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Tiêu đề Five Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy
Trường học University of Economics
Chuyên ngành Economics
Thể loại Tài liệu
Năm xuất bản 2023
Thành phố Hanoi
Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 210,54 KB

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Policymakers who want to stabilize the economy must decide how much to change the money supply, government spending, or taxes.. What would be the effect of this change on the economy if

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Q U I C K Q U I Z : Give three examples of how our society discourages saving.

What are the drawbacks of eliminating these disincentives?

C O N C L U S I O N

This chapter has considered five debates over macroeconomic policy For each, it

began with a controversial proposition and then offered the arguments pro and

con If you find it hard to choose a side in these debates, you may find some

com-fort in the fact that you are not alone The study of economics does not always

make it easy to choose among alternative policies Indeed, by clarifying the

in-evitable tradeoffs that policymakers face, it can make the choice more difficult.

Difficult choices, however, have no right to seem easy When you hear

politi-cians or commentators proposing something that sounds too good to be true, it

probably is If they sound like they are offering you a free lunch, you should look

for the hidden price tag Few if any policies come with benefits but no costs By

helping you see through the fog of rhetoric so common in political discourse, the

study of economics should make you a better participant in our national debates.

◆ Advocates of active monetary and fiscal policy view the

economy as inherently unstable and believe that policy

can manage aggregate demand to offset the inherent

instability Critics of active monetary and fiscal policy

emphasize that policy affects the economy with a lag

and that our ability to forecast future economic

conditions is poor As a result, attempts to stabilize the

economy can end up being destabilizing

◆ Advocates of rules for monetary policy argue that

discretionary policy can suffer from incompetence,

abuse of power, and time inconsistency Critics of rules

for monetary policy argue that discretionary policy is

more flexible in responding to changing economic

circumstances

◆ Advocates of a zero-inflation target emphasize that

inflation has many costs and few if any benefits

Moreover, the cost of eliminating inflation—depressed

output and employment—is only temporary Even this

cost can be reduced if the central bank announces a

credible plan to reduce inflation, thereby directly

lowering expectations of inflation Critics of a

zero-inflation target claim that moderate zero-inflation imposes

only small costs on society, whereas the recession

necessary to reduce inflation is quite costly

◆ Advocates of reducing the government debt argue that the debt imposes a burden on future generations by raising their taxes and lowering their incomes Critics of reducing the government debt argue that the debt is only one small piece of fiscal policy Single-minded concern about the debt can obscure the many ways in which the government’s tax and spending decisions affect different generations

◆ Advocates of tax incentives for saving point out that our society discourages saving in many ways, such as by heavily taxing the income from capital and by reducing benefits for those who have accumulated wealth They endorse reforming the tax laws to encourage saving, perhaps by switching from an income tax to a consumption tax Critics of tax incentives for saving argue that many proposed changes to stimulate saving would primarily benefit the wealthy, who do not need a tax break They also argue that such changes might have only a small effect on private saving Raising public saving by increasing the government’s budget surplus would provide a more direct and equitable way to increase national saving

S u m m a r y

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1 What causes the lags in the effect of monetary and fiscal

policy on aggregate demand? What are the implications

of these lags for the debate over active versus passive

policy?

2 What might motivate a central banker to cause a

political business cycle? What does the political business

cycle imply for the debate over policy rules?

3 Explain how credibility might affect the cost of reducing

inflation

4 Why are some economists against a target of zero

inflation?

5 Explain two ways in which a government budget deficit

hurts a future worker

6 What are two situations in which most economists view

a budget deficit as justifiable?

7 Give an example of how the government might hurt young generations, even while reducing the government debt they inherit

8 Some economists say that the government can continue running a budget deficit forever How is that possible?

9 Some income from capital is taxed twice Explain

10 Give an example, other than tax policy, of how our society discourages saving

11 What adverse effect might be caused by tax incentives

to raise saving?

