Course Overview
Master the fundamentals of macroeconomic analysis from measurement to the complete IS-LM-PC model.
The Big Picture
Macroeconomics studies aggregate economic activityβthe interaction of people, firms, and governments at the economy-wide level.
Macroeconomics centres on three key variables: Output (GDP), Unemployment, and Inflation.
Course Progression
- Measurement (L1) β GDP, price levels, inflation
- Goods Market (L2) β Keynesian cross, demand determines output
- Financial Markets (L3) β Money demand/supply, interest rates
- IS-LM Model (L4) β Combining goods and financial markets
- Labour Market (L5) β Wage-setting, price-setting, natural unemployment
- Phillips Curve (L6) β Inflation-unemployment relationship
- IS-LM-PC Model (L7) β Short-run to medium-run dynamics
- Inflation (L8) β Fisher equation, nominal vs real
Quick Navigation
Measurement & GDP
Three approaches to GDP, deflators, CPI
Goods Market
Consumption function, equilibrium, multiplier
Financial Markets
Money demand, supply, interest rates
IS-LM Model
Deriving IS & LM curves, policy analysis
Labour Market
WS-PS model, natural unemployment rate
Phillips Curve
Inflation-unemployment tradeoff, expectations
IS-LM-PC Model
Complete model, short to medium run
Inflation & Interest
Fisher equation, real rates, liquidity trap
Introduction to Macroeconomics & Measurement
Understanding how we measure aggregate economic activity through GDP, price levels, and inflation.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
GDP is the value of all final goods and services produced in an economy during a given period of time.
Expenditure Approach
Nominal vs Real GDP
Chain-Type Index (Important for Essays)
π Exam Focus: Measurement
Common Question Types (Tutorial 1, Past Papers)
- GDP Calculations: Given quantities and prices for multiple goods across years, calculate nominal GDP, real GDP, and growth rates
- GDP Deflator vs CPI: Compute both measures and explain why they differ (Paasche vs Laspeyres weights)
- Chain-Type Indexes (2023-24 Section C): Explain why chain-weighted indexes are more accurate than fixed-weight indexes
- GDP Limitations (2022-23 Section C): Essay on what GDP doesn't measure (sustainability, environment, informal economy)
Step-by-Step Methodology
Fixed-weight indexes use base year prices β substitution bias over time. Chain-type indexes update weights annually β better captures actual consumption patterns. Key example: computer prices fell dramatically since 1985.
GDP Deflator: Paasche (current quantities), domestic output only, excludes imports
CPI: Laspeyres (fixed basket), consumer goods only, includes imports
GDP misses: Home production, informal economy, environmental costs, sustainability
The Goods Market
Understanding how demand determines output in the short run through the Keynesian cross model.
The Consumption Function
Aggregate Demand & Equilibrium
Production equals demand: Y = Z
Saving-Investment Identity
The Multiplier
Numerical Example (Tutorial 2 Style)
π Exam Focus: Goods Market
Common Question Types (Tutorial 2, Past Papers)
- Equilibrium Output Derivation: Start from Z = C + I + G, apply Y = Z, solve for Y
- Multiplier Calculations: Basic multiplier, with income tax (tβ), with endogenous investment (bβ)
- Automatic Stabilizers (Tutorial 2 Q2): How T = tβ + tβY affects the multiplier and stability
- Policy Analysis: Effect of ΞG or ΞT on equilibrium output
Step-by-Step: Solving for Equilibrium
Basic: 1/(1βcβ) β larger cβ = larger multiplier
With income tax: 1/(1βcβ+cβtβ) β tβ reduces multiplier (automatic stabilizer)
With I(Y): 1/(1βcββbβ) β bβ increases multiplier
Tax multiplier: βcβ/(1βcβ) β smaller than spending multiplier!
If all consumers try to save more (βcβ), equilibrium Y falls but total saving S = I is unchanged (with fixed I). Individual rationality β collective outcome. This illustrates why macro β simple aggregation of micro.
Financial Markets I: Money
Understanding money demand, money supply, and how the interest rate is determined.
