GLOBAL EDITION. Macroeconomics. Policy and Practice SECOND EDITION. Frederic S. Mishkin

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GLOBAL EDITION Macroeconomics Policy and Practice SECOND EDITION Frederic S. Mishkin

Real-Time Data Analysis Exercises Up-to-date macro data is a great way to engage in and understand the usefulness of macro variables and their impact on the economy. Real-Time Data Analysis exercises communicate directly with the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis s FRED site, so every time FRED posts new data, students see new data. End-of-chapter exercises accompanied by the Real-Time Data Analysis icon include Real- Time Data versions in MyEconLab. Select in-text figures labeled MyEconLab Real- Time Data update in the electronic version of the text using FRED data. Current News Exercises Posted weekly, we find the latest microeconomic and macroeconomic news stories, post them, and write auto-graded multi-part exercises that illustrate the economic way of thinking about the news. Interactive Homework Exercises Participate in a fun and engaging activity that helps promote active learning and mastery of important economic concepts. Pearson s experiments program is flexible and easy for instructors and students to use. For a complete list of available experiments, visit www.myeconlab.com.

Macroeconomics, Global Edition Cover Title Copyright Brief Contents Contents Preface About the Author PART 1 Introduction Chapter 1 THE POLICY AND PRACTICE OF MACROECONOMICS THE PRACTICE OF MACROECONOMICS The Process: Developing Macroeconomic Models The Purpose: Interpreting Macroeconomic Data MACROECONOMIC POLICY How Can Poor Countries Get Rich? Is Saving Too Low? Do Government Budget Deficits Matter? How Costly Is It to Reduce Inflation? How Can We Make Financial Crises Less Likely? How Active Should Stabilization Policy Be? Should Macroeconomic Policy Follow Rules? Are Global Trade Imbalances a Danger? HOW WE WILL STUDY MACROECONOMICS Emphasis on Policy and Practice Concluding Remarks DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 2 MEASURING MACROECONOMIC DATA MEASURING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY: NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTING MEASURING GDP: THE PRODUCTION APPROACH Market Value Final Goods and Services Newly Produced Goods and Services Fixed Period of Time POLICY AND PRACTICE: Can GDP Buy Happiness? Stocks Versus Flows

MEASURING GDP: THE EXPENDITURE APPROACH Consumption Expenditure Investment Government Purchases Meaning of the Word Investment Net Exports Changes in the Spending Components of GDP over Time MEASURING GDP: THE INCOME APPROACH Categories of Income An International Comparison of Expenditure Components Income Measures REAL VERSUS NOMINAL GDP Nominal Variables Real Variables Chain-Weighted Measures of Real GDP MEASURING INFLATION GDP Deflator PCE Deflator Consumer Price Index POLICY AND PRACTICE: Policy and Overstatementsof the Cost of Living Inflation Rate Percentage Change Method and the Inflation Rate MEASURING UNEMPLOYMENT MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: Unemployment and Employment MEASURING INTEREST RATES Types of Interest Rates MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: Interest Rates Real Versus Nominal Interest Rates The Important Distinction Between Real and Nominal Interest Rates DATA ANALYSIS PART 2 Macroeconomic Basics Chapter 3 AGGREGATE PRODUCTION AND PRODUCTIVITY DETERMINANTS OF AGGREGATE PRODUCTION Factors of Production Production Function Cobb-Douglas Production Function APPLICATION: Why Are Some Countries Rich and Others Poor? Cobb-Douglas Production Function Characteristics Changes in the Production Function: Supply Shocks DETERMINATION OF FACTOR PRICES

