Week 11 Lecture Slides 11175 2024-1
Week 11 Lecture Slides 11175 2024-1
Week 11 Lecture Slides 11175 2024-1
Week 11
• Inflation rate: The percentage increase in the general price level in the
economy from one year to the next.
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Measuring Inflation
• GDP allows us to calculate changes in the price level
over time.
• GDP deflator: A measure of the price level, calculated
by dividing nominal GDP by real GDP and multiplying
by 100.
Nominal GDP
GDP deflator = x 100
Real GDP
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Measuring Inflation
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Measuring Inflation
• consider a simple economy that produces only cars:
Year Quantity of Cars Price of cars Nominal GDP
2021 10 $20,000 $200,000
2022 12 $24,000 $288,000
2023 13 $26,000 $338,000
2022
2023
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The CPI Market Basket
Measuring Inflation
• The following is a simplified example of the market basket to show how
the CPI is constructed.
Base Year (2015) 2020 2021
Product Quantity Price Expenditure Price Expenditure Price Expenditure
(on base year (on base year
quantities) quantities)
Eye 1 $50.00 $50.00 $100.00 $100.00 $85.00 $85.00
exams
Pizzas 20 10.00 200.00 15.00 300.00 14.00 280.00
Books 20 25.00 500.00 25.00 500.00 27.50 550.00
Total $750.00 $900.00 $915.00
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GDP deflator & inflation rate
Year CPI
2015 (Base)
2020
2021
➢ Substitution bias
➢ Increase in quality bias
➢ New product bias
➢ Outlet bias
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The Costs of Inflation
Some well known costs include:
0 – $18,200 Nil
$18,201 – $45,000 19c for each $1 over $18,200
$45,001 – $120,000 $5,092 plus 32.5c for each $1 over
$45,000
$120,001 – $180,000 $29,467 plus 37c for each $1 over
$120,000
$180,001 and over $51,667plus 45c for each $1 over
$180,000
The Costs of High Inflation
Distortions in the tax system
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Demand-pull inflation
Price level
LRAS
SRAS1
112 B
108 A
AD1 AD2
0
$1200 1300 Real GDP (billions of dollars)
What causes inflation?
• Cost-push inflation: Inflation that arises as a result of
a negative supply shock - that is, anything that
causes a decrease in the aggregate supply of goods
and services.
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Cost-push inflation
2. … moving
Price level short-run
equilibrium to LRAS SRAS2
point B, with
lower real GDP SRAS1
and a higher
price level.
1. An increase in
B production costs
112
shifts SRAS to the left
108 A …
AD1
0 $1100 1200 Real GDP (billions of dollars)
What causes inflation?
• Sources of a supply shock can include:
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Labor Force Framework
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Persons not in Labor force
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LFS February 2024
P: Working Age
Population 15+
22.21 m.
E: U: Unemployed
Employed - actively
14.23 m. searching
+ available to
start work
0.56 m.
[Unemployment
rate = U/F =3.8%]
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Labor force participation rate
• Labor force participation rate: The percentage of the working age
population in the labor force.
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Measuring the unemployment rate and
the labour force participation rate
Problems with measuring the unemployment rate:
➢ The number of discouraged job seekers increases during a recession,
therefore, the official unemployment rate appears lower than it would
otherwise be.
❑ Feb 2023: 87,400 were discouraged job seekers.
➢ Under-employed workers—people who work part-time but would like to
work more hours.
❑ Feb 2024: 963,200 people are underemployed.
➢ People who claim to be unemployed but are not can lead to the
unemployment rate being overstated.
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How long are people usually
unemployed?
Duration of unemployment Feb 2024
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Types of Unemployment
• Frictional Unemployment
• Structural Unemployment
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Types of unemployment
• Frictional unemployment: Short-term unemployment
arising from the process of matching workers with jobs.
➢ School leavers, secondary and university graduates looking
for their first job.
➢ People re-entering the workforce after an absence.
➢ People who have lost or quit their job and are looking for
their new job.
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Types of Unemployment
• Structural unemployment: Unemployment arising from a
persistent mismatch between the skills and characteristics of
workers and the requirements of jobs.
e.g. New technology and changes in consumer tastes may make
some workers redundant.
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Types of unemployment
• Cyclical (Demand deficient) unemployment:
Unemployment caused by a business cycle
contraction. Also known as ‘demand deficient’
unemployment.
➢Falling sales lead to cut-backs on production and the
sacking of workers.
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Types of unemployment
• Natural rate of unemployment: The unemployment which
occurs when the economy is operating at full employment
or producing an output at potential GDP.
• Economists say that full employment occurs where there is
no cyclical unemployment.
• There will always be some frictional and structural
unemployment.
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The costs of unemployment
Costs to the economy
• Loss of Gross Domestic Product.
• Loss of human capital.
• Retraining costs.
• Costs to the government:
➢ Unemployment benefit payments are a net drain on the federal
budget.
➢ The opportunity cost of funds directed towards unemployment
benefits.
➢ Loss of tax revenue
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The costs of unemployment
Costs to the individual
• Loss of income.
• Loss of skills.
• Retraining costs.
• Loss of self esteem.
• Unemployment may contribute to family break-ups, health
problems, mental illness, crime and political unrest.
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Question 1
1. Which of the following is the best measure of
the average of the prices of the goods and
services consumed by a typical household?
A. The consumer price index.
B. The producer price index.
C. The GDP deflator.
D. None of the above.
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Question 2
2. Suppose that the data in the following table
reflects the prices in an economy. What is the
inflation rate between 2012 and 2013? Year CPI
(2012 = 100)
2012 100
2013 120
A. 2 per cent
B. 5 per cent
C. 20 per cent
D. 10 per cent 37
Question 3
3. Which of the following describes the accuracy of the
Consumer Price Index (CPI)?
A. Changes in the CPI accurately reflect the true rate of
inflation.
B. Changes in the CPI understate the true rate of
inflation.
C. Changes in the CPI overstate the true rate of
inflation.
D. Changes in the CPI are unrelated to the true rate of
inflation.
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Question 4
4. When the price of petrol rises, some
consumers begin riding their bikes more frequently
or taking public transport instead of driving their
cars. The fact that the CPI does not fully account
for such changes in consumer behaviour is called
A. outlet bias.
B. increase in quality bias.
C. substitution bias.
D. discrimination bias.
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Question 5
5. Demand-pull inflation is caused by
A. a recession.
B. high levels of aggregate demand in the short
run.
C. an increase in the costs of production, which
pulls prices higher.
D. wage increases that are higher than increases
in productivity growth.
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Question 6
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Question 7
7. The labour force is the sum of
A. employed workers and unemployed workers.
B. employed workers and individuals not looking for
work.
C. employed workers and the working-age
population.
D. unemployed workers and the working-age
population.
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Question 8
8. The unemployment rate is the
A. percentage of the labour force receiving
unemployment benefits.
B. percentage of the population that is
unemployed.
C. percentage of the working-age population that
is unemployed.
D. percentage of the labour force that is
unemployed.
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Question 9
9.A full-time student who is not working is
categorised as
A. unemployed.
B. employed.
C. not in the labour force.
D. a discouraged worker.
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Question 10
10. Which of the following causes the official measure
of the unemployment rate to understate the true extent
of joblessness?
A. Many full-time workers really want to be part-time
workers.
B. People who collect unemployment benefits report
themselves to be searching for a job.
C. Discouraged workers are not counted as
unemployed.
D. Discouraged workers are counted as unemployed.
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