AP Macroeconomics – Unit 2: Economic Indicators & the Business Cycle

1. The Circular Flow & GDP

Before we can measure the economy, we need a map of how it works. The Circular Flow Diagram shows how money, resources, and goods flow between the major players in an economy.

The Players (Economic Sectors)

Sector Role in the Economy
Households Own the factors of production. Supply labor, land, and capital to firms. Use income to consume goods and services.
Firms (Businesses) Hire factors of production from households. Produce goods and services. Earn revenue from sales.
Government Collects taxes from households and firms. Provides public goods, transfer payments, and subsidies.
Foreign Sector Other countries that buy our exports and sell us imports. Net exports (X βˆ’ M) is the difference.
Financial Sector Banks and financial markets that channel savings into investment (loans to firms).
Households Firms Government Product Market (Goods/Services) Factor Market (Land, Labor, Capital) Consumer Spending ($) Wages, Rent, Interest, Profit ($) Transfers / Services Subsidies / Purchases Taxes Taxes

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

GDP is the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders in a given time period (usually one year).

GDP is the single most important number in macroeconomics. It tells us the size of the economy. But the definition has critical keywords the AP exam loves to test:

Keyword Why It Matters
Market Value We use prices to add up different goods. You can't add 5 cars + 10 pizzas β€” but you can add their dollar values.
Final Goods Only the finished product counts. Intermediate goods (flour in bread) are excluded to avoid double counting.
Within Borders GDP counts production by location. A Japanese factory in Texas counts in US GDP, not Japan's.
Exam Tip: GNP (Gross National Product) counts by citizenship. GDP counts by geography. Know the difference.
Given Time Period GDP is a flow variable (measured per period), not a stock (total accumulated wealth).

Two Ways to Calculate GDP

Expenditure Approach (Spending)

Add up all spending on final goods:

GDP = C + I + G + (X βˆ’ M)
  • C = Consumer Spending (largest component ~68%)
  • I = Gross Private Domestic Investment (business equipment, new construction, inventory changes)
  • G = Government Spending (NOT transfer payments)
  • X βˆ’ M = Net Exports (Exports minus Imports)
Exam Tip: Transfer payments (Social Security, welfare) are NOT included in G because no new good or service is produced.

Income Approach (Earning)

Add up all income earned producing goods:

GDP = W + R + I + P
  • W = Wages (compensation to labor)
  • R = Rent (payment to land)
  • I = Interest (payment to capital)
  • P = Profit (payment to entrepreneurs)

Both approaches yield the same GDP β€” every dollar spent is a dollar earned.

What's NOT Included in GDP?

Excluded Item Why
Intermediate GoodsAvoids double counting. Only the final sale counts.
Used GoodsAlready counted when first sold. No new production occurred.
Financial TransactionsStocks, bonds β€” these are transfers of ownership, not production.
Transfer PaymentsSocial Security, welfare β€” no good or service is produced in exchange.
Non-market ActivitiesHousehold work, DIY projects, volunteer work β€” no market price.
Underground EconomyIllegal transactions and unreported income are not counted.

2. Unemployment

When workers who want jobs can't find them, the economy is operating inside its PPC. Measuring unemployment tells us how far from our productive potential we are.

Key Definitions

Labor Force = Employed + Unemployed (actively seeking work).

NOT in the labor force: Students, retirees, stay-at-home parents, discouraged workers, prisoners, military β€” anyone not working AND not actively looking.

The Unemployment Rate Formula

Unemployment Rate =
Number of Unemployed
Labor Force
Γ— 100

Only people who are actively seeking work count as unemployed. If you stop looking, you're not counted β€” which means the official rate can understate the true problem.

The Labor Force Participation Rate

LFPR =
Labor Force
Working-Age Population
Γ— 100

This measures the percentage of the adult population that is either working or actively looking for work.

The Three Types of Unemployment

This is heavily tested on the AP exam. Know all three cold.

