Introduction To Economics - Class Notes
Introduction To Economics - Class Notes
9/17/2019
1.Branches of Economics
Applied economics:
● Economic History: observing, studies the past
● Economic structure: (ex:Globalization)
● Development:
Policy=specific objective
Economic Activity=system
Process=transformation
Outputs=goods and services
Inputs=land, capital and labour
Distribution law/rule
Capitalist system: if you are the owner of the company you are gonna get profit, if
you are a worker you are gonna get a salary
Firms=companies
Organisations that reveals goods and services to maximise profit
Households are gonna buy products and services from companies (look at graphic)
Companies also pay interest and profits to the owners and interests to the landers
2 more: Financial sector land money to those agents that need it to consume or
invest Intermediary between savings and investment
Those … with companies households and public sectors from the rest of the world
that normally paid with foreign currency
Pre-classical period
Mercantilism=product of financial and trade leaders
More related to economic policy than economic theory
Imports and exports were paid with silver and gold
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Physiocrats=
-France, 18th century
-Authors: F.Quesnay and A.Turgot
-Wealth of nations derived from land (agriculture)
Adam Smith: Scottish Economist, published one of the most important book The
Wealth of Nations, 1776
Main ideas: individual interest, free market and competition should maximize the
social welfare.
(Efficiency definition: if you are are to produce more with less resources, or if …)
Example: The bakers want to get profit, so they produce a lot of bread. Therefore
the consumers are gonna take advantage of this behavior, because the price is
going to get cheaper. It’s not because of the baker’s solidarity.
David Ricardo: first one to be worried about distribution. Theories about the
distribution of wealth.
1. Labour theory of value: Ricardo tries to explain the value of things. The value
of goods/services depends of the quantity of labour that those goods/services
are incorporating. He is also talking about intellectual labor
2. Comparative advantage theory: This theory implicates globalization. It is
focused on international trade theory. He is recommending that every country
should specialize in those productions where they are more productive.
This theory should maximise the world production.
Keynesianism:
J.M Keynes
Mainstream during the Great Depression crisis (1929).
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.
Free market doesn’t lead to full employment.
Say’s Law, Jean Baptiste (classical economist): the supplies (producers) creates its
own demand. This theory is rejected by Keynes, because people can save. He
thinks that as a consequence, we will create crisis.
Conclusion: free market doesn’t lead to full employment.
State Intervention:
1. Fiscal Policy
2. Monetary policy
Monetarism:
Oils crisis in the 70s: stagflation (stagnation and inflation). Keynesian
recommendations were not useful to face this crisis.
The course was higher because we had to pay more for oil: the whole market was
affected.
Trade-off (keynesian thought):
1. Policies to reduce employment, but they were increasing inflation
2. Decrease inflation, and increase unemployment
In the oil crisis, the world was suffering stanflation: high unemployment and high
inflation.
Monetarists didn’t agree with the Keynesian thought. They will supply new policies:
Supply Policies. They want to increase productivity, the efficiency.
One of the recommendations was to privatise. Competitive market, regulation and
liberalisation. And the last: stabilisation of the economy.
This is why we call this school monetarism, because monetary variables are crucial.
One of the fathers of monetarism is Milton Friedman (school of Chicago).
Example: Pinochet in Chile, was following an extreme version of monetarism.
Neoliberalists would also follow a monetarist thought.
Post-Keynesianism:
They appeared in the 50s and 60s
Keynesianism +
1. Income distribution
2. Credit institutions
3. Unions and Multinationals
They updated the Keynesian thought: they added some new parameters like the role
of financial markets, the role of some institutions…
Hyman Minsky: his theory is Financial Instability. Capitalism is going to generate
insurance financial instability. Investing in the financial sector would maybe bring
more profit. The problem is that the financial sector is a key sector, we need to
connect savings and investors. In this second period (advanced capitalised period)
the financial sector is not going to play the traditional role. It becomes a speculative
mechanism. This capitals are not being invested in real economy (manufactured
sector etc.). The issue is that the capitals invested are also speculatives, so they will
be retired. A bubble is created: speculatives capitals can leave the financial market
in one day.
This theory can explain the last crisis.
10/1/2019
Institutionalism:
Institutions (values, habits…) play a key role in the long term
Old Institutional Economics (T.Veblen) and New Institutional Economics (R.Coase
and D.North)
5.Economic Systems
One economics system are the group of societies that are sharing the same mode
of production.
A mode of production is one specific way of society produce, consume and
distribute.
