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Essentials of Economics

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Title: Essentials of Economics


1
Essentials of Economics
  • Business 502

2
Concepts of Aggregate Supply
The Aggregate Demand curve we have derived is
really not a demand curve in the same sense as
microeconomic demand, but is analogous. Can we
derive something that would be an analogy to the
supply curve, and aggregate supply? Ideas on
this have evolved over the 20th Century.
3
Apologia
  • What follows is my best approximation to a
    nonpartisan but orthodox aggregate supply theory.
  • I disagree with it on several points.
  • My partisan and unorthodox ideas are not the
    subject matter of the course.
  • I will try not to waste your time with tedious
    expressions of my skepticism.

4
Aggregate Supply
  • The relationship between real GDP (relative to
    potential output) and the price level (relative
    to its previously-expected value) is the
    short-run aggregate supply curve

5
Translating
In a given year, we start out with a specific
price level and expected inflation rate, and we
get
6
Aggregate Supply
  • When real GDP is greater than potential output,
    inflation is likely to be higher than previously
    anticipated
  • inflation will probably accelerate
  • When real GDP is lower than potential output,
    inflation is likely to be lower than previously
    anticipated
  • the inflation rate will probably fall (may even
    end up with deflation)

7
Short-Run Aggregate Supply
  • High levels of real GDP are associated with high
    inflation and a high price level for many reasons
  • when demand for products is stronger than
    anticipated, firms raise their prices
  • when aggregate demand is higher than potential
    output, some industries may reach the limits of
    capacity

8
Potential Output
The classical view was that the amount
businessmen will want to sell does not depend on
the price level at all. In a diagram with the
price level, "Aggregate Supply" would be shown by
a vertical line, since production depends on the
relationship between prices (especially between
output prices and labor) and not on the price
level. This "long run" production is the
potential output of the economy.
9
Potential Output -- and a Paradox
This would mean that the aggregate supply
(potential output) is represented in a RGDP/price
level diagram by a vertical line, like this
10
1950s Vintage
11
1960s Vintage
12
Current Vintage
13
NAIRU
  • NAIRU or Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment
  • The rate of unemployment at which inflation
    neither speeds up nor slows down.
  • Potential Output
  • Potential output is the NAIRGDP, that is, the
    output corresponding to the non-accelerating
    inflation rate of unemployment.

14
Where is the Short Run Aggregate Supply Curve?
15
Surprise Principle
  • This is a particular instance of what I have
    called the surprise principle.
  • The surprise principle says that people may
    respond differently to the same events, depending
    whether the events are expected or come as a
    surprise.
  • Other applications may be to consumption,
    investment, and currency exchange movements.

16
Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
  • Where the aggregate supply and aggregate demand
    curves cross is the current level of real GDP and
    the current inflation rate

17
Expectations
  • Surprises are relative to expectations. There are
    three hypotheses about expectations.
  • Rational Expectations
  • Agents use all available information and are
    right on the average.
  • Adaptive Expectations
  • Agents base their expectations on a fairly simple
    projection from recent experience.
  • Static Expectations
  • Expectations are given and do not change
    predictably.

18
Surprise Makes a Difference
  • According to New Classical economists, increased
    production would seem profitable when inflation
    comes as a surprise because
  • Businessmen have incomplete information, and
    believe that the price increase is a relative
    price increase -- increasing their margin over
    costs -- when it is not.
  • Contracts based on the old price level have some
    time to run, and while they are in force, it
    really is more profitable to increase production.
  • If businessmen have adaptive expectations, then
    it takes some time for them to adjust their
    expectations even if they have complete
    information.

19
More Surprise
  • Macroeconomic Long Run
  • The macroeconomic long run is a period long
    enough so that businessmen are not surprised by
    inflation.
  • Macroeconomic Short Run
  • The macroeconomic short run is a period short
    enough so that businessmen believe it is
    profitable to increase output when the price
    level is higher than they had expected, because
    they are taken by surprise.