Q u e s t i o n s f o r R e v i e w

1 The chapter suggests that the economy, like the human

body, has “natural restorative powers.”

a Illustrate the short-run effect of a fall in aggregate

demand using an

aggregate-demand/aggregate-supply diagram What happens to total output,

income, and employment?

b If the government does not use stabilization policy,

what happens to the economy over time? Illustrate

on your diagram Does this adjustment generally

occur in a matter of months or a matter of years?

c Do you think the “natural restorative powers” of

the economy mean that policymakers should be

passive in response to the business cycle?

2 Policymakers who want to stabilize the economy must

decide how much to change the money supply,

government spending, or taxes Why is it difficult for

policymakers to choose the appropriate strength of their

actions?

3 Suppose that people suddenly wanted to hold more

money balances

a What would be the effect of this change on the

economy if the Federal Reserve followed a rule of

increasing the money supply by 3 percent per year?

Illustrate your answer with a money-market

diagram and an

aggregate-demand/aggregate-supply diagram

b What would be the effect of this change on the

economy if the Fed followed a rule of increasing

the money supply by 3 percent per year plus

1 percentage point for every percentage point that unemployment rises above its normal level? Illustrate your answer

c Which of the foregoing rules better stabilizes the economy? Would it help to allow the Fed to respond to predicted unemployment instead of current unemployment? Explain

4 Some economists have proposed that the Fed use the following rule for choosing its target for the federal

funds interest rate (r):

r  2%  π  1/2 (y  y*)/y*  1/2 ( π  π *),

where πis the average of the inflation rate over the

past year, y is real GDP as recently measured, y* is an

estimate of the natural rate of output, and π* is the Fed’s

goal for inflation

a Explain the logic that might lie behind this rule for setting interest rates Would you support the Fed’s use of this rule?

b Some economists advocate such a rule for monetary policy but believe πand y should be the forecasts of

future values of inflation and output What are the advantages of using forecasts instead of actual values? What are the disadvantages?

5 The problem of time inconsistency applies to fiscal policy as well as to monetary policy Suppose the

P r o b l e m s a n d A p p l i c a t i o n s

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government announced a reduction in taxes on income

from capital investments, like new factories

a If investors believed that capital taxes would

remain low, how would the government’s action

affect the level of investment?

b After investors have responded to the announced

tax reduction, does the government have an

incentive to renege on its policy? Explain

c Given your answer to part (b), would investors

believe the government’s announcement? What

can the government do to increase the credibility

of announced policy changes?

d Explain why this situation is similar to the time

inconsistency problem faced by monetary

policymakers

6 Chapter 2 explains the difference between positive

analysis and normative analysis In the debate about

whether the central bank should aim for zero inflation,

which areas of disagreement involve positive statements

and which involve normative judgments?

7 Why are the benefits of reducing inflation permanent

and the costs temporary? Why are the costs of

increasing inflation permanent and the benefits

temporary? Use Phillips-curve diagrams in your

answer

8 Suppose the federal government cuts taxes and

increases spending, raising the budget deficit to

12 percent of GDP If nominal GDP is rising 7 percent

per year, are such budget deficits sustainable forever?

Explain If budget deficits of this size are maintained for

20 years, what is likely to happen to your taxes and your

children’s taxes in the future? Can you do something today to offset this future effect?

9 Explain how each of the following policies redistributes income across generations Is the redistribution from young to old, or from old to young?

a an increase in the budget deficit

b more generous subsidies for education loans

c greater investments in highways and bridges

d indexation of Social Security benefits to inflation

10 Surveys suggest that most people are opposed to budget deficits, but these same people elected representatives who in the 1980s and 1990s passed budgets with significant deficits Why might the opposition to budget deficits be stronger in principle than in practice?

11 The chapter says that budget deficits reduce the income

of future generations, but can boost output and income during a recession Explain how both of these

statements can be true

12 What is the fundamental tradeoff that society faces if it chooses to save more?

13 Suppose the government reduced the tax rate on income from savings

a Who would benefit from this tax reduction most directly?

b What would happen to the capital stock over time? What would happen to the capital available to each worker? What would happen to productivity? What would happen to wages?

c In light of your answer to part (b), who might benefit from this tax reduction in the long run?