Type What It Is Examples & Details
Frictional Short-term, voluntary. Workers between jobs or new entrants to the labor force. They're searching for the right match. A recent graduate job-hunting. Someone who quit to find a better job. This is normal and healthy β€” it always exists.
Structural Long-term mismatch. Workers' skills don't match available jobs due to technology changes, industry shifts, or geographic mismatches. A coal miner replaced by automation. A factory worker in a town where the factory closed. Requires retraining or relocation to resolve.
Cyclical Caused by recessions. Demand for goods falls β†’ firms lay off workers. This is the "bad" unemployment that policymakers try to eliminate. Mass layoffs during 2008 financial crisis or COVID-19 shutdowns. Rises during contractions, falls during expansions.

Natural Rate of Unemployment (NRU)

Natural Rate of Unemployment (NRU) = Frictional + Structural unemployment.

This is the unemployment rate when the economy is at full employment. Full employment does NOT mean 0% unemployment β€” it means no cyclical unemployment.

Full Employment β†’ Cyclical Unemployment = 0

🎯 AP Exam Connection: When the economy is at full employment (NRU), it is operating on the PPC and at the Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) level of output. You'll see this exact connection in Units 3 and 5.

Shortcomings of the Unemployment Rate

The official rate doesn't tell the whole story:

Problem Explanation
Discouraged Workers People who gave up looking for work. They're NOT counted as unemployed β€” they left the labor force entirely. This makes the rate look better than reality.
Underemployed Workers A PhD working part-time at a coffee shop counts as "employed." The rate doesn't capture quality of employment.

3. Inflation & Price Indices

If unemployment tells us about the quantity of jobs, inflation tells us about the value of the money we earn. Rising prices = your dollar buys less.

Inflation: A sustained increase in the general price level. It's not one product getting expensive β€” it's most prices rising over time.

Deflation: A sustained decrease in the general price level. Sounds good, but it's actually dangerous β€” people delay purchases, firms cut production, and a downward spiral can begin.

Disinflation: Prices are still rising, but at a slower rate. (e.g., inflation falls from 6% to 3%)

Measuring Inflation: The Consumer Price Index (CPI)

The CPI tracks the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services that a typical urban household purchases. It is the most common measure of inflation in the US.

CPI Formula

CPI =
Cost of Market Basket in Current Year
Cost of Market Basket in Base Year
Γ— 100

The CPI in the base year is always 100. If this year's CPI = 120, prices have risen 20% since the base year.

Inflation Rate Formula

Inflation Rate =
CPInew βˆ’ CPIold
CPIold
Γ— 100

CPI vs. GDP Deflator

CPI GDP Deflator
What it covers A fixed basket of consumer goods and services. All goods and services produced domestically (C + I + G + Xn).
Imports? Yes β€” consumers buy imports, so they're in the basket. No β€” only domestically produced goods.
Basket Fixed (same goods every year). Changes as the economy's output mix changes.
Bias Overstates inflation (substitution bias β€” people switch to cheaper alternatives, but the fixed basket doesn't reflect this). Less biased because the basket updates.

Who Wins and Who Loses from Inflation?

Winners (Inflation Helps)

  • Borrowers β€” repay loans with dollars worth less
  • Flexible-wage workers β€” wages adjust upward
  • Government (as debtor) β€” national debt shrinks in real terms

Losers (Inflation Hurts)

  • Lenders β€” get repaid in less valuable dollars
  • Fixed-income earners β€” retirees, pensioners
  • Savers β€” purchasing power of savings erodes

🎯 Exam Key: The AP loves asking about unanticipated inflation. If inflation is expected, people adjust contracts and interest rates accordingly (using the Fisher Effect: Nominal Interest Rate = Real Interest Rate + Expected Inflation). Unanticipated inflation is what causes redistributions between borrowers and lenders.

4. The Business Cycle

Economies grow over time, but not in a smooth line. Output rises and falls in a repeating pattern called the Business Cycle. Understanding this cycle is the backbone of AP Macroeconomics.