Compare Capitalism and Socialism.
The main goal of the socialist model is not to get profit. The government is planning
loses for a company.
In a socialist economy we follow a plan: we decide how much companies are going
to produce, the price, who is going to consume etc. Then we also decide the
objective of the companies.
In the capitalist model most of the decisions are made by markets (ex:prices). If we
want to maximise efficiency we should force the competition.
We can have high unemployment in a capitalist model, which does not happen in a
socialist system, although they have underemployment: the workers are not using
their full capacities (ex: to press an elevator çbutton: it is something I can do myself).
What is the value an underemployed person is making ? Nothing
Social inequalities are accepted in a capitalist model. Socialists prefer having a low
income, and a lower efficiency than social inequalities.
Inflation can not be high in a socialist economy, because everything is controlled, but
some queues are created: the price won’t change with the demand but you have to
be the first one to get the product. It creates black market.
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1. Demand:
Demand: How many products, consumers are willing to buy at any given price.
When the amount of product that buyers are willing to buy at any given price go up
or down
This changes are not related to the price.
2) Changes in income:
Normally, the higher the income, the higher the consumption. However there
are other goods that are called inferior and behave differently: the higher the
income the lower the consumption (ex: palm oil).
3) Changes in tastes:
Tastes can be influenced by advertisement, for example. Tastes can also
change against the goods.
4) Changes in expectations:
2. Supply:
Quantity of goods that suppliers are willing to offer at any given price.
It reflects the positive relationship between price and quantity supplied (increasing
marginal costs).
The higher the price, the higher the quantity (ex: housing market).
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The change in the quantity is not explained by the price of the product.
3.Elasticities:
It measures how much a variable changes when another variable changes.
A) Equilibrium
The price at which the quantity, consumers are willing to buy coincides
with the quantity are willing to supply
When the answer of the price buyers and sellers are willing to sell
the same amount of products
B) Disequilibrium
More products available than amount of purchases
Excess supply
Low price: More demand than available supply
Excess demand (shortage of supply)
If markets are competitive, these disequilibrium will correct themselves
If we have an excess supply in a market with perfect competition it will correct itself
The invisible hand
Aggregation of multiple individual decisions
4.1.1. Shifts in perfect competition
a) Shifts in demand
Ex: Increase in income
Demand curve shifts to the right
Excess demand, but consumers are willing to buy at
a higher price
New equilibrium
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4.2. Imperfect competition and market failures
Some of the previous assumptions are not fulfilled in the real world:
a)Few buyers or sellers
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Market power is the capacity to affect the price.
Markets with one or few consumers: weapons, aircraft, … when a state has market
power.
ex:
P Qd TR MR
10 10 10*10=100
9.5 11 9.5*11=104.5 4.5
9 12 9*12=108 3.5
Marginal Cost is the additional unit cost that companies are assuming after
producing one more unit.
3) Barriers to entry
Legal: patents, licences…
Technological:
Economic: economies of scales
(Licences,...)
4) Product differentiation
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Economies of Scale: unit cost reduction that occur when companies increase
their size. (UC=total cost divided by the quantity)
Other economists reject that prices are determined by utility (satisfaction) because of
its subjectivity:
Markets does not always correct disequilibrium through changes in prices (rigidity of
prices). In the crises, the prices don’t necessarily raise, but the entrepreneurs fire
employes.
Externalities are the positive or negative effects of the activity of firms that are not
internalized.
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7.Theories of unemployment
The supply creates its own demand. We don’t have to be worried about the lack of
demand (Jean Baptiste)
(...)
Problem of lack of demand: the government have to assume a very active role.
Marxist approach:
What is the nature of unemployment ?
Derives from the nature of the capitalist system. Not a temporal problem. Because
the central objective is to maximise profit. By doing this we are going to maximise
capital, and when possible reduce salaries, which is very common in crisis. It’s
because of the existence of unemployment that capitalists can control salaries.
8.Employment policies
How can we create employment ?
It depends.
“Loi Aubry”
10/29/2019
1.Aggregate magnitudes
1) Aggregate demand
Price level=weighted average
GDP (Gross Domestic Product)(x) and Price level (average price in my economy)(y).
AD curve decreasing. The higher the price, the lower the demanded quantity.
Consumers are the first source of demand, but it’s not the only one. Investment is a
second source of demand. The public administration can also buy products.
In general in economy:
● M=imports
● X=exports
Other determinants: wealth, income, distribution, interest rate, price expectations and
taxes among others.
