Advanced Placement Macroeconomics

Instructor: Mr. Eli Tella Phone: (956) 514-2100

Office: A-2 email:

Office Hours: 3:00-3:50

Description:

Economics describes the nature of an economy or an economic system and investigates economic problems with the objective of offering solutions. The word economy is derived from the ancient Greekoikos (house) and nemein (to manage) oikonomia and literally means household management.Macroeconomics will introduce students to economic principles in a broader sense applying those concepts to economic systems as a whole. This college level course includes the study of different economic principles including basic economic concepts, measurement of economic performance, national income and price determination, financial sector, inflation, unemployment, stabilization policies, economic growth, productivity, open economies, international trade, and finance. Throughout the course students will analyze economic decisions made by policy makers and use critical thinking skills to generate, interpret and label graphs and charts.The course is one semester long and every student is expected to take the AP exam in May. Students that pass the examination will receive college credit.

Textbook:

Mankiw, N. Gregory. Principles of Macroeconomics, 5th ed., (Ohio: South-Western Cengage Learning 2008).

Additional Readings and Materials:

Morton, John. Advanced Placement Economics, 3rd ed. (New York: National Council on Economic Education 2005).

Wall Street Journal

A variety of financial web pages

Local newspaper articles

Course Planer

Unit 1 Basic Economic Concepts

A. Scarcity and Opportunity Costs

B. Production Possibilities Frontier

C. Interdependence and the Gaines from Trade

D. Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium

A. Scarcityand Opportunity Costs

The limited nature of society’s recourses and the fundamental economic problem facing all societies that results from a combination of scarce resources and people’s virtually unlimited wants.

Lesson 1: Introduction to course: expectations and requirements, study of economic principles and basic economic concepts. Analyze and discuss chapter 1 Ten Principles of Economics. Have the students read and study Chapter 2 for homework.

Lesson 2: How people make decisions, how people interact, and how the economy works review

Lesson 3:Introduction of the economic way of thinking, class discussion on scarcity and opportunity costs.

Lesson 4:Language of economics and introduction of the Circular-Flow Diagram: a schematic representation of the organization of the economy. Student Graph practice.

B._Production Possibilities Frontier

Graph that shows the combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology.

Lesson 5: Production Possibilities Frontier practice. Analyzing trade offs and efficiency. Quiz on Principles of economics and economic language.

Lesson 6: Economic Model practice, graphing review (single variable, two variables, demand curve, slope, cause and effect). Read Chapter 3 for homework.

Lesson 7:Focus exercise discussion on productive and allocative efficiency. Review of Chapters 1 and 2, Chapter Test.

Key concepts:scarcity, economics, efficiency, equality, opportunity cost, rational people, marginal changes, incentive, market economy, property rights, market failure, externality, market power, productivity, inflation, and business cycle, circular flow diagram, production possibilities frontier, microeconomics, macroeconomics, positive statements, normative statements.

C. Interdependence and the Gains from Trade

Characteristic of a society (and increasingly that of the world) with a highdegree of division-of-labor where people depend on other people to produce most of the goods and servicesrequired to sustain life and living.

Lesson 8:Study of specialization and trade, absolute advantage, comparative advantage, and discussion on international trade.

Lesson 9: The price of trade and applications of comparative advantage

Lesson 10: Chapter 3 review and chapter quiz

Key concepts: absolute advantage, opportunity cost, comparative advantage, imports, exports

D. Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium

The terms supply and demand refer to the behavior of people as they interact with one another in competitive markets

Lesson 11: Introduction to the Market Forces of Supply and Demand, study of competition. Question and Answer session on the law of demand and law of supply.

Lesson 12: Study of the demand curve and the relationship between price and quantity demanded. Shifts in the demand curve.

Lesson 13: Continuum of demand curve lesson, graph practice (demand curve model.)

Lesson 14: Study of the supply curve and the relationship between price and quantity demanded. Shifts in the supply curve.

Lesson 15: Supply Curve lesson continued, graph practice (supply curve model.)

Lesson 16: Equilibrium, Supply and Demand Together, student graph practice.