Demand for Capital and Labor Supply of Capital and Labor Factor Market Equilibrium DISTRIBUTION OF NATIONAL INCOME APPLICATION: Explaining Real Wage Growth APPLICATION: Oil Shocks, Real Wages, and the Stock Market Concluding Remarks DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 4 SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN CLOSED AND OPEN ECONOMIES RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SAVING AND WEALTH Private Saving Government Saving National Saving POLICY AND PRACTICE: Government Policies to Stimulate Saving Uses of Saving The Link Between Saving and Wealth MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: Balance of Payments Accounts APPLICATION: How the United States Became the Largest Net Debtor in the World SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND GOODS MARKET EQUILIBRIUM IN A CLOSED ECONOMY Saving and Investment Equation Saving Investment Goods Market Equilibrium RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN A CLOSED ECONOMY Changes in Saving: Autonomous Consumption Changes in Saving: Effects of Fiscal Policy POLICY AND PRACTICE: Crowding Out and the Debate over the 2009 Fiscal Stimulus Package Changes in Autonomous Investment SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND GOODS MARKET EQUILIBRIUM IN AN OPEN ECONOMY Perfect Capital Mobility and the Open Economy Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open Economy SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE TRADE BALANCE IN A SMALL OPEN ECONOMY Goods Market Equilibrium in a Small Open Economy Connection Between the World Economy and the Small Open Economy RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN A SMALL OPEN ECONOMY Changes in Domestic Saving APPLICATION: The Twin Deficits Changes in Investment LARGE VERSUS SMALL OPEN ECONOMIES

DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 4 Web Appendix SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN LARGE OPEN ECONOMIES Chapter 5 MONEY AND INFLATION WHAT IS MONEY? Meaning of Money Functions of Money Unusual Forms of Money CENTRAL BANKS AND THE CONTROL OF THE MONEY SUPPLY Federal Reserve Banks Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) The European Central Bank Control of the Money Supply MEASURING MONEY The Federal Reserves Monetary Aggregates Where Are All the U.S. Dollars and the Euros? The Feds Use of M1 Versus M2 in Practice QUANTITY THEORY OF MONEY Velocity of Money and the Equation of Exchange From the Equation of Exchange to the Quantity Theory of Money The Classical Dichotomy Quantity Theory and the Price Level Quantity Theory and Inflation APPLICATION: Testing the Quantity Theory of Money HYPERINFLATION POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Zimbabwean Hyperinflation INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES APPLICATION: Testing the Fisher Effect THE COST OF INFLATION Costs of Anticipated Inflation Costs of Unanticipated Inflation DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 5 Appendix THE MONEY SUPPLY PROCESS THE FEDS BALANCE SHEET Liabilities

Assets CONTROL OF THE MONETARY BASE Federal Reserve Open Market Operations Shifts from Deposits into Currency Discount Loans Overview of the Feds Ability to Control the Monetary Base MULTIPLE DEPOSIT CREATION: A SIMPLE MODEL Deposit Creation: The Single Bank Deposit Creation: The Banking System Critique of the Simple Model FACTORS THAT DETERMINE THE MONEY SUPPLY Changes in the Nonborrowed Monetary Base Changes in Borrowed Reserves from the Fed Changes in the Required Reserve Ratio Changes in Currency Holdings Changes in Excess Reserves Overview of the Money Supply Process THE MONEY MULTIPLIER Deriving the Money Multiplier Intuition Behind the Money Multiplier Money Supply Response to Changes in the Factors APPLICATION: Quantitative Easing and the Money Supply, 20072013 AND DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 5 Web Appendix APPLICATION: THE GREAT DEPRESSION BANK PANICS AND THE MONEY SUPPLY, 19301933 PART 3 Long-Run Economic Growth Chapter 6 THE SOURCES OF GROWTH AND THE SOLOW MODEL ECONOMIC GROWTH AROUND THE WORLD THE SOLOW GROWTH MODEL Building Blocks of the Solow Growth Model Time Subscripts Dynamics of the Solow Growth Model Convergence in the Solow Model The Bathtub Model of the Steady State APPLICATION: Evidence on Convergence, 19602012 War, Destruction, and Growth Miracles SAVING RATE CHANGES IN THE SOLOW MODEL POPULATION GROWTH IN THE SOLOW MODEL Population Growth and the Steady State Changes in Population Growth Population Growth and Real GDP Per Capita