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b) Investment
Capital goods: those goods that are used in producing other goods, rather than to
satisfy needs.
It’s part of the total product devoted to buy capital goods -> Capital Stock.
More volatile (unstable) than consumption. It has to do with utility. (ex.If my profit
prospects are negative. Is an investor going to be interested in investing in my
production ?)
It depends on prospects:
● Investing just to cover my depreciation. I’m investing just to replace my
machines because they have achieved their life cycle. Therefore we are just
substituting previous investments. In this case we are not increasing our
capital stock.
● Investment>depreciation -> Capital accumulation. I am replacing my
machines but I add two more.
● Investment<depreciation -> disinvestment
1.2.Aggregate Supply
It shows the amount of products and services that are supplied at any price
level.
It has 4 determinants/variables:
1.3.Aggregate Economy
a) Neoclassical model
(graph powerpoint)
The economy is going to have full employment if we don’t have state
intervention. They rely in the power of prices and flexibility.
b) Keynesian Model
“In the long run (the vertical line of the AS will disappear) we will all be
dead.” We need the state Policies to avoid the vertical curve of AS. He
rejects flexibility of prices.
2.Public Sector
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3. Public budget
It’s a plan of expected incomes and expenditures for the upcoming fiscal year.
Incomes:
● Sales of Public Companies
Few public companies. But if these companies are getting profit, who is gonna
be the owner of this profit ? The owner is the state. This profit will be part of
public income.
● Taxes: Mandatory financial charges that are imposed by governments. Most
important source of public incomes.
a) According to what is taxed
Direct and Indirect taxes. Direct taxes are directly taxes from income,
wealth and profits. Does not depend on your decision. Indirect taxes
come from transactions. The valuable tax taxes consumption. (TVA)
b) According to the proportion taxed
Progressive, regressive and proportional taxes.
(ex. 2000 a month and a 20% tax. 20% is the tax rate and the taxable
amount is 2000.)
Progressive taxes: those taxes in which the tax rate increases as the
taxable amount increases.
Regressive taxes:
Proportional taxes:
● Public Debt
Expenditures:
● Investment: gross expenditure that half the vocation of lasting more than 1
year (ex. If you buy a machine or build a University)
● Current exp.: goods and services that are consumed within the year (ex.Office
Supplies)
Public budget
Public incomes
Public expenditures
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If investors perceive that investing in your country is risky, they will ask for a higher
interest.
Country risk, depends on the fiscal debt.
Public Debt: the higher the PD, the higher the “price” (interest).
4.Fiscal Policy
a) Resource allocation: (ex. Tobacco, we can increase the tax rate for this
product to reduce the consumption) Fiscal policy is used to discourage. (ex.
Public transport, lower tax rate with the objective to encourage the
consumption of public transports) Fiscal policy is used to encourage.
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4.2 Fiscal Policy Tools
Fiscal policies try to shift the demand to the left.
Expansionary Policy (expansionary means that we are expanding the demand)
Different fiscal policy implement different effects: Expansionary and contractionary.
Neoclassical school:
The type of countries that could implement social policies: one of the conclusion of
neoclassical countries is that poor countries cannot afford social policies (ex. Social
Substitutes). This is because they don’t have enough resources.
Non productive expenditure: government has few resources, and invest them in
productivity. However, if you use this resources to create schools or hospital, they
are called “non productive”. Because they do not increase the supply nor the
productivity.
Criticism to Neoclassical approach: Social services make workers.
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1.Money
Anything (over History we can see that very different products can be used as
money) that is accepted as a mean of exchange.
Money is an important social innovation. It reduces the transaction cost.
Probability of coincidence of demand (ex.Food and clothes)
Store of value (stability). If the value of money is going to be the same in a year or
not.
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6.The Monetary Market
In this case we only have one producer.
Increasing (shifting the supply to the right) or reducing (shifting the demand the left)
the supply of demand controls inflation.
Quantitative theory: The general price level of goods and services is directly
proportional to the amount of money in circulation.
M*V=P*Q (Q is not constant)
8. The monetary Policy
Changes in the supply of money and interest rates geared to affect inflation, GDP
and unemployment. (more Keynesian, for Neoclassicals we shouldn’t use monetary
Policy)
AD has 4 components:
How can the monetary supply shift this aggregate demand ?
If we put more money in circulation people have more money to consume, and
investors can invest more. The GDP will be higher, the employment will be higher.
(expansionary policies)
However if you have problems with inflation, you can’t apply this policy.