Time Real GDP Potential GDP Peak Trough Peak Contraction Expansion
Phase What Happens Key Indicators
Expansion Real GDP increases. The economy grows, businesses hire, consumer confidence rises. ↑ GDP, ↓ Unemployment, ↑ Inflation pressure
Peak Maximum output. The economy is at or beyond full employment. Inflationary pressures are highest. GDP at maximum, Unemployment at lowest, Inflation high
Contraction Real GDP falls. Firms cut production and lay off workers. If it lasts two consecutive quarters, it's a recession. ↓ GDP, ↑ Unemployment, ↓ Inflation pressure
Trough The bottom. Output and employment are at their lowest. The economy begins recovery. GDP at minimum, Unemployment at highest

Connecting the Cycle to the PPC

The business cycle and the PPC are the same idea shown differently:

  • Expansion / Peak β†’ Economy moves toward or on the PPC.
  • Contraction / Trough β†’ Economy moves inside the PPC (unemployed resources).
  • Economic Growth (long-run) β†’ The PPC shifts outward and potential GDP rises.

🎯 AP Exam Trick: The exam often asks "what phase is the economy in?" Look for clues: rising unemployment = contraction; falling unemployment + rising prices = expansion nearing peak. Always connect to the output gap (actual GDP vs. potential GDP).

5. Real vs. Nominal GDP

If GDP rises from $20 trillion to $21 trillion, did the economy actually produce more? Or did prices just go up? This is the single most important distinction in macroeconomics.

Nominal GDP

Measured in current-year prices. It's the raw number β€” it reflects BOTH changes in output AND changes in prices.

Also called "money GDP" or "current-dollar GDP."

Problem: If prices double but output stays the same, nominal GDP doubles β€” making the economy look like it grew when it didn't.

Real GDP

Measured in base-year (constant) prices. It strips out inflation to show only changes in actual output.

Also called "constant-dollar GDP."

This is the one that matters. Real GDP tells us if the economy truly produced more goods and services.

The GDP Deflator

The GDP Deflator converts nominal GDP to real GDP. Think of it as the "price filter."

GDP Deflator =
Nominal GDP
Real GDP
Γ— 100

Solving for Real GDP

If they give you nominal GDP and the deflator, rearrange:

Real GDP =
Nominal GDP
GDP Deflator
Γ— 100

Example: Nominal GDP = $22 trillion, GDP Deflator = 110. β†’ Real GDP = ($22T / 110) Γ— 100 = $20 trillion. The economy actually only produced $20T in "base-year" terms; the other $2T was just price increases.

Quick Decision Rule

If the GDP Deflator is… Then…
= 100 It's the base year. Nominal GDP = Real GDP.
> 100 Prices have risen since the base year. Nominal GDP > Real GDP. You must deflate (shrink) nominal GDP.
< 100 Prices have fallen since the base year. Nominal GDP < Real GDP. You must inflate (expand) nominal GDP.

Real GDP Per Capita

To compare living standards across countries or over time, we use GDP per person:

Real GDP Per Capita =
Real GDP
Population

A country's total GDP can grow, but if the population grows faster, living standards actually decline. Per capita is the true measure of economic well-being.

Limitations of GDP as a Measure of Well-Being

GDP is powerful, but it doesn't capture everything about quality of life:

Limitation Explanation
Income InequalityGDP per capita is an average β€” it hides how unevenly income is distributed.
Non-market ActivitiesRaising children, volunteering, subsistence farming β€” real economic activity with zero GDP contribution.
LeisureAmericans could work 80-hour weeks and boost GDP, but less leisure isn't "better."
Environmental DamageA factory that pollutes a river increases GDP (production + cleanup spending). That's hardly "well-being."
Quality of LifeGDP doesn't measure health, safety, education quality, or freedom.

Unit 2 Cheat Sheet

GDP = C + I + G + (X βˆ’ M)

Real GDP = (Nominal GDP / Deflator) Γ— 100

Inflation Rate = [(CPInew βˆ’ CPIold) / CPIold] Γ— 100

Unemp. Rate = (Unemployed / Labor Force) Γ— 100

Master these formulas. They appear on every single AP Macro exam.

End of Unit 2 Study Guide.

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