Macroeconomics - Explained
What is Macroeconomics?
- Marketing, Advertising, Sales & PR
- Accounting, Taxation, and Reporting
- Professionalism & Career Development
-
Law, Transactions, & Risk Management
Government, Legal System, Administrative Law, & Constitutional Law Legal Disputes - Civil & Criminal Law Agency Law HR, Employment, Labor, & Discrimination Business Entities, Corporate Governance & Ownership Business Transactions, Antitrust, & Securities Law Real Estate, Personal, & Intellectual Property Commercial Law: Contract, Payments, Security Interests, & Bankruptcy Consumer Protection Insurance & Risk Management Immigration Law Environmental Protection Law Inheritance, Estates, and Trusts
- Business Management & Operations
- Economics, Finance, & Analytics
What is Macroeconomics?
Macroeconomics is a field of economics that studies how market forces, such as unemployment rates, interest rates, inflation, government spending, and international trade, influence one or more nations' economy.
What are the Goals of Macroeconomics?
In thinking about the macroeconomy's overall health, it is useful to consider three primary goals:
- economic growth,
- low unemployment, and
- low inflation.
Why is Economic Growth important in Macroeconomics?
Economic growth affects the standard of living in a country. Economists measure growth by the percentage change in real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product. A growth rate of more than 3% is considered good.
Why is Unemployment important in Macroeconomics?
Unemployment or the unemployment rate is the percentage of people in the labor force who do not have a job. When people lack jobs, the economy is wasting a precious resource-labor, and the result is lower goods and services produced.
Why is Inflation important in Macroeconomics?
Inflation is a sustained increase in the overall level of prices, and is measured by the consumer price index. If many people face a situation where the prices that they pay for food, shelter, and healthcare are rising much faster than the wages they receive for their labor, there will be widespread unhappiness as their standard of living declines. For that reason, low inflation—an inflation rate of 1–2%—is a major goal.
Related Topics
- Economics
- Scarcity in Economics
- Division of Labor
- Microeconomics
- Macroeconomics
- Theory and Models
- Traditional Economy
- Command Economy
- Centrally Planned Economy
- Market Economy
- Free Market Economy
- Collaborative Economy
- Private Enterprise
- Mixed Economy
- Underground Economy
- Black Economy
- Government Market Regulation
- Capitalism
- Conscious Capitalism
- Communism
- Centrally Planned Economy
- Socialism
- Marxism
- Egalitarianism
- Plutocracy
- Neoliberalism
- Underground Economy
- Black Economy
- Globalization
- Imports and Exports
- Gross Domestic Product
- Fiscal Policy
- Social Economics
- Positive Economics
- Mathematical Economics
- Constitutional Economics
- Labor Economics
- Organizational Economics
- Development Economics
- Behavioral Economics
- Environmental Economics
- Evolutionary Economics
- True-Cost Economics
- Managerical Economics
- Experimental Economics
- Welfare Economics
- American Economic Association