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Inactive population: not working nor seeking for a job (ex. retires).
2. Types of unemployment
Frictional: people who take some time to move from one job to another. Not very
problematic.
Seasonal: the demand varies over the course of the year. For some economists this
a kind of “structural” unemployment. It has to do with a specific skills that is not
always required in the labour market.
Cyclical: associated with economic crisis, with the economic cycle. When employers
fire people because they don’t need so much production.
Structural:
1. .
2. In this case maybe we have opportunities.
3. los fganseses somos log mejoges
2. Keynesian approach: when entrepreneurs fire workers when they get into a
crisis. The demand of labour is a “derived” demand.
6.Theories of unemployment
Minimum wage: it is a distortion, the invisible hand can’t happen.
1.What’s inflation
The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is rising
If the inflation is 2%, it means that the level of prices is 2% higher.
3. Measures of Inflation
Consumer Price Index (CPI) -> market basket: asking people how many products
are you buying.
Core inflation (calculated through the price of all the products minus energy and food
products). If this rate is 2% and the CPI is 10%,
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4. Types of inflation
Demand pull Inflation: Increased AD > Increased AS
Cost Pull Inflation: Rise in the price of Raw Materials. (ex. If you have to pay higher
price for oil, you have to increase the price to keep your profit rate).
7. Inflationary spiral
Self reinforcing process: inflation that regenerates more inflation.
Because of inflation real wages are going down, because the purchasing power or
real wages is going down.
8. Deflation spiral
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1. Economic Growth
There are different ways of measuring it.
Types:
● GDP and GNP (Growth National Product).
GDP is measuring the value of all the products and services that are
produced in the domestic market by national companies but also by foreign
companies.
GNP is measuring the value of all the products and services that are
produced by national companies in the domestic market or abroad.
● GDP per capita. Determines the living conditions of a population.
● Potential GDP. The highest GDP that one country can produce with the
current resources.
2. Historical perspective
viva pablo iglesias #podem
The Dutch disease. An important increase of one exporting sector can generate the
decline of the rest of the exporting sectors.
pablo lo hizo
12/10/2019
5. Business Cycles
Divided into 4 stages: declines and increases are general.
● Expansion: period in which the GDP increases.
● Peak: the highest level of GDP. It’s the beginning of the Recession.
● Recession: period where the GDP declines.
● Trough: the lowest level of GDP the economy is going to achieve. It’s also the
beginning of the expansion.
There are 3 types of cycles (length):
1. Short-term cycle (Kitchin): from 2 to 4 years, it results from the changes in
business inventories. Temporary cycle. People stop buying.
2. Medium-term cycle (economic): from 7 to 11 years, it refers to new business
investment. Investors stop investing. The problem comes from your
productive capacity. It’s higher than necessary in that moment.
3. Long-term cycle (Kondratiev): from 30 to 50 years, it results from the
technological innovation. “High Growth waves”. Industrial revolution: steam
engines. High investment because investors want to change the technology.
(powerpoint graph)
6. Economic Crisis
Different school of thoughts:
● Monetarist: Due to the credit cycle. Markets are unstable because of the
“invisible hand”. But there is an exogenous variable,
● Keynesian: Due to the instability of investment. Profit prospects.
● Marxist: If we want to maximise the surplus: capitalist are going to invest their
profits. C=constant capital (replacing machines because of depreciation),
V=wages capital and S is the surplus (profits). After reinvesting my profits, the
production capacity is higher.
Periodical crisis:
Financiarisation:
7. Degrowth theory
Georgescu Roegen et Serge Latouche
We have to change central objectives.
“good life”
Maybe there is a relationship between economic growth and the concept of “good
life”, but also satisfiers. Economic growth is in conflict with satisfiers.
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Unit. 8: Inequality
Is inequality a problem?
1. What’s inequality?
Different social, political and/or economic situation of individuals or territories, that
affects their current or future development.
Marxist:
2. Types of inequality
Individual:
If you are socially excluded, your possibilities of getting a job are much lower.
Political exclusion.
3. Main indicators
Deciles: Comparing purcentages of the total income.
GINI Coefficient: Measures the distance between the “diagonal” and the Lorenz
Curve. 0=maximum equality and 1=maximum inequality
Lorenz Curve: graph
4. Causes
Multicausality
5. Effects
This devaluation of the liberal-democracy and rise of far-right parties are effects of
inequalities. Workers are disappointed with globalisation. Real wage remains
constant.