20
Inflationary Expectations
If people expect an increase in the price level,
the SAS curve will shift leftward to exactly the
expected price level.
21
Disinflation
22
The Three Faces of Aggregate Supply
  • Aggregate supply relates the price level to the
    level of real GDP
  • Aggregate supply can also relate the inflation
    rate to the growth of real GDP
  • The Phillips curve relates aggregate supply to
    the unemployment rate

23
A Foundation of Aggregate Supply
  • The Phillips Curve
  • An inverse relationship between inflation and
    unemployment

24
Phillips Curve
  • Prof. Phillips first observed it as a statistical
    relationship in the 1950s, a period of
    relatively low, steady inflation.
  • Almost everybody agrees it is NOT a straight-line
    relationship -- not that simple.
  • But some are skeptical about the whole idea .

25
Many Economists argue that
  • Labor costs rise less rapidly than prices when
    unemployment is high, so that inflation slows
    down.
  • Low enough unemployment will cause costs to rise
    faster than prices, with the result that
    inflation speeds up.
  • There is an unemployment rate that just balances
    those tendencies

26
Supply and Demand (More or Less)
27
U. S. Inflation and Unemployment 1948-2003
28
1998-2003 and 1987-92
29
Nevertheless,
  • Even though there is no very stable relationship
    between unemployment and inflation, most
    economists believe that inflation will speed up
    when unemployment is low and slow down when it is
    high.

30
Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve
31
Equilibrium
  • The economys equilibrium inflation and
    unemployment rates depend on
  • the natural rate of unemployment
  • the expected rate of inflation
  • supply shocks
  • aggregate demand
  • demand shocks

32
Milton Friedman
  • 1912-2006
  • Nobel 1976
  • Among many other contributions, Friedman was one
    of the first to point out how inflationary
    expectations would shift the Phillips Curve.

33
George Akerlof
  • 1940-
  • Nobel 2001
  • One of many critics of the expectations-augmented
    Phillips curve, he expressed his reservations in
    his Nobel lecture.

34
Phillips Curve Resartus 1
  • Probably the single most important macroeconomic
    relationship is the Phillips Curve.
  • Economists should not have accepted the natural
    rate hypothesis so readily.
  • At very low unemployment rates, the Friedman/
    Phelps prediction of accelerating inflation seems
    quite possibly reasonable and empirically
    relevant.
  • Unemployment in the U.S. for the whole of the
    1930s was indisputably in excess of the natural
    rate. According to the natural rate hypothesis,
    price deflation should have accelerated for the
    whole decade. That did not happen. Prices fell
    for a time, but deflation stopped after 1932

35
Phillips Curve Resartus 2
  • Akerlof sees a long-run relation between
    inflation and unemployment when unemployment is
    high and inflation is low because
  • Cuts in nominal wages create problems
  • At relatively low inflation rates relative wage
    cuts become nominal wage cuts
  • Some relative wage cuts are needed with changing
    circumstances
  • Note that rapid productivity growth will cushion
    this
  • And because ignoring inflation is near-rational
    when inflation is low.

36
The Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • Unemployment cannot be reduced below its natural
    rate without accelerating inflation
  • If the natural rate of unemployment is high,
    expansionary fiscal and monetary policy are
    largely ineffective as tools to reduce
    unemployment
  • Most estimates of the current natural rate in the
    U.S. lie between 4.5 and 5.0 percent

37
Fluctuations in Unemployment and the Natural Rate
38
The Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • Four sets of factors influence the natural rate
    of unemployment
  • demography
  • the relative age and educational distribution of
    the labor force
  • institutions
  • labor unions, worker mobility, taxes
  • productivity growth
  • wage growth
  • past levels of unemployment

39
Expected Inflation
  • The natural rate of unemployment and expected
    inflation together determine the position of the
    Phillips curve
  • higher expected inflation moves the Phillips
    curve upward

40
Expected Inflation
  • There are three basic scenarios for how inflation
    expectations are formed
  • static expectations
  • prevail when people ignore the fact that
    inflation can change
  • adaptive expectations
  • prevail when people assume the future will be
    like the recent past
  • rational expectations
  • prevail when people use all the information they
    have as best they can

41
The Phillips Curve under Static Expectations
  • If inflation expectations are static, expected
    inflation never changes
  • the trade-off between inflation and unemployment
    will not change from year to year
  • If inflation has been low and stable, businesses
    will probably hold static inflation expectations

