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Index
About this Book
Cover Page Brief Contents Title Page Copyright Page Dedication About the Authors A Fresh Perspective on Economics Broad. Useful. Intuitive.
Broadly Applicable Extraordinarily Useful Refreshingly Intuitive
Build a Solid Foundation
Four Core Principles. Endless Applications. Economic Intuition Begins with the Basics From Fundamentals to “One Economics” Useful Economics for the Real World
Teaching Modern Economics
Every Decision Is an Economic Decision From Market Structure to Business Strategy Micro Foundations of Macroeconomics A Flexible Approach to Business Cycle Models
Applications That Keep It Real
Everyday Economics Interpreting the Data Do the Economics
Tools That Prepare and Engage
It Helps to Have a Navigation System
The Big Picture The road ahead Every roadmap needs landmarks Marginal reminders
Don’t Just Summarize … Synthesize
Tying It Together Built-in study guide Chapter at a Glance Questions for discussion and assessment
Practice the Process of Graphing
Step-by-step breakdowns of key graphs Casual graphs model good economics habits Practice, practice, practice
Technology That Supports Learning
Everything You Need in a Single Learning Path
Pre-class Tutorials Interactive Decision Points LearningCurve Adaptive Quizzing Step-by-Step Graphs End-of-Chapter Activities with Graphing Questions Work It Out Activities
Powerful Support for Instructors
Assessment
Test Bank End-of-Chapter Questions Practice Quizzes
Additional Resources
Gradebook LMS Integration Instructor’s Resource Manual Solutions Manual Lecture Slides Active Learning Resources
Acknowledgments Organization of This Book Contents
A Quick Review of Graphs
Graphs That Break Down Numbers
Pie Charts Analyzing Distributions
Graphs That Show Comparisons
Bar Chart and Dot Plot Time-Series Graphs
Graphs That Show Relationships
Scatterplot The stylized graphs of economics
A Relationship Is Not the Same Thing as Cause and Effect
Part I: Foundations of Economics
Chapter 1: The Core Principles of Economics
1.1 A Principled Approach to Economics
The Economic Approach A Systematic Framework for Making Decisions
1.2 The Cost-Benefit Principle
Quantifying Costs and Benefits Maximize Your Economic Surplus Focus on Costs and Benefits, Not How They’re Framed Applying the Cost-Benefit Principle
1.3 The Opportunity Cost Principle
Opportunity Costs Reflect Scarcity Calculating Your Opportunity Costs The “Or What?” Trick How Entrepreneurs Think About Opportunity Cost You Should Ignore Sunk Costs Applying the Opportunity Cost Principle The Production Possibility Frontier Recap: Evaluating Either/Or Decisions
1.4 The Marginal Principle
When Is the Marginal Principle Useful? Using the Rational Rule to Maximize Your Economic Surplus Applying the Rational Rule
1.5 The Interdependence Principle
Interdependency One: Dependencies Between Your Own Choices Interdependency Two: Dependencies Between People (or Businesses) Interdependency Three: Dependencies Between Markets Interdependency Four: Dependencies Over Time What Else?
Tying It Together
Using the Core Principles in Practice
Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 2: Demand: Thinking Like a Buyer
2.1 Individual Demand: What You Want, at Each Price
An Individual Demand Curve The Law of Demand
2.2 Your Decisions and Your Demand Curve
Choosing the Best Quantity to Buy The Rational Rule for Buyers How Realistic Is This Theory of Demand?
2.3 Market Demand: What the Market Wants
From Individual Demand to Market Demand The Market Demand Curve Is Downward-Sloping Movements Along the Demand Curve
2.4 What Shifts Demand Curves?
The Interdependence Principle and Shifting Demand Curves Six Factors Shifting the Demand Curve
2.5 Shifts versus Movements Along Demand Curves
Movements Along the Demand Curve Shifts in Demand
Tying It Together
Individual Demand Market Demand
Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 3: Supply: Thinking Like a Seller
3.1 Individual Supply: What You Sell, at Each Price
An Individual Supply Curve The Law of Supply
3.2 Your Decisions and Your Individual Supply Curve
Setting Prices in Competitive Markets Choosing the Best Quantity to Supply The Rational Rule for Sellers in Competitive Markets Rising Marginal Cost Explains Why Your Supply Curve Is Upward-Sloping How Realistic Is This Theory of Supply?
