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Aggregate Supply and Demand

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change W = a b (1/U) % change P-1 ... long inside lag, short outside lag. Monetary Stimulus may not work short inside lag, long outside lag. In boom Fiscal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aggregate Supply and Demand


1
Aggregate Supply and Demand
  • F. Gerard Adams
  • Northeastern University

2
Macroeconomic Measurement
3
GDP--Three approaches to measuring GDP
  • Final Demand
  • Gross Income Flows
  • Sum of Value Added

4
Income and Product Side of GDP
  • Outlays Receipts
  • Compensation of Employees (2-1) Personal
    Consumption Expend. (2-7)
  • Proprietors' Income (2-2) Gross Private Domestic
    Invest. (5-5)
  • Rental Income of Persons (2-3) Net Exports of
    Goods and Services
  • Corporate Profits Exports (4-4)
  • Dividends (2-4) less Imports (4-1)
  • Undistributed Profits (5-2)
  • Corporate Profits Taxes (3-2)
  • Net Interest (2-5) Government consumption
    (3-1)
  • Indirect Business Taxes (3-3) Government
    investment (3-2)
  • Consumption of Fixed Capital (5-3)
  • less Net Income Receipts from RoW (4-2)
  • Gross Domestic Product Gross Domestic Product

5
Real GDP
  • Real GDP GDP / GDP Deflator

6
Price Index Number formulas
  • I t ?i wi (Pit / Pi0 ) 100
  • ILit ? ((Pi0 Qi0)/ (?i
    (Pi0 Qi0)) (Pit / Pi0 ) 100)

ILit ?i(Pit Qi0) / ?i(Pi0 Qi0)
100 IPi ?i (Pit Qit ) / ?i(Pi0 Qit)
100
7
Index number problems
  • What kind of problems?
  • Do they make a difference?

8
What Measures for Business?
9
Aggregate Supply and Demand
  • How Do We Forecast the Economy?
  • Demand Side
  • The demand components
  • Keeping up with the latest information
  • Supply Side
  • Short run -- Labor Markets and Inflation
    (Phillips curve)
  • Long run -- Productivity growth

10
Theory of Aggregate Demand
  • Output is determined by aggregate demand
  • Y AD C I G

11
How do we use this to forecast?Whats exogenous
and whats endogenous?
  • Outlook for Consumption
  • Durables (autos)
  • Non durables
  • services
  • Outlook for Investment (including software)
  • Business Equipment
  • Structures
  • Government
  • Inventory change
  • Residential construction
  • Government Consumption
  • Exports
  • Imports

12
A Simple Aggregate Demand System
I
G
Y GDP
C
13
Production and Income Flows
P I outlay
NIPA
Gov
S-I
14
Theory of Aggregate Demand
  • Y C I G
  • C cY
  • Y cY I G
  • Y 1/(1-c) (I G)

15
The multiplier (numerical example)
  • Assume mpc .8 multiplier ?????
  • Y C I G AD
  • 100 80 10 10 100
  • 100 80 10 20 110
  • 110 88 10 20 118
  • 118 94.4 10 20
    124.4
  • 150 120 10 20 150

16
The Multiplier
  • multiplier dY/d(GI) 1/(1-c)
  • if c is .7 Multiplier is 1/.3 3.33
  • but note there are leakages (imports)

17
More complex multiplier
  • Y C I G X M
  • C c (Y-T)
  • T t (Y)
  • M m (Y)
  • Y c (Y (tY)) I GX mY where I , G, X,
    are exogenous
  • Y(1 c ct m) I G X
  • dY/d(IGX) 1/(1-c ct m)

18
Whats a reasonable value for the multiplier?
  • Assume
  • c 0.8
  • t 0.3
  • m 0.2 Mult 1/(1-c ct m)
  • Mult 1/(1-.8.24.2) Mult 1/.641.5625

19
Components of Consumption
  • What factors influence consumption spending
  • Long term income versus current income
  • Liquidity
  • Assets
  • Consumer Sentiment

20
  • Smoothing consumption over the life cycle

Y, C
Income ( Y )
Consumption ( C )
LIFE (years)
21
Theory of consumptionConsumption spending is
tied to long run (life cycle) income
  • Life cycle hypothesis

Income
wealth
Consumption
income and consumption
saving
dissaving
Years
Total life
Working life
22
Life cycle hypothesis and consumption
  • 1. In a stable population
  • Income Working life Consumption Total
    Life or saving working life
    dissaving during retirement.
  • i. e. YWL CTL or SWL C (TL-WL)
  • C/Y WL/TL
  • The share of consumption in income depends on the
    working life relative to total life
  • 2. In an aging population, you need to save more
    to cover future retirement of a growing share of
    the populationthats our problem.