POLICY AND PRACTICE: Chinas One-Child Policy and Other Policies to Limit Population Growth PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH IN THE SOLOW MODEL Technology Growth and the Steady State SUMMING UP THE SOLOW MODEL Solow Model: The Results Solow Model: Limitations SOURCES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH: GROWTH ACCOUNTING Growth Accounting Equation Growth Accounting in Practice APPLICATION: U.S. Growth Rates in the Postwar Period CROSS-COUNTRY DIFFERENCES IN GROWTH ACCOUNTING RATES DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 6 Appendix THE ALGEBRA OF THE SOLOW GROWTH MODEL SOLVING FOR THE STEADY STATE AND RESULTS AND Chapter 6 Web Appendix THE GOLDEN RULE LEVEL OF THE CAPITAL-LABOR RATIO Chapter 7 DRIVERS OF GROWTH: TECHNOLOGY, POLICY, AND INSTITUTIONS TECHNOLOGY AS A PRODUCTION INPUT Technology Versus Conventional Production Inputs Technology and Excludability POLICIES TO PROMOTE PRODUCTIVITY Building Infrastructure Increasing Human Capital POLICY AND PRACTICE: Government Measures to Increase Human Capital Encouraging Research and Development INSTITUTIONS AND PROPERTY RIGHTS The Legal System and Property Rights Geography, the Legal System, and Economic Growth Obstacles to Effective Property Rights POLICY AND PRACTICE: The World Banks Doing Business POLICY AND PRACTICE: Does Foreign Aid Work? ENDOGENOUS GROWTH THEORY Allocation of Labor Production Function Production of Technology Sustained Growth in the Romer Model FACTORS THAT AFFECT ENDOGENOUS GROWTH

Effects of an Increase in the Fraction of the Population Engaged in R&D, Effect of Changes in the Productiveness of R&D, Response to an Increase in the Total Population, N APPLICATION: Does Population Growth Improve Living Standards? The Romer Model and Saving DATA ANALYSIS PART 4 Business Cycles: The Short Run Chapter 8 BUSINESS CYCLES: AN INTRODUCTION BUSINESS CYCLE BASICS Business Cycle Illustration An Alternative View of the Business Cycle Co-Movement and Timing of Economic Variables Dating Business Cycles MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND THE BUSINESS CYCLE Real GDP and Its Components MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: Leading Economic Indicators Unemployment Inflation Financial Variables International Business Cycles A BRIEF HISTORY OF U.S. BUSINESS CYCLES PreWorld War I The Interwar Period and the Great Depression PostWorld War II The Great Moderation The Great Recession of 20072009 TIME HORIZONS IN MACROECONOMICS Keynesian and Classical Views on Economic Fluctuations The Short Run Versus the Long Run PRICE STICKINESS Perfect Competition Versus Monopolistic Competition Sources of Price Stickiness Empirical Evidence for Price Stickiness ROAD MAP FOR OUR STUDY OF BUSINESS CYCLES DATA ANALYS IS

Chapter 9 THE IS CURVE PLANNED EXPENDITURE THE COMPONENTS OF EXPENDITURE Consumption Expenditure Planned Investment Spending Net Exports Government Purchases and Taxes GOODS MARKET EQUILIBRIUM Solving for Goods Market Equilibrium Deriving the IS Curve UNDERSTANDING THE IS CURVE What the IS Curve Tells Us: Intuition What the IS Curve Tells Us: Numerical Example Why the Economy Heads Toward Equilibrium Why the IS Curve Has Its Name and Its Relationship with the Saving-Investment Diagram FACTORS THAT SHIFT THE IS CURVE Changes in Government Purchases APPLICATION: The Vietnam War Buildup,19641969 Changes in Taxes Changes in Autonomous Spending POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Fiscal Stimulus Package of 2009 Changes in Financial Frictions Summary of Factors That Shift the IS Curve DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 10 MONETARY POLICY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY THE MONETARY POLICY CURVE The Taylor Principle: Why the Monetary Policy Curve Has an Upward Slope Shifts in the MP Curve Movements Along the MP Curve Versus Shifts in the Curve POLICY AND PRACTICE: Movements Along the MP Curve: The Rise in the Federal Funds Rate Target, 20042006 POLICY AND PRACTICE: Shifts in the MP Curve: Autonomous Monetary Easing at the Onset of the 20072009 Financial Crisis THE AGGREGATE DEMAND CURVE Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve Graphically Factors That Shift the Aggregate Demand Curve Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve Algebraically