3.3 Market Supply: What the Market Sells
From Individual Supply to Market Supply The Market Supply Curve Is Upward-Sloping Movements Along the Supply Curve
3.4 What Shifts Supply Curves?
The Interdependence Principle and Shifting Supply Curves Five Factors Shifting the Supply Curve
3.5 Shifts versus Movements Along Supply Curves
Movements Along the Supply Curve Shifts in Supply
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 4: Equilibrium: Where Supply Meets Demand
4.1 Understanding Markets
What Is a Market? How Markets Are Organized
4.2 Equilibrium
Supply Equals Demand Getting to Equilibrium Figuring Out Whether Markets Are in Equilibrium
4.3 Predicting Market Changes
Shifts in Demand Shifts in Supply Predicting Market Outcomes When Both Supply and Demand Shift Interpreting Market Data
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part II: Analyzing Markets
Chapter 5: Elasticity: Measuring Responsiveness
5.1 Price Elasticity of Demand
Measuring Responsiveness of Demand Determinants of the Price Elasticity of Demand Calculating the Price Elasticity of Demand
5.2 How Businesses Use Demand Elasticity
Elasticity and Revenue Elasticity and Business Strategy
5.3 Other Demand Elasticities
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand Income Elasticity of Demand
5.4 Price Elasticity of Supply
Measuring Responsiveness of Supply Determinants of the Price Elasticity of Supply Calculating the Price Elasticity of Supply
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 6: When Governments Intervene in Markets
6.1 How Taxes and Subsidies Change Market Outcomes
A Tax on Sellers A Tax on Buyers The Statutory Burden and Tax Incidence The Economic Burden of Taxes A Three-Step Recipe for Evaluating Taxes Analyzing Subsidies
6.2 Price Regulations
Price Ceilings: When Regulation Forces Lower Prices Price Floors: When Regulation Forces Higher Prices
6.3 Quantity Regulations
Quotas
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 7: Welfare and Efficiency
7.1 Evaluating Public Policies
Positive and Normative Policy Analysis Efficiency and Equity
7.2 Measuring Economic Surplus
Consumer Surplus Producer Surplus Voluntary Exchange and Gains from Trade
7.3 Market Efficiency
Question One: Who Makes What? Question Two: Who Gets What? Question Three: How Much Gets Bought and Sold?
7.4 Market Failure and Deadweight Loss
Market Failure Deadweight Loss Market Failure versus Government Failure
7.5 Beyond Economic Efficiency
Critiques of Economic Efficiency
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 8: Gains from Trade
8.1 Gains from Trade 8.2 Comparative Advantage
Introducing Comparative Advantage Comparative Advantage in Action Markets Facilitate Gains from Trade Comparative Advantage Drives International Trade
8.3 Prices Are Signals, Incentives, and Information
Role One: A Price Is a Signal Role Two: A Price Is an Incentive Role Three: A Price Aggregates Information
8.4 How Managers Can Harness Market Forces
Internal Markets Allocate Resources
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part III: Applications and Policy Issues
Chapter 9: International Trade
9.1 Comparative Advantage Is the Foundation of International Trade
Comparative Advantage and International Trade What Gets Traded? Choosing Your Trading Partners: Sources of Comparative Advantage
9.2 How International Trade Shapes the Economy
The World Market The Effects of Imports Imports Raise Economic Surplus The Effects of Exports Exports Raise Economic Surplus Who Wins, and Who Loses? The Politics of International Trade
9.3 The Debate About International Trade
Five Arguments for Limiting International Trade An Intuitive Approach to the International Trade Debate
9.4 International Trade Policy
Tools of Trade Policy Current Trade Policy
9.5 Effects of Globalization
Globalization and the Labor Market
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 10: Externalities and Public Goods
10.1 Identifying Externalities
Types of Externalities The Conflict Between Private Interest and Society’s Interest
10.2 The Externality Problem
The Rational Rule for Society Consequences of Negative Externalities Consequences of Positive Externalities
10.3 Solving Externality Problems
Solution One: Private Bargaining and the Coase Theorem Solution Two: Corrective Taxes and Subsidies Solution Three: Cap and Trade Solution Four: Laws, Rules, and Regulations
10.4 Public Goods and the Tragedy of the Commons
Public Goods and the Free-Rider Problem Solution Five: Government Support for Public Goods Solution Six: Assign Ownership Rights for Common Resource Problems
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 11: The Labor Market
11.1 The Labor Market: Supply and Demand at Work 11.2 Labor Demand: Thinking Like an Employer
How Many Workers Should You Hire at What Price? The Rational Rule for Employers Analyzing Labor Demand Shifts Will Robots Take Your Job?