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ability-to-pay principle—the idea that

taxes should be levied on a person

according to how well that person

can shoulder the burden

absolute advantage—the comparison

among producers of a good

accord-ing to their productivity

accounting profit—total revenue

mi-nus total explicit cost

aggregate-demand curve—a curve that

shows the quantity of goods and

services that households, firms, and

the government want to buy at each

price level

aggregate-supply curve—a curve that

shows the quantity of goods and

services that firms choose to

pro-duce and sell at each price level

appreciation—an increase in the value

of a currency as measured by the

amount of foreign currency it can

buy

automatic stabilizers—changes in

fis-cal policy that stimulate aggregate

demand when the economy goes

into a recession without

policymak-ers having to take any deliberate

action

average fixed cost—fixed costs

divided by the quantity of output

average revenue—total revenue

divided by the quantity sold

average tax rate—total taxes paid

divided by total income

average total cost—total cost divided

by the quantity of output

average variable cost—variable costs

divided by the quantity of output

balanced trade—a situation in which

exports equal imports

benefits principle—the idea that

peo-ple should pay taxes based on the

benefits they receive from

govern-ment services

bond—a certificate of indebtedness

budget constraint—the limit on the

consumption bundles that a

con-sumer can afford

budget deficit—a shortfall of tax

rev-enue from government spending

budget surplus—an excess of

govern-ment receipts over governgovern-ment

spending

capital—the equipment and structures

used to produce goods and services

capital flight—a large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country

cartel—a group of firms acting in unison

catch-up effect—the property whereby countries that start off poor tend to grow more rapidly than countries that start off rich

central bank—an institution designed

to oversee the banking system and regulate the quantity of money in the economy

ceteris paribus—a Latin phrase, trans-lated as “other things being equal,”

used as a reminder that all variables other than the ones being studied are assumed to be constant

circular-flow diagram—a visual model

of the economy that shows how dol-lars flow through markets among households and firms

classical dichotomy—the theoretical separation of nominal and real variables

closed economy—an economy that does not interact with other economies in the world

Coase theorem—the proposition that if private parties can bargain without cost over the allocation of resources, they can solve the problem of exter-nalities on their own

collective bargaining—the process by which unions and firms agree on the terms of employment

collusion—an agreement among firms

in a market about quantities to pro-duce or prices to charge

commodity money—money that takes the form of a commodity with in-trinsic value

common resources—goods that are rival but not excludable

comparable worth—a doctrine accord-ing to which jobs deemed compara-ble should be paid the same wage

comparative advantage—the compari-son among producers of a good ac-cording to their opportunity cost

compensating differential—a differ-ence in wages that arises to offset the nonmonetary characteristics of different jobs

competitive market—a market with many buyers and sellers trading identical products so that each buyer and seller is a price taker

complements—two goods for which

an increase in the price of one leads

to a decrease in the demand for the other

constant returns to scale—the prop-erty whereby long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity

of output changes

consumer price index (CPI)—a mea-sure of the overall cost of the goods and services bought by a typical consumer

consumer surplus—a buyer’s willing-ness to pay minus the amount the buyer actually pays

consumption—spending by house-holds on goods and services, with the exception of purchases of new housing

cost—the value of everything a seller must give up to produce a good

cost-benefit analysis—a study that compares the costs and benefits to society of providing a public good

cross-price elasticity of demand—a measure of how much the quantity demanded of one good responds to

a change in the price of another good, computed as the percentage change in quantity demanded of the first good divided by the percentage change in the price

crowding out—a decrease in invest-ment that results from governinvest-ment borrowing

crowding-out effect—the offset in ag-gregate demand that results when expansionary fiscal policy raises the interest rate and thereby reduces in-vestment spending

