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Solution Manual For Macroeconomics,11th Edition by Andrew B. Abel, Ben S. Bernanke, Dean Croushore C

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Solution Manual For Macroeconomics, 11th edition Andrew B. Abel, Ben S. Bernanke, Dean Croushore Chapter 1-15

Chapter 1 Introduction to Macroeconomics  Learning Objectives I.

Goals of Part I A. Introduce students to the main concepts in macroeconomics (Ch. 1) B. Introduce national income accounting and major economic magnitudes (Ch. 2)

II. Section Goals A. Summarize the primary issues addressed in macroeconomics (Sec. 1.1) B. Describe the activities and objectives of macroeconomists (Sec. 1.2) C. Differentiate between the classical and Keynesian approaches to macroeconomics (Sec. 1.3) III. Notes to Tenth Edition Users: This chapter is little changed; the data were updated.

Teaching Notes

I.

What Macroeconomics Is About (Sec. 1.1) Macroeconomics: the study of structure and performance of national economies and government policies that affect economic performance. Macroeconomists study: A. Long-run economic growth 1. Growth of output in United States over time a. Text Fig. 1.1: Output of United States since 1869 b. Note decline in output during recessions; increase in output during some wars 2. Sources of growth—population, average labor productivity growth This may be a good place to introduce students to the calculation of a growth rate, which is used throughout the textbook. You can write it first in general terms, as %X  [(Xt+1  Xt)/Xt]  100%  [(Xt+1/Xt)  1]  100%. Then you might use an example with something you‘re talking about, such as real GDP growth over the past year, or the inflation rate. Throughout the text, students may come across mathematical calculations that are unfamiliar to them. The appendix to the textbook contains some helpful basic guidance to mathematical topics, including discussions of functions and graphs, slopes of functions, elasticities, functions of several variables, shifts of a curve, exponents, and growth-rate formulas. 3. Average labor productivity a. Average labor productivity: output produced per employed worker b. Text Fig. 1.2: Average labor productivity of United States since 1900 c. Average labor productivity growth: (1) 2.6% per year from 1949 to 1973 (2) 1.1% per year from 1973 to 1995 (3) 1.9% per year from 1995 to 2007


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