11.3 Labor Supply: How to Balance Work and Leisure
Your Individual Labor Supply: Allocating Your Time Between Labor and Leisure The Rational Rule for Workers The Extensive Margin: Choose Whether or Not to Work Choosing Your Occupation The Market Labor Supply Curve Analyzing Labor Supply Shifts
11.4 Changing Economic Conditions and Labor Market Equilibrium
A Three-Step Recipe
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 12: Wages, Workers, and Management
12.1 Labor Demand: What Employers Want
Human Capital Efficiency Wages The Market for Superstars
12.2 Labor Supply: What Workers Want
Compensating Differentials
12.3 Institutional Factors That Explain Why Wages Vary
Government Regulations Unions and Workers’ Bargaining Power Monopsony and Employers’ Bargaining Power
12.4 How Discrimination Affects Wages
Measuring Discrimination Types of Discrimination
12.5 Personnel Economics
Ensure Your Workers Have the Right Skills for the Job Motivate Your Workers with Incentives Shape Your Corporate Culture Offer the Right Benefits Attract the Best Workers
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 13: Inequality, Social Insurance, and Redistribution
13.1 Measuring Inequality
Income Inequality Alternative Measures of Inequality
13.2 Poverty
Defining Poverty Absolute versus Relative Poverty The Incidence of Poverty in the United States
13.3 Social Insurance, the Social Safety Net, and Redistributive Taxation
The Social Safety Net Social Insurance Programs The Tax System
13.4 The Debate About Income Redistribution
The Economic Logic of Redistribution The Costs of Redistribution: The Leaky Bucket The Trade-Off Between Efficiency and Equality Fairness and Redistribution
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part IV: Market Structure and Business Strategy
Chapter 14: Market Structure and Market Power
14.1 Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Monopolistic Competition
Perfect Competition Monopoly: No Direct Competitors Oligopoly: Only a Few Strategic Competitors Monopolistic Competition: Many Competitors Selling Differentiated Products Market Structure Determines Market Power Five Key Insights into Imperfect Competition
14.2 Setting Prices When You Have Market Power
Your Firm Demand Curve Your Marginal Revenue Curve The Rational Rule for Sellers
14.3 The Problem with Market Power
Market Power Leads to Worse Outcomes Increasing Competition Can Lead to Better Outcomes
14.4 Public Policy to Restrain Market Power
Laws to Ensure Competition Thrives Laws to Minimize the Harm from Exercising Market Power
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 15: Entry, Exit, and Long-Run Profitability
15.1 Revenues, Costs, and Economic Profits
Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit Average Revenue, Average Cost, and Your Profit Margin
15.2 Free Entry and Exit in the Long Run
Entry Decreases Demand and Your Profits Exit Increases Demand and Your Profits Economic Profits Tend to Zero Price Equals Average Cost
15.3 Barriers to Entry
Demand-Side Strategies: Create Customer Lock-In Supply-Side Strategies: Develop Unique Cost Advantages Regulatory Strategy: Government Policy Entry Deterrence Strategies: Convince Your Rivals You’ll Crush Them Overcoming Barriers to Entry
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 16: Business Strategy
16.1 The Five Forces That Determine Business Profitability
Five Forces Framework Force One—Existing Competitors: Intensity and Type of Existing Competition Force Two—Potential Competitors: Threat of Entry Force Three—Competitors in Other Markets: Threat of Potential Substitutes Force Four—Bargaining Power of Suppliers Force Five—Bargaining Power of Buyers Recap: The Five Forces and the Path Ahead
16.2 Non-Price Competition: Product Positioning
The Importance of Product Differentiation Positioning Your Product The Role of Advertising
16.3 Bargaining Power of Buyers and Sellers
Bargaining Power The Hold-Up Problem Contract Theory What Should You Make, and What Should You Buy?