currency—the paper bills and coins in the hands of the public

cyclical unemployment—the devia-tion of unemployment from its natural rate

deadweight loss—the fall in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax

demand curve—a graph of the rela-tionship between the price of a good and the quantity demanded

demand deposits—balances in bank accounts that depositors can access

on demand by writing a check

demand schedule—a table that shows the relationship between the price

of a good and the quantity demanded

G L O S S A RY

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depreciation—a decrease in the value

of a currency as measured by the

amount of foreign currency it can

buy

depression—a severe recession

diminishing marginal product—the

property whereby the marginal

product of an input declines as the

quantity of the input increases

diminishing returns—the property

whereby the benefit from an extra

unit of an input declines as the

quantity of the input increases

discount rate—the interest rate on the

loans that the Fed makes to banks

discouraged workers—individuals

who would like to work but have

given up looking for a job

discrimination—the offering of

differ-ent opportunities to similar

individ-uals who differ only by race, ethnic

group, sex, age, or other personal

characteristics

diseconomies of scale—the property

whereby long-run average total

cost rises as the quantity of output

increases

dominant strategy—a strategy that is

best for a player in a game

regard-less of the strategies chosen by the

other players

economic profit—total revenue minus

total cost, including both explicit

and implicit costs

economics—the study of how society

manages its scarce resources

economies of scale—the property

whereby long-run average total

cost falls as the quantity of output

increases

efficiency—the property of society

getting the most it can from its

scarce resources

efficiency wages—above-equilibrium

wages paid by firms in order to

in-crease worker productivity

efficient scale—the quantity of output

that minimizes average total cost

elasticity—a measure of the

respon-siveness of quantity demanded

or quantity supplied to one of its

determinants

equilibrium—a situation in which

supply and demand have been

brought into balance

equilibrium price—the price that

bal-ances supply and demand

equilibrium quantity—the quantity supplied and the quantity de-manded when the price has ad-justed to balance supply and demand

equity—the property of distributing economic prosperity fairly among the members of society

excludability—the property of a good whereby a person can be prevented from using it

explicit costs—input costs that re-quire an outlay of money by the firm

exports—goods and services that are produced domestically and sold abroad

externality—the impact of one per-son’s actions on the well-being of a bystander

factors of production—the inputs used

to produce goods and services

Federal Reserve (Fed)—the central bank of the United States

fiat money—money without intrinsic value that is used as money because

of government decree

financial intermediaries—financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers

financial markets—financial institu-tions through which savers can di-rectly provide funds to borrowers

financial system—the group of institu-tions in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment

Fisher effect—the one-for-one adjust-ment of the nominal interest rate to the inflation rate

fixed costs—costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produced

fractional-reserve banking—a bank-ing system in which banks hold only a fraction of deposits as reserves

free rider—a person who receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for it

frictional unemployment —unemploy-ment that results because it takes time for workers to search for the jobs that best suit their tastes and skills

game theory—the study of how people behave in strategic situations

GDP deflator—a measure of the price level calculated as the ratio

of nominal GDP to real GDP times

100

Giffen good—a good for which an increase in the price raises the quantity demanded

government purchases—spending on goods and services by local, state, and federal governments

gross domestic product (GDP)—the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country

in a given period of time

horizontal equity—the idea that tax-payers with similar abilities to pay taxes should pay the same amount

human capital—the accumulation of investments in people, such as edu-cation and on-the-job training

implicit costs—input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm

import quota—a limit on the quantity

of a good that can be produced abroad and sold domestically

imports—goods and services that are produced abroad and sold domestically

in-kind transfers—transfers to the poor given in the form of goods and services rather than cash

income effect—the change in con-sumption that results when a price change moves the consumer to a higher or lower indifference curve

income elasticity of demand—a mea-sure of how much the quantity de-manded of a good responds to a change in consumers’ income, com-puted as the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in income

indexation—the automatic correction

of a dollar amount for the effects of inflation by law or contract

indifference curve—a curve that shows consumption bundles that give the consumer the same level of satisfaction

inferior good—a good for which, other things equal, an increase in income leads to a decrease in demand

