Economics 1022A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Real Wages, Potential Output, Business Cycle

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Economic growth is the sustained expansion of production possibilities measured as the increase in real. The economic growth rate is the annual percentage change of real gdp. The economic growth rate tells us how rapidly the total economy is expanding. The standard of living depends on real gdp per person. Real gdp per person is real gdp divided by the population. Real gdp per person grows only if real gdp grows faster than the population grows. Real gdp can increase for two distinct reasons: The economy might be returning to full employment in an expansion phase of the business cycle. The return to full employment in an expansion phase of the business cycle isn"t economic growth. The expansion of potential gdp is economic growth. The rule of 70 states that the number of years it takes for the level of a variable to double is approximately. 70 divided by the annual percentage growth rate of the variable.

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