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 17: Sophisticated Pricing Strategies
17.1 Price Discrimination
Price Discrimination The Efficiency of Price Discrimination Conditions for Price Discrimination
17.2 Group Pricing
Setting Group Prices How to Segment Your Market
17.3 The Hurdle Method
Alternative Versions and Timing Shopping Around Extra Hassle, Bad Service, and Imperfect Goods Quantity Discounts
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 18: Game Theory and Strategic Choices
18.1 How to Think Strategically
Introducing Game Theory The Four Steps for Making Good Strategic Decisions
18.2 The Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Challenge of Cooperation
Understanding the Prisoner’s Dilemma Nash Equilibrium The Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Failure of Cooperation Examples of the Prisoner’s Dilemma
18.3 Multiple Equilibria and the Problem of Coordination
Coordination Games Examples of Coordination Games Anti-Coordination Games Good and Bad Equilibria Solving Coordination Problems
18.4 Advanced Strategy: First and Second Mover Advantages
Games That Play Out over Time Using Tree Logic First-Mover Advantage versus Second-Mover Advantage
18.5 Advanced Strategy: Repeated Games and Punishments
Collusion and the Prisoner’s Dilemma Finitely Repeated Games Indefinitely Repeated Games
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part V: Advanced Decisions
Chapter 19: Decisions Involving Uncertainty
19.1 Risk Aversion
Understanding Risk Diminishing Marginal Utility The Risk-Reward Trade-off Expected Utility
19.2 Reducing Risk
Strategy One: Risk Spreading—Transforming Big Risks into Small Risks Strategy Two: Diversification Strategy Three: Insurance Strategy Four: Hedging—Offsetting Risks Strategy Five: Gathering Information to Reduce Risk
19.3 Behavioral Economics: How People Make Mistakes Around Uncertainty
Overconfidence Problems Assessing Probability Problems Evaluating Payoffs
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 20: Decisions Involving Private Information
20.1 Adverse Selection When Sellers Know More Than Buyers
Hidden Quality and the Risk of Getting a Lemon Adverse Selection and Your Ability to Buy High-Quality Products Solutions to Adverse Selection of Sellers
20.2 Adverse Selection When Buyers Know More Than Sellers
Hidden Quality and the Risk of Getting High-Cost Customers Solutions to Adverse Selection of Buyers
20.3 Moral Hazard: The Problem of Hidden Actions
Hidden Actions and Your Decisions Moral Hazard in Relationships: The Principal-Agent Problem Solving Moral Hazard Problems
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part VI: Macroeconomic Foundations and the Long Run
Chapter 21: Sizing Up the Economy Using GDP
21.1 GDP and the Macroeconomy
From Microeconomics to Macroeconomics The Circular Flow Digging into the Definition of GDP
21.2 GDP Measures Total Spending, Output, and Income
Perspective One: GDP Measures Total Spending Perspective Two: GDP Is Total Output Perspective Three: GDP Measures Total Income Recap: Three Perspectives on GDP
21.3 What GDP Captures and What It Misses
Limitations of GDP GDP as a Measure of Living Standards
21.4 Real and Nominal GDP
Real and Nominal GDP How to Calculate Real GDP
21.5 Millions, Billions, and Trillions
The Problem of Big Numbers Four Strategies for Scaling Big Numbers
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 22: Economic Growth
22.1 Economic Growth Facts
Economic Growth Since 1 Million B.C. Economic Growth Over the Past Two Centuries
22.2 The Ingredients of Economic Growth
The Production Function Ingredient One: Labor and Total Hours Worked Ingredient Two: Human Capital Ingredient Three: Capital Accumulation New Recipes for Combining Ingredients: Technological Progress
22.3 The Analytics of Economic Growth
Analyzing the Production Function Capital Accumulation and the Solow Model Technological Progress
22.4 Public Policy: Why Institutions Matter for Growth
Property Rights Government Stability Efficiency of Regulation Government Policy to Encourage Innovation
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 23: Unemployment
23.1 Employment and Unemployment
The Employed and the Unemployed Labor Force Participation The Unemployment Rate
23.2 The Dynamics of the Labor Market
Labor Market Flows Alternative Measures of Unemployment
23.3 Understanding Unemployment
Types of Unemployment Frictional Unemployment: It Takes Time to Find a Job Structural Unemployment: When Wages Are Stuck Above the Equilibrium Wage Institutions: Additional Causes of Structural Unemployment Recap: Frictional and Structural Unemployment
23.4 The Costs of Unemployment
The Economic Costs of Unemployment The Social Costs of Unemployment Protecting Yourself from the Harmful Effects of Unemployment
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 24: Inflation and Money
24.1 Measuring Inflation
The Price of a Basket of Goods and Services Constructing the Consumer Price Index and Measuring Inflation The Challenges of Measuring the True Cost of Living
24.2 Different Measures of Inflation
Consumer Prices Business Prices
24.3 Adjusting for the Effects of Inflation
Comparing Dollars over Time Real and Nominal Variables Real and Nominal Interest Rates Overcoming Money Illusion
24.4 The Role of Money and the Costs of Inflation
The Functions of Money The Costs of Hyperinflation The Costs of Expected Inflation The Costs of Unexpected Inflation The Inflation Fallacy
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part VII: Micro Foundations of Macroeconomics
Chapter 25: Consumption and Saving
25.1 Consumption, Saving, and Income
Consumption and Income Saving and Income
25.2 The Micro Foundations of Consumption
Choosing How Much to Spend and How Much to Save The Rational Rule for Consumers Consumption Smoothing Permanent Income Hypothesis
25.3 The Macroeconomics of Consumption
The Relationship Between Consumption and Income Adding Behavioral Economics and Credit Constraints to Our Analysis