Lesson 17: Study of elasticity and its applications, graph analysis

Lesson 18: Unit Review and Unit Test

Key concepts: market, competitive market, quantity demanded, law of demand, demand schedule, demand curve, normal good, inferior good, substitutes, complements, quantity supplied, law of supply, supply schedule, supply curve, equilibrium, equilibrium price, equilibrium quantity, surplus, shortage, law of supply and demand.Elasticity, total revenue,

Unit Two Measurement of Economic Performance

  1. Measuring a Nations Income
  2. Inflation, Measuring the Cost of living
  3. Identifying Unemployment
  1. Measuring a Nations Income

The economy’s income and expenditure, business cycle (circular flow diagram) and the components of gross domestic product. Study of a variety of analysis regarding economic performance

Lesson 19: The measurement of Gross Domestic Product and its components. GDP: the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. Introduction of GDP equation (y = c + i + g + (x-m) )

Lesson 20: The study of Real versus nominal GDP and international differences in GDP and the quality of life. AP free response question practice.

Lesson 21: Review of GDP and Chapter Quiz.

B. Inflation, Measuring the Cost of Living

An increase in the overall level of prices in the economy

Lesson 22: Measuring the cost of living, Inflation and Inflation rate

Lesson 23: The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer Price Index and Dollar Figures in Different Times Exercise.

Key Concepts: microeconomics, macroeconomics, gross domestic product (GDP), consumption, investment, government purchases, net exports, nominal GDP, real GDP, GDP deflator, consumer price index, inflation rate, indexation, nominal interest rate, real interest rate

C. Identifying Unemployment

Unemployed: state of working for less than one hour per week for pay or profit in a non-family owned business, while being able and having made an effort to find a job during the past month.

Lesson 24: Measurement of Unemployment, case study on minimum wage

Lesson 25: Introduction to Okun’s Law. StudyTheory of Efficiency Wages

Lesson 26: Unit Two Review and Unit Two Test

Key Concepts: labor force, unemployment rate, labor-force participation rate, natural rate of unemployment, job search, efficiency wages, cyclical unemployment, frictional unemployment, job search.

Unit Three Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

  1. Aggregate Demand
  2. Aggregate Supply
  3. Macroeconomic Equilibrium

A. Aggregate Demand

The total quantity of goods and services demanded at different price levels.

Lesson 27: Explaining short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Lesson 28: Introduction of the Aggregate Demand curve; the hypothetical curve showing different levels of real GDP that could be purchased at various price levels.

B. Aggregate Supply

The value of goods and services that all firms would produce in a specific period of time at various price levels

Lesson 29: Introduction and study of Aggregate Supply and its determinants.

Lesson 30: Study of the Aggregate supply Curve; the hypothetical curve showing different levels of real GDP that could be produced at various price levels.

Lesson 31: Comparison of the Sticky-Wage Theory, Sticky-price Theory, and Misperceptions Theory.

C. Macroeconomic Equilibrium

Levelof real GDP consistent with a given price level; intersection of aggregate supply and aggregate demand.

Lesson 32:Study of the Multiplier Effect.

Lesson 33: Keynesian Economics Review

Lesson 34: Chapter 21-22 Review and Exam

Key concepts: recession, depression, model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply, aggregate demand curve, aggregate supply curve, natural rate of output, stagflation, theory of liquidity preference, fiscal policy, multiplier effect, crowding-out effect, automatic stabilizers.

Unit Four Financial Sector

A. Financial Institutions

B. The basic Tools of Finance

C. The Monetary System

A. Financial Institutions

Institutions which collectfunds from the public and places them in financial assets, such as deposits, loans, and bonds, rather than tangibleproperty

Lesson 35: Introduction to the financial institutions in the U.S economy

Lesson 36:Study of Saving and Investing money market equilibrium

Lesson 37: Introduction to the Market for Loanable Funds study of bond market equilibrium.

Lesson 38: Graph practice Money Market and Loanable funds market

Key concepts: financial system, financial markets, bond, stock, financial intermediaries, mutual fund, national saving, private saving, budget surplus, budget deficit, crowding out.

B. The Basic Tools of Finance

Finance the field that studies how people make decisions regarding the allocation of resources over time and the handling of risk

Lesson 39: Measuring the time value of money

Lesson 40: Introduction to Managing Risk

Lesson 41: Study of Asset Evaluation

Lesson 42: Chapter 14 Review and Chapter Test

Key concepts: finance, present value, future value, compounding, risk aversion, diversification, firm-specific risk, market risk, fundamental analysis, efficient market hypothesis, informational efficiency, random walk.