Money Demand
Wealth Constraint & Bond Market
If money market clears, bond market clears automatically:
Excess supply of bonds = Excess demand for money
Banking System & Money Multiplier
Numerical Example (Tutorial 3 Q3)
π Exam Focus: Financial Markets
Common Question Types (Tutorial 3)
- Money Demand Function: Given Md = $Y Γ L(i), solve for equilibrium interest rate
- Money vs Bonds (Tutorial 3 Q1): Wealth = Md + Bd. Show excess supply of bonds = excess demand for money
- Open Market Operations: CB buys bonds β βM β βi (and vice versa)
- Money Multiplier (Tutorial 3 Q3): If reserve ratio = ΞΈ, money multiplier = 1/ΞΈ
Step-by-Step Methodology
With reserve ratio ΞΈ = 0.1, monetary base H = Β£100bn:
Overall money supply = H Γ (1/ΞΈ) = Β£100bn Γ 10 = Β£1000bn
Modern: CB sets i directly, M adjusts β horizontal LM (i = Δ«)
Traditional: CB sets M, i adjusts β upward-sloping LM
The IS-LM Model
Combining goods and financial markets to analyze fiscal and monetary policy.
Investment Function
IS Curve Derivation
LM Curve
IS Curve Slope Analysis
βG β IS shifts right β βY and βi β βI (crowded out)
Net effect on Y positive but less than simple multiplier predicts.
Numerical Example (Tutorial 4 Style)
π Exam Focus: IS-LM Model
Common Question Types (Tutorial 4, 2022-23 Q6, 2023-24 Q6)
- IS Derivation: Start from Z = C + I + G, apply Y = Z, solve for Y as function of i
- IS Slope Analysis (Past Exam Favourite!): How does tβ or bβ affect IS slope? (βtβ β steeper IS; βbβ β flatter IS)
- Policy Analysis: Effect of βG or βT on Y and i, with graphs
- Income Tax Extension (2022-23 Q6): T = tβ + tβY gives multiplier 1/(1βcββbβ+cβtβ)
- Transfer Payments (2023-24 Q6): How transfers vs taxes affect equilibrium differently
Step-by-Step: Deriving IS Curve
- Write Z = C(YβT) + I(Y,i) + G
- Substitute specific functions (e.g., C = cβ + cβ(YβT), I = bβ + bβY β bβi)
- Apply equilibrium: Y = Z
- Collect Y terms on LHS, solve for Y
- Result: Y = [1/(1βcββbβ)] Γ (Autonomous spending β bβi)
IS Slope Formula (Exam Favourite)
"If BoE holds interest rate constant in response to βG, money supply will increase, and impact on income will be larger than if M held constant." (Answer: A)
The Labour Market
Understanding wage setting, price setting, and the natural rate of unemployment.
Wage & Price Setting
Natural Unemployment
π Exam Focus: Labour Market
Common Question Types (Tutorial 5, 2023-24 MCQ)
- W/P from PS (MCQ Favourite): "If markup m = 11%, what is real wage?" Answer: W/P = 1/(1+0.11) = 0.90
- Natural Unemployment: Given WS and PS, find un = (m+z)/Ξ±
- Effect of Policy Changes: How do βminimum wage, βmarkup, βunion power affect un?
- Bargaining Power (2023-24 MCQ): If worker bargaining power β, real wage stays constant (determined by PS!), but nominal W and P both rise
Key Methodology
- Write WS: W/P = F(u,z) = 1 β Ξ±u + z
- Write PS: W/P = 1/(1+m)
- Set WS = PS: 1 β Ξ±u + z = 1/(1+m)
- Solve for un
Real wage is determined by PS, not WS! WS affects nominal wage, but firms pass costs to prices. Result: W/P = 1/(1+m) regardless of worker bargaining power. Changes in z or worker power only affect un, not W/P.
The Phillips Curve
Understanding the relationship between inflation and unemployment.
Phillips Curve
Wage Indexation (Tutorial 6 Q2)
Okun's Law
π Exam Focus: Phillips Curve
Common Question Types (Tutorial 6, Past MCQs)
- Multi-Period Inflation (2022-23 MCQ, 2023-24 MCQ): Given PC and Οe = ΞΈΟtβ1, calculate Ο for t, t+1, t+2...