25.4 What Shifts Consumption?
Consumption Shifter One: Real Interest Rates Consumption Shifter Two: Expectations Consumption Shifter Three: Taxes Consumption Shifter Four: Wealth
25.5 Saving
Saving Motive One: Changing Income over the Life Cycle Saving Motive Two: Changing Needs over the Life Cycle Saving Motive Three: Bequests Saving Motive Four: Precautionary Saving Smart Saving Strategies
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 26: Investment
26.1 Macroeconomic Investment
Defining Investment Types of Investment Investment Is a Key Economic Variable
26.2 Tools to Analyze Investments
Investment Tool One: Compounding Investment Tool Two: Discounting Real versus Nominal Interest Rates
26.3 Making Investment Decisions
How to Evaluate an Investment Opportunity The Rational Rule for Investors An Alternative Perspective: The User Cost of Capital
26.4 The Macroeconomics of Investment
The Real Interest Rate and Investment Factors That Shift the Investment Line
26.5 The Market for Loanable Funds
Supply and Demand of Loanable Funds Shifts in the Supply of Loanable Funds Shifts in the Demand for Loanable Funds
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 27: The Financial Sector
27.1 Banks
What Do Banks Do? Bank Runs Shadow Banks and the Financial Crisis
27.2 The Bond Market
What Does the Bond Market Do? Evaluating Risks
27.3 The Stock Market
What Do Stocks Do? Comparing Stocks and Bonds Understanding Stock Market Data
27.4 What Drives Financial Prices?
Valuing Stocks The Efficient Markets Hypothesis The Value of Expert Advice Financial Bubbles
27.5 Personal Finance Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 28: International Finance and the Exchange Rate
28.1 International Trade and Global Financial Flows
International Trade Global Financial Flows
28.2 Exchange Rates
Exchanging U.S. Dollars for Foreign Currencies Exchange Rates and the Price of Foreign Goods
28.3 Supply and Demand of Currencies
The Market for U.S. Dollars Shifts in Currency Demand Shifts in Currency Supply Forecasting Exchange Rate Movements Government Intervention in Foreign Exchange Markets
28.4 The Real Exchange Rate and Net Exports
Real Exchange Rate and Competitiveness The Real Exchange Rate Determines Net Exports
28.5 The Balance of Payments
The Current Account and The Financial Account Saving, Investment, and the Current Account Current Account Controversies
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part VIII: The Business Cycle
Chapter 29: Business Cycles
29.1 Macroeconomic Trends and Cycles
Trend Growth and the Output Gap Business Cycles Are Not Cycles
29.2 Common Characteristics of Business Cycles
Recessions Are Short and Sharp; Expansions Are Long and Gradual The Business Cycle Is Persistent The Business Cycle Impacts Many Parts of the Economy Okun’s Rule of Thumb Links the Output Gap and the Unemployment Rate
29.3 Analyzing Macroeconomic Data
The Basics of Macroeconomic Data Top 10 Economic Indicators Tracking the Economy: An Economy Watcher’s Guide
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 30: IS-MP Analysis: Interest Rates and Output
30.1 Aggregate Expenditure
Aggregate Expenditure and Short Run Fluctuations The Demand-Driven Short Run and the Supply-Driven Long Run
30.2 The IS Curve: Output and the Real Interest Rate
Aggregate Expenditure and Interest Rates The IS Curve Describes the Link Between the Real Interest Rate and the Output Gap How to Use the IS Curve
30.3 The MP Curve: What Determines the Interest Rate
The Federal Reserve The Risk Premium The MP Curve
30.4 The IS-MP Framework
IS-MP Equilibrium Fluctuating Demand and Business Cycles Analyzing Monetary Policy Analyzing Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier
30.5 Macroeconomic Shocks
Spending Shocks Shift the IS Curve Financial Shocks Shift the MP Curve Predicting Economic Changes
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 31: The Phillips Curve and Inflation
31.1 Three Inflationary Forces