23
Reality about consumption
  • consumer anticipations,
  • inflation,
  • interest rates
  • Permanent income hypothesisconsumption adjusts
    to long term income expectations and does not
    link to short term ups and downs of income

24
Components of demand
  • Investment
  • What factors influence Investment

25
Theory of Investment
  • At the margin the Internal Rate of Return
    Interest Rate
  • PDV - C NRt1/(1r)NRt2 /(1r)2 NRt3
    /(1r)3 . NRtn /(1r)n
  • Where r is the interest rate
  • IRR 0 - C NRt1/(1IRR)NRt2 /(1IRR)2
    NRt3 /(1IRR)3 . NRtn /(1IRR)n

IRR and r
1
Hurdle rate
2
Investment function
3
Investment
26
Investment Criteria
  • Invest Do
    not Invest
  • If PDV lt 0 lt 0
  • If IRR lt rate gt rate

27
Accelerator Effect
  • Investment is a function of change in output
  • Required K a Y
  • I K - K-1
  • I aY K-1
  • I a (Y Y-1)
  • Notethe faster the economy grows there more
    capital investment it needs. When it slows down,
    investment will fall.

28
Various investment functions and animal spirits
  • Boom
  • Recession
  • In a boom investment is sensitive to interest
    rates. It may not be when investors are
    discouraged or have excess capacity

Interest rate
investment
29
Interest Rates
  • The role of interest rates--where do they impact?

30
Aggregate Demand Stabilization Policy
  • Fiscal Policy
  • Expenditures
  • The role of tax cuts
  • The role of monetary policy

31
Aggregate Demand Stabilization Policy
  • The role of monetary policy

32
What is money
  • Medium of Exchange
  • Store of Value

33
Various types of money
  • M1 demand deposits and currency
  • M2 demand deposits and currency and savings
    deposits

34
Demand and Supply of Money
  • Demand for Money
  • Transactions Demand f(y)
  • Asset demand--Speculative, Precautionary Demand
    f()
  • Supply of Money
  • Basically a supply of bank reserves
  • Supplied by open market operations

35
Commercial Banks and the Creation of Money
  • O The use of a fractional-reserve banking system
    allows the money supply to grow as a multiple of
    the reserves In How does the Fed influence
    interest rates

36
Required reserves and excess reserves
  • Required Reserves
  • Required Reserve Ratio Demand deposits
  • Excess Reserves Actual Reserves Required
    Reserves
  • Money Multiplier 1/Required Reserve Ratio

37
Fractional Reserve Banking (1)
  • Consolidated Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks
  • Assets Liabilities
  • Reserves 1000 Demand
    Deposits 1000
  • Note this is the initial position. Banks put
    their reserves into the Federal Reserve (a
    bankers bank).
  • Suppose reserve requirements are 10 percent, the
    banks have excess reserves (900) and can make
    loans that will increase the money supply

38
Fractional Reserve Banking (2)
  • Consolidated Balance Sheet of the Commercial
    Banks
  • Assets Liabilities
  • Reserves 1000 Demand deposits
    1900
  • Loans 900
  • .
  • Banks lent out 900 and borrowers spent money and
    it was redeposited elsewhere in the banking
    system.
  • There are still excess reserves.

39
Fractional Reserve Banking (3)
  • This slide shows the equilibrium when banks are
    fully loaned up. Remember the required reserve
    ratio is still 10.
  • Consolidated Balance Sheet of the Commercial
    Banks
  • Assets
    Liabilities
  • Reserves 1000
    Demand Deposits 10,000
  • Loans 9000
    .

40
Fractional Reserve Banking (4)

  • Federal Reserve open market operations. Fed sells
    100 short term paper on open market. Banks pay
    from reserves. To meet reserve requirement,
    loans must be called and money supply (demand
    deposits) declines.
  • Consolidated Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
  • Assets Liabilities
  • Reserves 900 Demand Deposits
    9000
  • Loans 8000
    .
  • Short term paper 100

41
Fractional Reserve Banking(5)
  • Now suppose the Fed wants to stimulate the
    economy by open market operations. Beginning with
    the equilibrium Fractional Reserve Banking (3),
    the Fed buys 100 short term paper. (assume some
    banks were holding short term paper.) Note the
    banks now have some excess reserves, but they may
    not lend them out.
  • You can lead a horse to water, but you cant
    make him drink!
  • Consolidated Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
  • Assets
    Liabilities
  • Reserves 1100 Demand
    Deposits 10000
  • Short term paper -100
    .
  • Loans 9000
    .

