Chapter 5 Notes
Chapter 5 Notes
Chapter 5 Notes
ii. Labor force—consists of those who are either working or looking for work
iii. Unemployment rates rise during recessions b/c people are laid off and new
jobs are difficult to find
B. Inflation
i. Inflation rate—the percentage increase in the overall price level over a given
period of time, usually one year
ii. Inflation has increased before each recession and then decline during and
immediately after each recession
iii. There are long-term trends in inflation
1. Low point during 1970s to high point in 1980—the Great Inflation
2. Decline in inflation is called disinflation
3. Deflation—when inflation is negative and the average level falls
iv. There is no reason to expect the inflation rate to be zero, even on average
C. Interest Rates
i. Interest rate—the amount received per dollar loaned per year, usually
expressed as a percentage (e.g., 6 percent) of the loan
ii. Different Types of Interest Rates
1. Mortgage interest rate—rates on loans to buy a house
2. Saving deposit interest rate—rates people get on their savings
deposits at banks
3. Treasury bill rate—interest rate the government pays when it borrows
money from people for a year or less
4. Federal funds rate—interest rate banks charge each other on very
short-term loans
iii. When interest rates rise, it becomes more expensive to borrow funds to buy a
house or a car, so many people postpone such purchases
iv. Interest rates rise before each recession then decline during & after recession
v. There are long-term trends in inflation rate
vi. Trends and fluctuations of interest rates are intimately connected with the
trends and fluctuations in inflation and real GDP
1. When inflation rises, people who lend money will be paid back in
funds that are worth less b/c average price of goods ↑ more quickly
2. To compensate for this decline in value of funds, lenders require a
higher interest rate
vii. Real interest rate—the interest rate minus the expected rate of inflation; it
adjusts the nominal interest rate for inflation
viii. Nominal interest rate—the interest rate uncorrected for inflation
ix. To keep the real interest rate from changing by a large amounts as inflation
rises, the nominal interest rate has to increase with inflation
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Vandan Desai
ECON 102—Principles of Macroeconomics
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Vandan Desai
ECON 102—Principles of Macroeconomics