Macroeconomic goals are the broad objectives a government pursues for the whole economy, mainly full employment, price stability, and economic growth, which it tries to hit using fiscal policy tools like government spending and taxes (AP Macro Topic 3.8, EK POL-1.A.1).
Macroeconomic goals are the destinations; policy is how the government tries to get there. In AP Macro, the big three goals are full employment (the economy producing at its potential, with only natural unemployment), price stability (low, predictable inflation), and economic growth (a rising capacity to produce over time).
The CED introduces this term in Topic 3.8 (EK POL-1.A.1), where governments use fiscal policy, meaning changes in government spending and taxes/transfers, to push the economy toward these goals. The logic is simple. If the economy is in a recessionary gap, unemployment is too high, so expansionary fiscal policy boosts aggregate demand to restore full employment. If the economy is in an inflationary gap, prices are rising too fast, so contractionary fiscal policy cools aggregate demand to restore price stability. Every fiscal policy question on the exam is secretly asking which goal the economy is failing to meet right now.
This term lives in Unit 3 (National Income and Price Determination), Topic 3.8, supporting learning objective 3.8.A (define fiscal policy and related terms). EK POL-1.A.1 states it directly: governments implement fiscal policies to achieve macroeconomic goals, such as full employment. The goals are the 'why' behind everything in 3.8.B and 3.8.C, where you draw and calculate the short-run effects of fiscal policy on the AD-AS graph. If you can't name the goal, you can't pick the right policy. A recessionary gap calls for expansionary policy because the goal is full employment, and an inflationary gap calls for contractionary policy because the goal is price stability. The goals also give Unit 3 its connection to the rest of the course, since the same targets show up again when the Fed pursues them with monetary policy in Unit 4.
Keep studying AP® Macroeconomics Unit 3
Expansionary Fiscal Policy (Unit 3)
This is the most direct link. When the economy falls short of the full employment goal, the government runs expansionary fiscal policy, raising spending or cutting taxes, to shift aggregate demand right and close the gap. The goal tells you which direction the policy goes.
Recessionary and Inflationary Gaps (Unit 3)
Output gaps are how you measure whether a goal is being missed. A recessionary gap means the full employment goal is failing, while an inflationary gap means price stability is at risk. On the AD-AS graph, the gap is the visual evidence that triggers a fiscal policy response.
Unemployment and Inflation Measurement (Unit 2)
Unit 2 gives you the scorecard for these goals. The unemployment rate and the natural rate tell you how close the economy is to full employment, and CPI inflation tells you whether prices are stable. Topic 3.8 is where those measurements turn into policy decisions.
Monetary Policy (Unit 4)
Fiscal policy isn't the only road to these goals. In Unit 4, the central bank pursues the same targets (full employment and price stability) using interest rates instead of spending and taxes. Same destinations, different driver.
Macroeconomic goals usually show up as the setup of a question rather than the answer. A typical multiple-choice stem describes a situation, like a government wanting to reduce unemployment during a recession, and asks you to identify the policy tool or the AD-AS effect. You should also be ready for the reverse, where a question describes spending and tax actions and asks which broad objective they serve, such as reducing inflation and maintaining stable prices. On FRQs, the goals frame the scenario. The prompt tells you the economy is in a recessionary or inflationary gap, and you have to choose the fiscal policy that restores full employment or price stability, draw the AD shift, and calculate the multiplier effect (LOs 3.8.B and 3.8.C). One more wrinkle worth knowing for 3.8.D is that even a well-chosen policy can miss its goal because of lags in deciding on and implementing the action.
Macroeconomic goals are the ends; fiscal policy is one of the means. Full employment, price stability, and economic growth are what the government wants. Government spending and taxes/transfers are the tools it uses to get there (EK POL-1.A.2). If a question asks for the objective, answer with a goal. If it asks for the action, answer with a policy tool. Mixing these up turns an easy point into a wrong answer.
The three macroeconomic goals in AP Macro are full employment, price stability, and economic growth.
Per EK POL-1.A.1, governments use fiscal policy (government spending and taxes/transfers) to achieve these goals.
A recessionary gap signals the full employment goal is being missed, so the fix is expansionary fiscal policy.
An inflationary gap signals price stability is at risk, so the fix is contractionary fiscal policy.
Goals are the objectives and fiscal policy is the tool, so don't swap them when a question asks which is which.
The same goals reappear in Unit 4, where monetary policy chases them with interest rates instead of spending and taxes.
They are the broad objectives a government pursues for the entire economy, mainly full employment, price stability, and economic growth. The CED introduces them in Topic 3.8 as the reason governments use fiscal policy (EK POL-1.A.1).
No. Goals are the targets, like full employment, while fiscal policy is the tool used to hit them, meaning changes in government spending and taxes/transfers. The exam tests this distinction directly, so keep ends and means separate.
Full employment (output at potential with only natural unemployment), price stability (low and predictable inflation), and economic growth (rising productive capacity over time). Recessionary gaps threaten the first goal and inflationary gaps threaten the second.
No. Fiscal policy is the Unit 3 tool, but in Unit 4 the central bank pursues the same goals through monetary policy, adjusting the money supply and interest rates. Same targets, different policymaker.
Output gaps are the evidence that a goal is being missed. A recessionary gap means the economy is below full employment, calling for expansionary fiscal policy, while an inflationary gap means price stability is slipping, calling for contractionary policy.
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