C. The Monetary System

Set of mechanisms by which a governmentprovidesmoney (cash) in a country'seconomy. It usually consists of a mint, central bank, and commercial banks, Federal Reserve System (FED, open market operations, and stagflation

Lesson 43: The Meaning of Money

Lesson 44: Banks and the Money supply

Lesson 45: Federal Reserve System and its tools of Monetary Control

Lesson 46: Unit Four Review and Unit Exam

Key concepts: money, medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value, liquidity, commodity money, currency, demand deposits, fiat money, federal Reserve, central bank, money supply, monetary policy, reserves, fractional-reserve banking, reserve ratio, money multiplier, open market operations, reserve requirements, discount rate, federal funds rate.

Unit FiveInflation, Unemployment, Stabilization Policies

  1. Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy
  2. The Phillips Curve
  3. Balanced Budget Multiplier

A. Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy

The setting of the level of government spending and taxation by government policymakers.

Lesson 47: Study of the wealth effect, interest rate effect, and the exchange rate

Lesson 48: Study of changes in government purchases

Lesson 49: Using policy to stabilize the economy, free response question exercise

B. The Phillips Curve

A curve that shows the short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment.

Lesson 50: Origins of the Phillips Curve, Relation between the Phillips Curve to the Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply models.

Lesson 51: The Long-Run Phillips Curve, student graph practice including constructing charts and using data.

Lesson 52: The Short- Run Phillips Curve, student free response graph practice

Lesson 53: The cost of reducing inflation

C. Balanced Budget Multiplier

Change in overall spending caused by a change in investment spending

Lesson 54: Study of the Multiplier Effect

Lesson 55: Formula for the spending multiplier

Lesson 56: Other applications of the Multiplier Effect and changes in taxes.

Lesson 57: Unit 5 review and unit test.

Key concepts: Phillips curve, natural-rate hypothesis, supply shock, sacrifice ratio, rational, expectations, theory of liquidity preference, fiscal policy, multiplier effect, automatic stabilizers.

Unit Six Economic Growth and Productivity

  1. Economic Growth Around the World
  2. Productivity: Its Role and Determinants
  3. Economic Growth and Public Policy

A. Economic Growth around the World

Sustained period during which a nation’s total output of goods and services increases.

Lesson 58: Study of Long-Run Growth

Lesson 59: Real GDP per person Analysis

B. Productivity: Its Role and Determinants

Degree to which productive resources are used efficiently; normally refers to labor, but can apply to all factors of production.

Lesson 60: Why is Productivity Important and how productivity is determined

Lesson 61: Study of investment in Human capital

Lesson 62: Study of Investment in Physical capital

Lesson 63: Introduction of Technological knowledge

C. Economic Growth and Policy

What can government policy do to raise productivity and living standards?

Lesson 64: Saving and Investing Policies, economic policy student debate.

Lesson 65: Study of Diminishing Returns and the Catch-Up Effect.

Lesson 66: Investment from abroad, Education, and Health and Nutrition.

Lesson 67: Unit Six review and unit test.

Key concepts: productivity, physical capital, natural resources, technological knowledge, diminishing returns, catch-up effect, labor productivity, labor force participation rate, economies of scale, infrastructure, efficiency

Unit Seven International Trade and Finance

  1. The Determinants of Trade
  2. The Winners and Losers from Trade
  3. Arguments for Restricting Trade

A. Determinants of Trade

Trade: To engage in the exchange, purchase, or sale of goods.

Lesson 68: The equilibrium without Trade

Lesson 69: The world price and Comparative Advantage

B. The Winners and Losers from Trade

Lesson 70: The Gains and Losses of an Exporting/Importing Country

Lesson 71:Study of the effects of a Tariff and trade Policy

C.Arguments for Restricting Trade

Lesson 72: The jobs argument, national security argument, infant industry argument, unfair competition argument, and the protection-as-a-bargaining-chip argument.

Lesson 73: Study of Trade Agreements and the World Trade Organization

Lesson 74: Unit Review and Unit Exam

Lesson 75: Course conclusion and Final Thoughts.

Key concepts: world price, tariff, quotas, subsidies, absolute advantage, comparative advantage, terms of trade, domestic price, current account, balance of good and services, trade deficit, trade surplus, capital account, official reserves, flexible exchange rates, fixed exchange rates, depreciation, appreciation, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), World Trade organization (WTO), North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

Ultimately the goal of this course is to prepare students at the college level. The main goal of students enrolled in this course should be that they be prepared to pass the AP Macroeconomics Exam in May.

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