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economics

McConnell
Brue
Flynn

Chapter 26
An Introduction to Macroeconomics

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Chapter Contents
Performance and Policy
The Miracle of Modern Economic Growth
Saving, Investment, and Choosing between Present and Future
Consumption
Uncertainty, Expectations, and Shocks
How Sticky Are Prices?
Categorizing Macroeconomic Models Using Price Stickiness

26-2
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Performance and Policy
Business Cycle: Recession
Real GDP: Corrects for price changes
Nominal GDP: Uses current prices
Unemployment
Inflation: Increase in overall level of prices

26-3
LO26.1
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Modern Economic Growth
Standard of living measured by output per person
No growth in living standards prior to Industrial
Revolution
Modern economic growth:
• Output per person rises
• Not experienced by all countries

26-4
LO26.2
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Global Perspective 26.1

LO26.2 26-5

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC. Source: The World Bank Group
Saving and Investment
Saving: Trade-off current for future consumption
Investment
• Financial investment
• Economic investment
Banks and financial institutions

26-6
LO26.3
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Uncertainty, Expectations, and Shocks
The importance of expectations and shocks
Expectations affect investment
Shocks: What happens is not what was expected
Demand shocks
Supply shocks

26-7
LO26.4
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Demand Shocks
Demand shocks and flexible prices
• Price falls if demand is low
• Sales unchanged
Demand shocks and sticky prices
• Maintain inventory
• Sales change
• Business cycles
26-8
LO26.4
© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Demand Shocks and Flexible Prices

$40,000

Price

37,000
DH

DM
35,000
DL

0 900
Cars per week
26-9
LO26.4
© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Demand Shocks and Fixed Prices

Price

$37,000

DH

DM

DL

700 900 1,150


Cars per week
26-10
LO26.4
© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
How Sticky Are Prices?
Inflexible prices/sticky prices
Flexible prices: Examples: corn, oil, natural gas

LO26.5 26-11

© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Average Number of Months between Price Changes in
Selected Industries
Industry Months
Services 11.3
Manufacturing 8.1
Finance 7.1
Utilities 4.7
Retail 4.6
Agriculture 3.2

Source: Yuriy Gorodnichenko and Michael Weber, “Are Sticky Prices Costly? Evidence from the
Stock Market,” American Economic Review, January 2016, pp. 165–199. Used with permission
of The University of Chicago Press via Copyright Clearance Center.
LO26.5 26-12
© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Sticky Prices: Consumers and Firms
Many prices are sticky in the short run:
• Consumers prefer stable prices.
• Firms want to avoid price wars.
All prices are flexible in the long run: Firms adjust to
unexpected, but permanent changes in demand.

26-13
LO26.5
© McGraw Hill LLC. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw Hill LLC.
Categorizing Macroeconomic Models Using
Price Stickiness
Sticky prices rather than stuck.
Aggregate expenditures model.
Aggregate demand-aggregate supply model.

LO26.6 26-14

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Last Word: The Behavioral Economics of
Sticky Prices
Reasons for sticky prices:
• Consumer preference
• Business price wars
Wages and salaries 70% of costs.
Reductions in per-unit labor costs self-defeating.
26-15

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