42
Static Expectations of Inflation
43
Static Expectations of Inflation in the 1960s
  • In the 1960s, the Phillips curve did not shift up
    or down in response to changes in expected
    inflation
  • when unemployment was above 5.5, inflation was
    below 1.5
  • when unemployment was below 4, inflation was
    above 4
  • The economy moved along a stable Phillips curve

44
Static Expectations and the Phillips Curve,
1960-1968
45
The Phillips Curve under Adaptive Expectations
  • If the inflation rate varies too much for workers
    and businesses to ignore it and if last years
    inflation rate is a good guide to inflation this
    year, individuals are likely to hold adaptive
    expectations
  • inflation will be forecasted by assuming that
    this year will be like last year
  • forecast will be good only if inflation changes
    slowly

46
Accelerating Inflation
47
Adaptive Expectations and the Volcker Disinflation
  • At the end of the 1970s, expected inflation gave
    the U.S. an unfavorable short-run Phillips curve
    trade-off
  • Between 1979 and the mid-1980s, Fed chairman Paul
    Volcker reduced inflation from 9 to 3 percent per
    year
  • The fall in inflation triggered a fall in
    expected inflation
  • the Phillips curve shifted down

48
The Phillips Curve before and after the Volcker
Disinflation
49
The Phillips Curve under Rational Expectations
  • If the economy is changing rapidly enough that
    adaptive expectations lead to large errors,
    individuals will switch to rational expectations
  • People form their forecasts of future inflation
    not by looking backward but by looking forward
  • they look at what current and expected government
    policies tell us about what inflation will be

50
The Phillips Curve under Rational Expectations
  • The Phillips curve will shift as rapidly as
    changes in economic policy that affect aggregate
    demand
  • Anticipated changes in economic policy turn out
    to have no effect on the level of production or
    employment

51
Government Policy to Stimulate the Economy
  • Suppose that the unemployment rate is equal to
    its natural rate and inflation is equal to
    expected inflation
  • The government takes steps to stimulate the
    economy by cutting taxes and raising government
    spending to reduce the unemployment rate below
    the natural rate

52
Government Policy to Stimulate the Economy
  • If the policy comes as a surprise, the economy
    moves up and to the left along the Phillips curve
    in response to the change in government policy
  • Unemployment will be lower, production will be
    higher, and the rate of inflation will be higher

53
Government Policy to Stimulate the Economy
  • If the policy is anticipated, individuals will
    take the policy into account when they form their
    expectations of inflation
  • The Phillips curve will shift up
  • There will be no effect on unemployment or output
  • The rate of inflation will rise

54
Government Policy Announcements are Incredible
-- Why?
  • Governments have announced that "they really mean
    it this time" so often that people have good
    reason not to believe them.
  • The monetary authorities cannot make their plans
    credible, even when they "really mean it, this
    time," because people know that the temptation to
    accommodate inflation is so great.
  • Peoples expectations are not rational but
    adaptive.

55
From the Short Runto the Long Run
  • In the case of an anticipated shift in economic
    policy under rational expectations, the long run
    is now
  • If expectations are rational and changes in
    policy foreseen, expected inflation will be equal
    to actual inflation and unemployment will be at
    its natural rate

56
From the Short Runto the Long Run
  • If expectations are adaptive, the economy will
    approach the long run gradually
  • an expansionary shock will lower unemployment,
    increase real GDP, and lead to an increase in the
    inflation rate
  • individuals will raise their expectations of
    inflation in the next periods
  • as time passes, the gaps between actual
    unemployment and its natural rate and actual and
    expected inflation will shrink to zero

57
From the Short Runto the Long Run
  • Under static expectations, the long run never
    arrives
  • the gap between expected and actual inflation can
    grow arbitrarily large as different shocks hit
    the economy
  • if the gap between actual and expected inflation
    becomes large, individuals will not remain so
    foolish as to retain static expectations

58
Summary
  • Many modern economists subscribe to a theory of
    aggregate supply microfounded on a model of
    labor markets.
  • In this theory, surprises play the key role in
    generating responses to aggregate demand
    policy.
  • This can be derived from hypotheses of rational
    or adaptive expectations.
  • This seems to fit some historical periods well,
    but others less well.
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