The Importance of Macroeconomics
The Importance of Macroeconomics
Core Point #2
In the short run, movements in economic activity are dominated by changes in aggregate demand, while in the long run, the economy tends to return to a steadystate growth path
Core Point #3
The long-run growth rate is determined by (a) the ratio of investment to GDP, and (b) the degree to which fiscal, trade, and regulatory policies encourage the spread of free markets and technical innovation and invention.
Core Point #4
The central bank controls the nominal short-term interest rate, but the real longterm interest rate affects aggregate demand. Long-term interest rates are determined in large part on the expected future rate of inflation.
Core Point #5
Economic agents have forward-looking expectations, which means they base their decisions on what they expect to happen in the future, as contrasted to simpler extrapolations of the past. Of course, their predictions are not always accurate, but people learn from past mistakes and adjust their expectations accordingly.
Core Point #6
Changes in monetary policy affect both output and prices in the short run, but only prices in the long run. There is no longrun tradeoff between unemployment and inflation.
Core Point #7
Changes in monetary policy affect real output with a shorter lag than inflation. Because monetary policy is transmitted through a variety of methods, and because the lags are variable, the short-term impact of monetary policy often cannot be predicted accurately
Core Point #8
In the short run, wages are based on predetermined variables, which means they react to changes in the economy only with a substantial lag. In the long run, the real wage is equal to the marginal productivity of labor, while the nominal wage is determined by monetary factors.
Core Point #9
Federal government budget deficits can be financed either by selling Treasury securities to the central bank, which is akin to printing money and is inflationary, or by selling them to the private sector, which will raise real interest rates and hence reduce real growth.
An empirical discipline
Discussions about macroeconomics are often influenced by personal opinions, since they affect the amount of money that each individual has. As a result, what passes for facts is often weighted by personal bias. As a result, whenever possible, we try and test theories to see if they agree with the existing facts.