The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics
Table of contents — Macroeconomics
- Preface
- How to cite The Economy 2.0
- A note to instructors
- Producing The Economy 2.0
- List of features
- Introduction to mathematical extensions
- Glossary
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1—The supply side of the macroeconomy: Unemployment and real wages
- 1.1 Family fortunes: Jobs, wages, and the global macroeconomy
- 1.2 The economy as a whole
- 1.3 Measuring the macroeconomy: Output, employment, unemployment, and inactivity
- 1.4 Measuring the macroeconomy: Nominal wages, prices, and real wages
- 1.5 The supply side of the macroeconomy
- 1.6 Wage setting and unemployment (WS curve)
- 1.7 The price-setting real wage (PS curve)
- 1.8 Equilibrium and disequilibrium in the WS–PS model
- 1.9 Studying the economy as a whole: Macroeconomics
- 1.10 Summary
- 1.11 References
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2—Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions
- 2.1 A scarred generation
- 2.2 Measuring the economy: Inequality
- 2.3 Unemployment and inequality: WS–PS model and Lorenz curve
- 2.4 Labour market policies to address structural unemployment and inequality
- 2.5 Labour unions
- 2.6 Segmented labour markets
- 2.7 Taxes and the WS–PS model
- 2.8 Imported materials and the WS–PS model
- 2.9 Application: Did a decline in competition increase inequality in the US?
- 2.10 Application: Employment security and labour market flexibility in Denmark
- 2.11 Successes and failures: Germany and Spain
- 2.12 How good is the model?
- 2.13 Summary
- 2.14 References
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3—Aggregate demand and the multiplier model
- 3.1 The ‘great recession’: Hardship at home and at work
- 3.2 Measuring the aggregate economy: Gross domestic product
- 3.3 GDP as expenditure: The components of GDP
- 3.4 Interpreting GDP
- 3.5 Growth and fluctuations
- 3.6 Introducing the multiplier model
- 3.7 The multiplier model: Aggregate demand shocks cause business cycle fluctuations
- 3.8 The multiplier model: Including the government and net exports
- 3.9 Why is consumption relatively smooth?
- 3.10 Shocks to households and the limits to smoothing consumption
- 3.11 Why is investment volatile?
- 3.12 Investment spending in the multiplier model
- 3.13 Application: China’s post-COVID-19 aggregate demand problem
- 3.14 Summary
- 3.15 References
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4—Inflation and unemployment
- 4.1 Cost of living crisis
- 4.2 Measuring the economy: Inflation
- 4.3 What’s wrong with inflation?
- 4.4 Inflation, unemployment, and conflicting claims on output
- 4.5 Modelling the relationship between inflation and unemployment
- 4.6 Expected inflation shifts the Phillips curve
- 4.7 The business cycle model: Aggregate demand, the supply side, and inflation
- 4.8 The business cycle model: Demand and supply shocks, and inflation expectations
- 4.9 Global oil and other commodity price shocks
- 4.10 A review of causes of inflation
- 4.11 Application: The return of inflation after the pandemic
- 4.12 Summary
- 4.13 References
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5—Macroeconomic policy: Inflation and unemployment
- 5.1 ‘It’s the economy, stupid’: Government popularity, inflation, and unemployment
- 5.2 The role of government: Introducing fiscal and monetary policy
- 5.3 Fiscal and monetary policy responses to demand shocks
- 5.4 The division of labour between fiscal and monetary policymakers
- 5.5 A negative (inflationary) supply shock and the monetary policy dilemma
- 5.6 Fiscal policy: How governments can dampen fluctuations
- 5.7 The size of the multiplier and the impact of fiscal policy
- 5.8 Government austerity policy and the paradox of thrift
- 5.9 Monetary policy and inflation targeting
- 5.10 Monetary policy and anchored inflation expectations
- 5.11 Application: Inflation and the monetary policy response to the Russia–Ukraine war
- 5.12 Current costs and future benefits: Understanding investment and asset prices
- 5.13 Transmission of monetary policy decisions to inflation: Domestic channels
- 5.14 Monetary policy and the exchange rate
- 5.15 Application: Policy responses to supply shocks—case study of the UK 1950–2023
- 5.16 Summary
- 5.17 References
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6—The financial sector: Debt, money, and financial markets
- 6.1 How do you live if you don’t work?
- 6.2 Bilateral debt: Marco and Julia
- 6.3 Debt and the financial sector: Financial intermediaries and financial markets
- 6.4 Introducing a bank
- 6.5 Introducing money
- 6.6 Introducing the central bank
- 6.7 Who really signs the banknotes? The central bank’s balance sheet and the government
- 6.8 Money creation in a modern economy
- 6.9 Introducing financial markets
- 6.10 Businesses: Capital and the magic (and risks) of leverage
- 6.11 Household investments: Housing and financial assets
- 6.12 The financial sector: A summary and overview
- 6.13 Summary
- 6.14 References
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7—Macroeconomic policy in the global economy
- 7.1 Chainsaws, government spending, and inflation
- 7.2 Exchange rate regimes, monetary policy, and inflation
- 7.3 A flexible exchange rate regime with no stable inflation target (FlexNIT)
- 7.4 The ultimate Fix economy: A country within a common currency area
- 7.5 Exchange rate and monetary regimes: The story so far
- 7.6 Fixed and flexible exchange rate regimes in practice around the world
- 7.7 Exchange rate regimes and inflation outcomes in the world
- 7.8 Global financial markets and policy interest rates
- 7.9 Implications of global capital mobility for interest rates in different monetary exchange rate regimes
- 7.10 Why do some countries still end up with high and volatile inflation?
- 7.11 Application: Quality of governance and inflation
- 7.12 Summary
- 7.13 References
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8—Economic dynamics: Financial and environmental crises
- 8.1 Collapse of Lehman Brothers 2008–2009
- 8.2 Tipping points, instability, and lock-in
- 8.3 Application: A real-world poverty trap
- 8.4 Assets and price bubbles
- 8.5 Modelling a house price bubble and collapse
- 8.6 Structural changes in the housing market and shifts of the S-shaped PDC
- 8.7 Housing booms and busts: Household borrowing, bank lending, and aggregate consumption
- 8.8 Application: Inequality and the US housing boom and bust
- 8.9 Leverage and interconnection: The vulnerabilities of banks
- 8.10 Addressing instability of the financial system
- 8.11 A model of environmental collapse: The disappearance of Arctic sea ice
- 8.12 Prudential policies to address fundamental uncertainty about environmental tipping points
- 8.13 Destabilizing a carbon trap to promote green technologies
- 8.14 Summary
- 8.15 References
- 9 and 10—Coming soon
- Looking forward to economics after The Economy 2.0
- Bibliography