- Anchored vs Adaptive (ΞΈ=0 vs ΞΈ=1): Compare inflation paths under different expectation assumptions
- Wage Indexation (Tutorial 6 Q2): How indexation steepens the PC and accelerates inflation
- Supply Shocks (Tutorial 6 Q3): Oil price shocks β βm β βun
- Okun's Law (2022-23 MCQ): Calculate Ξu given output growth
Step-by-Step: Multi-Period Inflation
2022-23 & 2023-24: Given Οt = Οet + 0.15 β 2ut and un = 5%, if u held at 3% forever:
β’ With ΞΈ=0: Ο constant at ΟΜ + Ξ±Γ(unβu) = high but stable
β’ With ΞΈ=1: Ο accelerates by Ξ±Ξ΅ each period (no permanent tradeoff)
u < un β Ο rises | u > un β Ο falls | u = un β Ο stable (medium run)
The IS-LM-PC Model
The complete macroeconomic model from short run to medium run.
The Complete Model
Y = Yn (output at natural level), Ο = Ο (inflation at target), Οe = Ο (expectations correct)
π Exam Focus: IS-LM-PC Model
Common Question Types (Tutorial 7, 2022-23 Q7, 2023-24 Q7)
- IS-LM-PC Diagram (25 marks): Draw initial equilibrium, show shock effect, CB response
- Shock Analysis: Consumer confidence β or β, fiscal policy, credit expansion
- Policy Response: How must CB change r to return Y to Yn?
- GDP Composition: How do C, I change in medium run after permanent shock?
- Expectations (ΞΈ=0 vs ΞΈ=1): How does inflation behave if CB doesn't respond?
Step-by-Step: IS-LM-PC Shock Analysis (25-Mark Questions)
IS shifts left β Y β β Ο < ΟΜ β CB cuts r β I β β Y returns to Yn
Medium-run composition: C lower, I higher, r lower than before
IS shifts right β Y β β Ο > ΟΜ β CB raises r β I β β Y returns to Yn
Medium-run composition: C higher, I lower, r higher than before
Inflation, Interest Rates & the Liquidity Trap
Understanding the Fisher equation and monetary policy limitations.
Fisher Equation
Quantity Theory
π Exam Focus: Inflation & Interest Rates
Common Question Types (Tutorial 8, Past MCQs, Section C)
- Fisher Equation (2022-23 MCQ, 2023-24 MCQ): Calculate real rate given nominal rate and expected inflation
- Investment Decision: Compare real return on investment to real interest rate
- Zero Lower Bound (2022-23 Section C, 2023-24 MCQ): Why ΟΜ > 0 provides policy room
- Deflation Trap (Tutorial 8 Q2): How fiscal contraction at ZLB β deflation spiral
- Quantity Theory (Tutorial 8 Q3, 2023-24 Section C): Calculate inflation from gM and gY
Step-by-Step: Fisher Equation Application
"If BoE reduces Ο from 6% to 3% while keeping r = 2% constant, how does i change?"
Answer: i = r + Οe. If Οe falls by 3pp, i falls by 3pp (Answer: B)
Essay angle: With ΟΜ = 0 and i at ZLB, real rate r = 0 β 0 = 0 cannot be reduced further. With ΟΜ = 4% and anchored expectations, CB can push r to β4% by setting i β 0. This is why most CBs target Ο > 0.
QTM vs Phillips Curve (2023-24 Section C)
QTM (long run): Ο = gM β gY. Higher gY β lower Ο (supply-side view)
Phillips Curve (short/medium run): Y β β u β β Ο β (demand-driven view)
Resolution: QTM is a long-run identity; PC describes short-run dynamics. Different time horizons!
Complete Formula Sheet
All essential formulas for your A4 cheat sheet.
Goods Market
Labour Market
Phillips Curve
Fisher & Okun
Exam Strategy & Tips
Key insights from past papers and essential exam techniques.
Exam Structure (90 minutes)
| Section | Content | Marks | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 5 Multiple Choice | 20 | ~15 min |
| B | 2 Long Questions | 50 | ~50 min |
| C | 1 Essay (choose 1 of 2) | 30 | ~25 min |
Allowed: One-side A4 handwritten notes, non-programmable calculator
Key Formulas for MCQ
β’ WP = 11+m β real wage from PS (W = wage, P = price, m = markup)
β’ un = m+zΞ± β natural unemployment (z = labour factors, Ξ± = sensitivity)
β’ r β i β Οe β Fisher equation (r = real, i = nominal, Οe = expected inflation)
β’ Multiplier = 11 β c1 β (cβ = MPC)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- β Using i for investment instead of r
- β Confusing GDP deflator with CPI
- β Wrong multiplier when model has tβ or bβ
- β Not showing Y returns to Yn in medium run
- β Missing labels on graphs