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inflation—an increase in the overall

level of prices in the economy

inflation rate—the percentage change

in the price index from the

preced-ing period

inflation tax—the revenue the

govern-ment raises by creating money

internalizing an externality—altering

incentives so that people take

ac-count of the external effects of their

actions

investment—spending on capital

equipment, inventories, and

struc-tures, including household

pur-chases of new housing

job search—the process by which

workers find appropriate jobs given

their tastes and skills

labor force—the total number of

work-ers, including both the employed

and the unemployed

labor-force participation rate—the

percentage of the adult population

that is in the labor force

law of demand—the claim that, other

things equal, the quantity

de-manded of a good falls when the

price of the good rises

law of supply—the claim that, other

things equal, the quantity supplied

of a good rises when the price of the

good rises

law of supply and demand—the claim

that the price of any good adjusts to

bring the supply and demand for

that good into balance

liberalism—the political philosophy

according to which the government

should choose policies deemed

to be just, as evaluated by an

impar-tial observer behind a “veil of

ignorance”

libertarianism—the political

philoso-phy according to which the

govern-ment should punish crimes and

enforce voluntary agreements but

not redistribute income

life cycle—the regular pattern of

income variation over a person’s

life

liquidity—the ease with which an

asset can be converted into the

economy’s medium of exchange

lump-sum tax—a tax that is the same

amount for every person

macroeconomics—the study of econ-omy-wide phenomena, including inflation, unemployment, and eco-nomic growth

marginal changes—small incremental adjustments to a plan of action

marginal cost—the increase in total cost that arises from an extra unit of production

marginal product—the increase in out-put that arises from an additional unit of input

marginal product of labor—the in-crease in the amount of output from

an additional unit of labor

marginal rate of substitution—the rate

at which a consumer is willing to trade one good for another

marginal revenue—the change in total revenue from an additional unit sold

marginal tax rate—the extra taxes paid on an additional dollar of income

market—a group of buyers and sellers

of a particular good or service

market economy—an economy that allocates resources through the decentralized decisions of many firms and households as they in-teract in markets for goods and services

market failure—a situation in which a market left on its own fails to allo-cate resources efficiently

market for loanable funds—the mar-ket in which those who want to save supply funds and those who want to borrow to invest demand funds

market power—the ability of a single economic actor (or small group of actors) to have a substantial influ-ence on market prices

maximin criterion—the claim that the government should aim to maxi-mize the well-being of the worst-off person in society

medium of exchange—an item that buyers give to sellers when they want to purchase goods and services

menu costs—the costs of changing prices

microeconomics—the study of how households and firms make deci-sions and how they interact in markets

model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply—the model that most economists use to explain short-run fluctuations in economic activity around its long-run trend

monetary neutrality—the proposition that changes in the money supply

do not affect real variables

monetary policy—the setting of the money supply by policymakers in the central bank

money—the set of assets in an econ-omy that people regularly use to buy goods and services from other people

money multiplier—the amount of money the banking system gener-ates with each dollar of reserves

money supply—the quantity of money available in the economy

monopolistic competition—a market structure in which many firms sell products that are similar but not identical

monopoly—a firm that is the sole seller of a product without close substitutes

multiplier effect—the additional shifts

in aggregate demand that result when expansionary fiscal policy increases income and thereby in-creases consumer spending

mutual fund—an institution that sells shares to the public and uses the proceeds to buy a portfolio of stocks and bonds

Nash equilibrium—a situation in which economic actors interacting with one another each choose their best strategy given the strategies that all the other actors have chosen

national saving (saving)—the total in-come in the economy that remains after paying for consumption and government purchases

natural monopoly—a monopoly that arises because a single firm can sup-ply a good or service to an entire market at a smaller cost than could two or more firms

natural-rate hypothesis—the claim that unemployment eventually re-turns to its normal, or natural, rate, regardless of the rate of inflation

natural rate of unemployment—the normal rate of unemployment around which the unemployment rate fluctuates

