which the numerous components of expenditures C, I, G, X and M are measured at current prices.

Another one in which the same quantities are measured at constant prices (brief discussion of the new method).

Page 32: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

GDP and its growth rate GDP measured at constant prices is called real GDP and GDP measured at current prices is called nominal GDP.

Usually, GDP is measured every quarter expressed in annualized terms, the yearly figure being the simple average of the four quarters.

The GDP growth rate can be computed:-

- sometimes over the previous quarter (quarterly growth figures)

- more often over the same quarter of the preceding year (yearly growth figures)

When economists refer to economic growth, they refer to the growth rate of real GDP, not of nominal GDP and a recession refers to an episode of negative real growth lasting at least two consecutive quarters.

Page 33: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Canada’s latest GDP growth statistics

Page 34: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The inflation rate

Inflation is defined as a sustained process of increases in the average level of prices.

In order to track the evolution of the average level of prices, we construct various price indices among which we can cite the consumer price index (CPI) and the GDP price deflator.

We first explain how we measure the GDP price deflator. Later we discuss the differences between this particular price index and the consumer price index.

Page 35: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The inflation rate

Computing the GDP price deflator is quite simple once we know nominal and real GDP.

The price deflator is computed as:

P = ( Nominal GDP / Real GDP )

As we usually want the price index to be equal to 100 for the base period, we multiply the result by 100.

GDP price deflator = P • 100

The growth rate of this index is one particular measure of the rate of inflation.

Page 36: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Inflation measured by the consumer price index

Even if the rate of inflation measured by the GDP price deflator is important, it is the rate of inflation measured by the consumer price index which attracts most attention.

The consumer price index is based on the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services bought every month by a typical household.

Again, a base period must first be chosen.

The value of the index for a particular period is computed by dividing the cost of the basket in that period by its cost in the base period, the result being multiplied by 100.

For the base period, the value of the index is obviously equal to 100.

Page 37: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

The consumer price index: a simplified example

Base period

Item Quantity Price Cost

Cheese 2 kilos 10$/kilo 20,00$

Water 12 liters 1$/liter. 12,00$

Metro 25 tickets 1,50$ each 37,50$

Total 69,50$

CPI (69,50/69,50) * 100 = 100

Current period

Quantity Price Cost

2 kilos 11$/kilo 22,00$

12 liters 1,50$/liter. 18,00$

25 tickets 2,00$ each 50,00$

90,00$

(90,00 / 69,50) * 100 = 129,5

Page 38: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Inflation measured by the consumer price index

Usually, the consumer price index is measured every month and the rate of inflation is computed as its growth rate

- over the previous month for monthly inflation

- over the same month of the preceding year for yearly inflation

- we can also compare the 12-month average of a particular year with the 12-month average of the preceding year

Page 39: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Canada’s latest CPI inflation statistics

Page 40: Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC), MBA Program, October 2001

Macroeconomics:Macroeconomics: concepts and measurement concepts and measurement

École des Hautes Études Commerciales (HÉC),

MBA Program, October 2001