Dictionary Definition
macroeconomic adj : of or relating to
macroeconomics
Extensive Definition
Macroeconomics is a branch of economics that deals with the
performance, structure, and behavior of a national or regional
economy as a whole.
Along with microeconomics,
macroeconomics is one of the two most general fields in economics. Macroeconomists
study aggregated indicators such as GDP, unemployment
rates, and price indexes
to understand how the whole economy functions. Macroeconomists
develop models that explain the relationship between such factors
as national
income, output,
consumption,
unemployment,
inflation, savings, investment, international
trade and international
finance. In contrast, microeconomics is
primarily focused on the actions of individual agents, such as
firms and consumers, and
how their behavior determines prices and quantities in specific
markets.
While macroeconomics is a broad field of study,
there are two areas of research that are emblematic of the
discipline: the attempt to understand the causes and consequences
of short-run
fluctuations in national income (the business
cycle), and the attempt to understand the determinants of
long-run
economic
growth (increases in national income).
Macroeconomic
models and their forecasts are used by both governments and
large corporations to assist in the development and evaluation of
economic
policy and business strategy.
Development of macroeconomic theory
The first published use of the term "macroeconomics" was by the Norwegian Economist Ragnar Frisch in 1933 and before this, there already was an effort to understand many of the broad elements of the field.Classical economics and the quantity theory of money
Until the early twentieth century, the quantity theory of money dominated as the favored macroeconomic model among classical economists. This theory gives the equation of exchange:- M\cdot V = P\cdot Q
The equation states that the money supply times
the velocity of money (how quickly cash is passed from one person
to another through a series of transactions) is equivalent to
nominal output (price level times quantity of goods and services
produced). Classical economists, such as Irving
Fisher assumed that real income and the velocity of money would
be static in the short-run, so, based on this theory, a change in
price level could only be brought about by a change in money
supply. The classical quantity theory of money assumed that the
demand for money was static and independent of other factors such
as interest
rates. Economists questioned the classical quantity theory of
money during the Great
Depression when the demand for money, and thus the velocity of
money, fell sharply.
Keynesianism
Until the 1930s, most economic analysis did not separate out individual behavior from aggregate behavior. With the Great Depression of the 1930s and the development of the concept of national income and product statistics, the field of macroeconomics began to expand. Before that time, comprehensive national accounts, as we know them today, did not exist. The ideas of the British economist John Maynard Keynes, who worked on explaining the Great Depression, were particularly influential.After Keynes
One of the challenges of economics has been a struggle to reconcile macroeconomic and microeconomic models. Starting in the 1950s, macroeconomists developed micro-based models of macroeconomic behavior, such as the consumption function. Dutch economist Jan Tinbergen developed the first national macroeconomic model, which he first built for the Netherlands and later applied to the United States and the United Kingdom after World War II. The first global macroeconomic model, Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates LINK project, was initiated by Lawrence Klein and was mentioned in his citation for the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 1980.Theorists such as Robert
Lucas Jr suggested (in the 1970s) that at least some
traditional Keynesian (after
John Maynard Keynes) macroeconomic
models were questionable as they were not derived from
assumptions about individual behavior, but instead based on
observed past correlations between macroeconomic variables.
However, New
Keynesian macroeconomics has generally presented microeconomic
models to shore up their macroeconomic theorizing, and some
Keynesians have contested the idea that microeconomic foundations
are essential, if the model is analytically useful. An analogy
might be, that the fact that quantum physics is not fully
consistent with relativity theory does not mean that relativity is
false.
The various schools of thought are not always in
direct competition with one another, even though they sometimes
reach differing conclusions. Macroeconomics is an ever evolving
area of research. The goal of economic research is not to be
"right," but rather to be useful . An economic model, according to
Friedman, should accurately reproduce observations beyond the data
used to calibrate or fit the model.
Analytical approaches
The traditional distinction is between two different approaches to economics: Keynesian economics, focusing on demand; and supply-side economics, focusing on supply. Neither view is typically endorsed to the complete exclusion of the other, but most schools do tend clearly to emphasize one or the other as a theoretical foundation.- Keynesian economics The first stage of macroeconomics was a period of academic theory heavily influenced by the economist Keynes. It therefore has his name. This period focused on aggregate demand to explain levels of unemployment and the business cycle. That is, business cycle fluctuations should be reduced through fiscal policy (the government spends more or less depending on the situation) and monetary policy. Early Keynesian macroeconomics was "activist," calling for regular use of policy to stabilize the capitalist economy, while some Keynesians called for the use of incomes policies.
- Neoclassical economics For decades there existed a split between the Keynesians and classical economists, the former studying macroeconomics and the latter studying microeconomics. This schism has been resolved since the late 80s, however, and macroeconomics has evolved well into its second phase. The models Keynes used are now considered to be outdated, and new models have been designed that have greater logical consistency and are more closely related to microeconomics. The models used in macroeconomics today, however, have been built upon Keynesian models and are therefore similar. The main difference in this second stage of macroeconomics is an increased focus on monetary policy, such as interest rates and money supply. Macroeconomic theory today has harmonized the study of aggregate demand and supply with the study of money.