Inflationary Force One: Inflation Expectations Inflationary Force Two: Demand-Pull Inflation Inflationary Force Three: Supply Shocks and Cost-Push Inflation Understanding Inflation
31.2 Inflation Expectations
Why Inflation Expectations Matter Measuring Inflation Expectations
31.3 The Phillips Curve
Demand-Pull Inflation The Phillips Curve Framework The Phillips Curve in the United States An Alternative Illustration: The Labor Market Phillips Curve
31.4 Supply Shocks Shift the Phillips Curve
How Supply Shocks Shift the Phillips Curve Phillips Curve Shifter One: Input Prices Phillips Curve Shifter Two: Productivity Phillips Curve Shifter Three: Exchange Rates Shifts versus Movements Along the Phillips Curve
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 32: The Fed Model: Linking Interest Rates, Output, and Inflation
32.1 The Fed Model
The Fed Model Combines the IS, MP, and Phillips Curves Forecasting Economic Outcomes Three Types of Macroeconomic Shocks
32.2 Analyzing Macroeconomic Shocks
A Recipe for Analyzing Macroeconomic Shocks Analyzing Financial Shocks Analyzing Spending Shocks Analyzing Supply Shocks
32.3 Diagnosing the Causes of Macroeconomic Changes
A Brief Recap A Diagnosis Tool
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 33: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
33.1 The AD-AS Framework
Introducing Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Macroeconomic versus Microeconomic Forces
33.2 Aggregate Demand
Aggregate Expenditure Why Aggregate Demand Is Downward-Sloping Analyzing Aggregate Demand Aggregate Demand Shifters
33.3 Aggregate Supply
Why Aggregate Supply Is Upward-Sloping Analyzing Aggregate Supply Shifts in Aggregate Supply
33.4 Macroeconomic Shocks and Countercyclical Policy
Monetary Policy Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier Forecasting Macroeconomic Outcomes
33.5 Aggregate Supply in the Short Run and the Long Run
Aggregate Supply in the Long Run with Flexible Prices Aggregate Supply in the Very Short Run with Fixed Prices Aggregate Supply in the Short Run and Medium Run with Sticky Prices Getting from the Very Short Run to the Long Run
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Part IX: Macroeconomic Policy
Chapter 34: Monetary Policy
34.1 The Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve System The Federal Open Market Committee
34.2 The Fed’s Policy Goals and Decision-Making Framework
The Fed’s Dual Mandate: Stable Prices and Maximum Sustainable Employment How the Fed Chooses the Interest Rate
34.3 How the Fed Sets Interest Rates
The Overnight Market for Interbank Loans The Impact of Changing the Federal Funds Rate on the Rest of the Economy
34.4 Unconventional Monetary Policy
Monetary Policy Choices When Nominal Interest Rates Are Zero Lender of Last Resort
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Chapter 35: Government Spending, Taxes, and Fiscal Policy
35.1 The Government Sector
Government Spending Government Revenue Hidden Government Spending: Tax Expenditures Regulation
35.2 Fiscal Policy
A Countercyclical Force Automatic Stabilizers Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Interactions
35.3 Government Deficits and Debt
Government Budget Deficits Government Debt Reasons Not to Worry About the Debt Reasons to Worry About Government Debt
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Appendix A: A Closer Look at Aggregate Expenditure and the Multiplier
A.1 Aggregate Expenditure and Income
Aggregate Expenditure Aggregate Expenditure Rises with Income How to Use the Aggregate Expenditure Line
A.2 Macroeconomic Equilibrium and the Keynesian Cross
Aggregate Expenditure in Macroeconomic Equilibrium Shifts in Aggregate Expenditure Predicting the State of the Economy
A.3 The Multiplier
The Multiplier Effect The Size of the Multiplier
Tying It Together Chapter at a Glance End of Chapter
Key Concepts Discussion and Review Questions Study Problems
Glossary Index Back Cover
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