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natural resources—the inputs into the

production of goods and services

that are provided by nature, such as

land, rivers, and mineral deposits

negative income tax—a tax system

that collects revenue from

high-income households and gives

trans-fers to low-income households

net exports—the value of a nation’s

ex-ports minus the value of its imex-ports,

also called the trade balance

net foreign investment—the purchase

of foreign assets by domestic

resi-dents minus the purchase of

domes-tic assets by foreigners

nominal exchange rate—the rate

at which a person can trade the

currency of one country for the

cur-rency of another

nominal GDP—the production of

goods and services valued at

cur-rent prices

nominal interest rate—the interest rate

as usually reported without a

cor-rection for the effects of inflation

nominal variables—variables

mea-sured in monetary units

normal good—a good for which, other

things equal, an increase in income

leads to an increase in demand

normative statements—claims that

at-tempt to prescribe how the world

should be

oligopoly—a market structure in

which only a few sellers offer

simi-lar or identical products

open economy—an economy that

in-teracts freely with other economies

around the world

open-market operations—the

pur-chase and sale of U.S government

bonds by the Fed

opportunity cost—whatever must be

given up to obtain some item

perfect complements—two goods

with right-angle indifference curves

perfect substitutes—two goods with

straight-line indifference curves

permanent income—a person’s

nor-mal income

Phillips curve—a curve that shows the

short-run tradeoff between inflation

and unemployment

physical capital—the stock of

equip-ment and structures that are used to

produce goods and services

Pigovian tax—a tax enacted to correct the effects of a negative externality

positive statements—claims that at-tempt to describe the world as it is

poverty line—an absolute level of in-come set by the federal government for each family size below which a family is deemed to be in poverty

poverty rate—the percentage of the population whose family income falls below an absolute level called the poverty line

price ceiling—a legal maximum on the price at which a good can be sold

price discrimination—the business practice of selling the same good

at different prices to different customers

price elasticity of demand—a mea-sure of how much the quantity demanded of a good responds to

a change in the price of that good, computed as the percentage change

in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price

price elasticity of supply—a measure

of how much the quantity supplied

of a good responds to a change in the price of that good, computed as the percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price

price floor—a legal minimum on the price at which a good can be sold

prisoners’ dilemma—a particular

“game” between two captured pris-oners that illustrates why coopera-tion is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually beneficial

private goods—goods that are both excludable and rival

private saving—the income that households have left after paying for taxes and consumption

producer price index—a measure of the cost of a basket of goods and services bought by firms

producer surplus—the amount a seller

is paid for a good minus the seller’s cost

production function—the relationship between quantity of inputs used to make a good and the quantity of output of that good

production possibilities frontier—a graph that shows the combinations

of output that the economy can pos-sibly produce given the available

factors of production and the avail-able production technology

productivity—the amount of goods and services produced from each hour of a worker’s time

profit—total revenue minus total cost

progressive tax—a tax for which high-income taxpayers pay a larger fraction of their income than do low-income taxpayers

proportional tax—a tax for which high-income and low-income tax-payers pay the same fraction of income

public goods—goods that are neither excludable nor rival

public saving—the tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending

purchasing-power parity—a theory of exchange rates whereby a unit of any given currency should be able

to buy the same quantity of goods

in all countries

quantity demanded—the amount of a good that buyers are willing and able to purchase

quantity equation—the equation M ⫻

V ⫽ P ⫻ Y, which relates the quan-tity of money, the velocity of money, and the dollar value of the econ-omy’s output of goods and services

quantity supplied—the amount of a good that sellers are willing and able to sell

quantity theory of money—a theory asserting that the quantity of money available determines the price level and that the growth rate in the quantity of money available deter-mines the inflation rate