Schools
- Monetarism, led by Milton Friedman, holds that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. It rejects fiscal policy because it leads to "crowding out" of the private sector. Further, it does not wish to combat inflation or deflation by means of active demand management as in Keynesian economics, but by means of monetary policy rules, such as keeping the rate of growth of the money supply constant over time.
- New classical economics. The original theoretical impetus was the charge that Keynesian economics lacks microeconomic foundations -- i.e. its assertions are not founded in basic economic theory. This school emerged during the 1970s. This school asserts that it does not make sense to claim that the economy at any time might be "out-of-equilibrium". Fluctuations in aggregate variables follow from the individuals in the society continuously re-optimizing as new information on the state of the world is revealed. A neo classical economist would define macroeconomics as dynamic stochastic general equilibrium theory, which means that choices are made optimally considering time, uncertainty and all markets clearing.
- New Keynesian economics, which developed partly in response to new classical economics, strives to provide microeconomic foundations to Keynesian economics by showing how imperfect markets can justify demand management.
- Post-Keynesian economics represents a dissent from mainstream Keynesian economics, emphasizing the role of uncertainty, liquidity preference and the historical process in macroeconomics.
Macroeconomic Policies
In order to try to avoid major economic shocks, such as The Great Depression, governments make adjustments through policy changes which they hope will succeed in stabilizing the economy. Governments believe that the success of these adjustments is necessary to maintain stability and continue growth. This economic management is achieved through two types of strategies.Notes
References
- Macroeconomics.
- Essays in Positive Economics .
- Foundations of Modern Macroeconomics.
- The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets
- Modern Macroeconomics: Its Origins, Development And Current State .
See also
- Microeconomics
- Monetary policy
- Keynesian economics
- Economic development
- Fiscal Policy
- Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium
- Model (macroeconomics)
- AP Macroeconomics
macroeconomic in Arabic: اقتصاد كلي
macroeconomic in Asturian: Macroeconomía
macroeconomic in Bosnian: Makroekonomija
macroeconomic in Bulgarian: Макроикономика
macroeconomic in Catalan: Macroeconomia
macroeconomic in Czech: Makroekonomie
macroeconomic in Danish: Makroøkonomi
macroeconomic in German: Makroökonomie
macroeconomic in Estonian: Makroökonoomika
macroeconomic in Modern Greek (1453-):
Μακροοικονομία
macroeconomic in Spanish: Macroeconomía
macroeconomic in Esperanto: Makroekonomiko
macroeconomic in Persian: اقتصاد کلان
macroeconomic in French: Macroéconomie
macroeconomic in Galician: Macroeconomía
macroeconomic in Korean: 거시경제학
macroeconomic in Croatian: Makroekonomija
macroeconomic in Indonesian: Ekonomi makro
macroeconomic in Icelandic: Þjóðhagfræði
macroeconomic in Italian: Macroeconomia
macroeconomic in Hebrew: מקרו-כלכלה
macroeconomic in Georgian: მაკროეკონომიკა
macroeconomic in Lao: ເສດຖະສາດມະຫາພາກ
macroeconomic in Latvian: Makroekonomika
macroeconomic in Lithuanian:
Makroekonomika
macroeconomic in Hungarian: Makroökonómia
macroeconomic in Macedonian:
Макроекономија
macroeconomic in Mongolian: Макро эдийн
засаг
macroeconomic in Dutch: Macro-economie
macroeconomic in Japanese: マクロ経済学
macroeconomic in Norwegian: Makroøkonomi
macroeconomic in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Makroøkonomi
macroeconomic in Polish: Makroekonomia
macroeconomic in Portuguese: Macroeconomia
macroeconomic in Romanian: Macroeconomie
macroeconomic in Russian: Макроэкономика
macroeconomic in Albanian: Makroekonomia
macroeconomic in Simple English:
Macroeconomics
macroeconomic in Slovak: Makroekonómia
macroeconomic in Slovenian: Makroekonomija
macroeconomic in Serbian: Макроекономија
macroeconomic in Serbo-Croatian:
Makroekonomija
macroeconomic in Finnish: Makrotaloustiede
macroeconomic in Swedish: Makroekonomi
macroeconomic in Telugu: స్థూల ఆర్థిక
శాస్త్రము
macroeconomic in Thai: เศรษฐศาสตร์มหภาค
macroeconomic in Vietnamese: Kinh tế học vĩ
mô
macroeconomic in Turkish: Makroekonomi
macroeconomic in Ukrainian: Макроекономіка
macroeconomic in Urdu: کلیاتی معاشیات
macroeconomic in Chinese:
宏觀經濟學