Chapter 16: Achieving
Economic Stability Chapter
16 deals with the costs of economic instability and the major
stabilization policies used to remedy it.
Section 1 discusses the economic and social
costs of low growth, inflation, and unemployment. The economic
costs can be measured in terms of stagflation, the GDP gap,
or the misery index. The social costs include the frustrations
of being unemployed, wasted resources, potential political
instability, increased crime, and/or damage to family values.
Section 2 analyzes macroeconomic equilibrium
with the help of aggregate supply and aggregate demand curves.
The aggregate supply curve represents the sum of all production
at all possible price levels. The aggregate demand curve represents
the total demand that would take place at all possible price
levels. Most of the factors that influence the individual
supply and demand curves also affect the aggregate curvesthey
shift to the right to represent an increase, and to the left
to represent a decrease.
Section 3 discusses several stabilization
policies. Demand-side policies evolved from Keynesian economics
and are designed to affect the aggregate demand curve. Supply-side
economics are those economic policies designed to affect the
aggregate supply curve. Monetary policies include actions
by the Federal Reserve System (Fed) that change the cost and
the availability of credit.
Section 4 examines the relationship
between economics and politicsincluding the demise of
discretionary fiscal policy, the growing importance of automatic
stabilizers, and the importance of the Fed's independent status.
Economists come from a variety of backgrounds and have a diversity
of interests. Even so, they are more in agreement on key issues
than most people realize. In addition, they have made considerable
headway in raising awareness of how the economy operates.
Finally, the president's Council of Economic Advisers provides
advice on economic matters and advocates the president's economic
programs.
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