rational expectations—the theory ac-cording to which people optimally use all the information they have, including information about gov-ernment policies, when forecasting the future

real exchange rate—the rate at which a person can trade the goods and services of one country for the goods and services of another

real GDP—the production of goods and services valued at constant prices

real interest rate—the interest rate corrected for the effects of inflation

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real variables—variables measured in

physical units

recession—a period of declining real

incomes and rising unemployment

regressive tax—a tax for which

high-income taxpayers pay a smaller

fraction of their income than do

low-income taxpayers

reserve ratio—the fraction of deposits

that banks hold as reserves

reserve requirements—regulations

on the minimum amount of

re-serves that banks must hold against

deposits

reserves—deposits that banks have

received but have not loaned out

rivalry—the property of a good

whereby one person’s use

dimin-ishes other people’s use

sacrifice ratio—the number of

percent-age points of annual output lost in

the process of reducing inflation by

1 percentage point

scarcity—the limited nature of

soci-ety’s resources

shoeleather costs—the resources

wasted when inflation encourages

people to reduce their money

holdings

shortage—a situation in which

quan-tity demanded is greater than

quantity supplied

stagflation—a period of falling output

and rising prices

stock—a claim to partial ownership in

a firm

store of value—an item that people

can use to transfer purchasing

power from the present to the

future

strike—the organized withdrawal of

labor from a firm by a union

structural unemployment

—unem-ployment that results because the

number of jobs available in some

labor markets is insufficient to

pro-vide a job for everyone who wants

one

substitutes—two goods for which an

increase in the price of one leads to

an increase in the demand for the

other

substitution effect—the change in

consumption that results when a

price change moves the consumer along a given indifference curve to

a point with a new marginal rate of substitution

sunk cost—a cost that has already been committed and cannot be recovered

supply curve—a graph of the relation-ship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied

supply schedule—a table that shows the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied

supply shock—an event that directly alters firms’ costs and prices, shift-ing the economy’s aggregate-supply curve and thus the Phillips curve

surplus—a situation in which quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded

tariff—a tax on goods produced abroad and sold domestically

tax incidence—the study of who bears the burden of taxation

technological knowledge—society’s understanding of the best ways to produce goods and services

theory of liquidity preference— Keynes’s theory that the interest rate adjusts to bring money supply and money demand into balance

total cost—the market value of the inputs a firm uses in production

total revenue (for a firm)—the amount

a firm receives for the sale of its output

total revenue (in a market)—the amount paid by buyers and re-ceived by sellers of a good, com-puted as the price of the good times the quantity sold

trade balance—the value of a nation’s exports minus the value of its im-ports, also called net exports

trade deficit—an excess of imports over exports

trade policy—a government policy that directly influences the quantity

of goods and services that a country imports or exports

trade surplus—an excess of exports over imports

Tragedy of the Commons—a parable that illustrates why common

resources get used more than is desirable from the standpoint of society as a whole

transaction costs—the costs that par-ties incur in the process of agreeing and following through on a bargain

unemployment insurance—a govern-ment program that partially pro-tects workers’ incomes when they become unemployed

unemployment rate—the percent-age of the labor force that is unemployed

union—a worker association that bar-gains with employers over wages and working conditions

unit of account—the yardstick people use to post prices and record debts

utilitarianism—the political philoso-phy according to which the govern-ment should choose policies to maximize the total utility of every-one in society

utility—a measure of happiness or satisfaction

value of the marginal product—the marginal product of an input times the price of the output

variable costs—costs that do vary with the quantity of output produced

velocity of money—the rate at which money changes hands

vertical equity—the idea that tax-payers with a greater ability to pay taxes should pay larger amounts

welfare—government programs that supplement the incomes of the needy

welfare economics—the study of how the allocation of resources affects economic well-being

willingness to pay—the maximum amount that a buyer will pay for

a good

world price—the price of a good that prevails in the world market for that good

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