ECON 22060 Lecture 3: Chapter 6

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Macroeconomics and gdp: microeconomics, the study of the individual units that comprise the economy, a single household"s decisions: what job to take, how to spend income, a single firm"s decisions- output pricing, macroeconomics, the study of economy-wide issues. Production equals income: output and income are essentially the same, nations that produce a large amount of high-value output per capita are relatively wealthy, nations that don"t produce much high-value output per capita are relatively poor. Idea: the output you produce is sold, and you receive income for what you sell. Three uses of gdp data: why is gdp useful to examine, estimate living standards across time and nations, measure economic growth, determine whether an economy is experiencing a short-run expansion or recession. Measuring living standards: total gdp, may not always be the best standard to compare countries, doesn"t adjust for population size of country, per capita gdp, gdp per person, average living standards in a nation.

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