42
Demand for money supply of money
  • Transactions demand asset demand supply
    (controlled by Fed)

43
Interest rate determination
rate
M supply
5-
3-
Mdspeculative
1-
S and D for money
Mdtrans
44
Yield curve
Jan 2001
rate
nov.2002
4-
3-
2-
1-
Maturity
3 months
1 year
5 years
10 years
45
How does the Fed influence interest rates
  • Open Market Operations
  • Discount rate
  • Reserve requirements
  • Moral suasion
  • The Federal Reserve and the 1998-2000 stock
    market bubble

46
Interest rate policy and the Fed
47
The equation of exchange
  • MV PY
  • Money of times each dollar is used prices
    total income(spending)

48
Monetarism
  • Weak Monetarism
  • Assumes v is fixed
  • Effect of M on growth of pY
  • Strong Monetarism
  • Assumes v and y are fixed
  • Effect of M only on prices (inflation)

49
Do we have monetarist policy?
  • Possible targets
  • Money growth
  • Inflation
  • Real growth and business cycle stability

50
Disintermediation and Credit Availability
51
Limits of monetary policy
  • Liquidity trap
  • You can lead a horse to water.
  • Operation Twist

52
Back to the Real economy
  • In this section we are concerned with real
    aggregate supply and demand. We will consider
    Fiscal and Monetary policy again below.

53
Where do the supply limits come in?
  • What do we mean by supply limits
  • Capacity Utilization
  • Is the supply schedule flat, steep, or both flat
    and steep?

54
Aggregate Supply
Prices
Supply (short run)
Supply (long run)
Output
55
Aggregate Supply
  • Where is full employment?
  • Is the supply schedule horizontal below full
    employment?

56
Aggregate Demand and Supply 1
Price Level
AS
AD
GDP
57
Aggregate Demand and Supply 2
P
AS1
AD2
AD1
GDP
58
Aggregate Demand and Supply 3
AS1
Price level
AD1
AD2
Aggregate supply and demand
59
The Classical / Keynesian Controversy
  • Short run price and wage rigidity
  • Long run price and wage flexibility
  • A tempest in a teapot--in the long run we are
    all dead (J. M. Keynes)

60
Can we reconcile Classical and Keynesian?
  • over business cycle Keynesian
  • over longer run Classical

61
Aggregate Demand and Supply 4
P
AS1
AD2
AD1
AS2
GDP
62
Fiscal Policy
  • Reagans Supply side vs demand stimulus
  • Do we need a tax cut now?
  • Does the deficit have an impact?

63
Inflation and the Phillips Curve
  • What determines the rate of inflation

64
Inflation and the Phillips Curve
inflation
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Unemployment u/lf
65
The Phillips Curve
  • change P a b (1/U)
  • change P a b (1/U) c P-1 or Pe

66
Inflation and the Phillips Curve with various
assumptions about price expectations
inflation
.
.
.
.
.
P2
.
.
.
P1
Po
Unemployment u/lf
67
Is the Phillips Curve Stable?
  • The Phillips curve in the 1970s, the 1990s, and
    today

68
The Phillips Curve and the New Economy
69
How are prices determined?
  • Markup theory on
  • labor cost (ULC)
  • materials (oil) prices (Pm

70
Labor cost reflects
  • Wages
  • Productivity
  • change Prices depends on change of ULC
  • where change ULC change W - change
    productivity

71
The Makings of a Wage Price Spiral
  • change W a b (1/U) change P-1
  • change P e m ( change W - change
    Productivity) q change Pm

72
What to expect for economic policy now!
  • Monetary Policy
  • Fiscal Policy

73
Tools of macro policy
  • Fiscal Policy stimulus
  • Spending
  • Transfer Payments
  • Tax cuts
  • Monetary Policy stimulus
  • Open Market operations
  • Other Monetary policy tools

74
Effectiveness of Policy tools
  • Fiscal tax cuts versus expenditure increases
  • Monetary policy (liquidity trap, and you can lead
    a horse to water)
  • In recession Fiscal Stimulus works
    long inside lag, short outside lag
  • Monetary Stimulus may not
    work short inside lag, long outside lag
  • In boom Fiscal cutbacks works
  • Money tightening works

75
What differences between a Liberal and a
Conservative (Democratic and Republican??)
policy 1
  • Macroeconomic objectives?
  • Microeconomic views?
  • Organization of industry
  • Role of government
  • Time Horizon?

76
What differences between a Liberal and a
Conservative (Democratic and Republican??)
policy? 2
  • Traditional Democratic and Republican policies
  • Democrats were considered the big spenders
  • Republicans were budget balancers
  • Democrats were concerned with business cycle
    stabilization
  • Republicans were opposed to intervention
  • Democrats were in favor of big government
    projects (dams, roads, etc.)
  • Republicans were opposed to big government
    projects
  • Democrats concerned with income inequality
  • Republicans with reducing taxes so as to maintain
    unimpeded markets

77
What about Republican and Democratic Economic
Policy today?
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