THE MONEY MARKET AND INTEREST RATES Liquidity Preference and the Demand for Money Demand Curve for Money Supply Curve for Money Equilibrium in the Money Market Changes in the Equilibrium Interest Rate DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 10 Appendix THE DEMAND FOR MONEY KEYNESIAN THEORIES OF MONEY DEMAND Transactions Motive Precautionary Motive Speculative Motive Putting the Three Motives Together PORTFOLIO THEORIES OF MONEY DEMAND Portfolio Theory Portfolio Theory and Keynesian Liquidity Preference Other Factors That Affect the Demand for Money Summary EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE ON THE DEMAND FOR MONEY Interest Rates and Money Demand Stability of Money Demand AND Chapter 11 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND THE PHILLIPS CURVE THE PHILLIPS CURVE Phillips Curve Analysis in the 1960s POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Phillips Curve Tradeoff and Macroeconomic Policy in the 1960s The Friedman-Phelps Phillips Curve Analysis The Phillips Curve After the 1960s The Modern Phillips Curve The Modern Phillips Curve with Adaptive (Backward-Looking) Expectations THE AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve The Relationship of the Phillips Curve and the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve SHIFTS IN AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVES Shifts in the Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve Shifts in the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve

DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 12 THE AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY MODEL RECAP OF THE AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY CURVES The Aggregate Demand Curve Factors That Shift the Aggregate Demand Curve What Does Autonomous Mean? Short- and Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curves Factors that Shift the Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve Factors that Shift the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve EQUILIBRIUM IN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS Short-Run Equilibrium Algebraic Determination of the Equilibrium Output and Inflation Rate Long-Run Equilibrium Short-Run Equilibrium over Time Self-Correcting Mechanism CHANGES IN EQUILIBRIUM: AGGREGATE DEMAND SHOCKS Algebraic Determination of the Response to a Rightward Shift of the Aggregate Demand Curve APPLICATION: The Volcker Disinflation, 19801986 APPLICATION: Negative Demand Shocks, 20012004 CHANGES IN EQUILIBRIUM: AGGREGATE SUPPLY (PRICE) SHOCKS Temporary Supply Shocks APPLICATION: Negative Supply Shocks, 19731975 and 19781980 Permanent Supply Shocks APPLICATION: Positive Supply Shocks, 19951999 Conclusions APPLICATION: Negative Supply and Demand Shocks and the 20072009 Financial Crisis AD/AS ANALYSIS OF FOREIGN BUSINESS CYCLE EPISODES APPLICATION: The United Kingdom and the 20072009 Financial Crisis APPLICATION: China and the 20072009 Financial Crisis DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 12 Web Appendix A THE TAYLOR PRINCIPLE AND INFLATION STABILITY Chapter 12 Web Appendix B THE EFFECTS OF MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS ON ASSET PRICES Chapter 12 Web Appendix C THE ALGEBRA OF THE AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY MODE

Chapter 13 MACROECONOMIC POLICY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS THE OBJECTIVES OF MACROECONOMIC POLICY Stabilizing Economic Activity Stabilizing Inflation: Price Stability Establishing Hierarchical Versus Dual Mandates THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STABILIZING INFLATION AND STABILIZING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY Monetary Policy and the Equilibrium Real Interest Rate POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Federal Reserves Use of the Equilibrium Real Interest Rate, r* Response to an Aggregate Demand Shock Response to a Permanent Supply Shock Response to a Temporary Supply Shock The Bottom Line: The Relationship Between Stabilizing Inflation and Stabilizing Economic Activity HOW ACTIVELY SHOULD POLICY MAKERS TRY TO STABILIZE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY? Lags and Policy Implementation POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Activist/Nonactivist Debate Over the Obama Fiscal Stimulus Package THE TAYLOR RULE The Taylor Rule Equation The Difference Between the Taylor Rule and the Taylor Principle The Taylor Rule Versus the Monetary Policy Curve The Taylor Rule in Practice POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Feds Use of the Taylor Rule INFLATION: ALWAYS AND EVERYWHERE A MONETARY PHENOMENON CAUSES OF INFLATIONARY MONETARY POLICY High Employment Targets and Inflation APPLICATION: The Great Inflation MONETARY POLICY AT THE ZERO LOWER BOUND Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve with the Zero Lower Bound The Disappearance of the Self-Correcting Mechanism at the Zero Lower Bound APPLICATION: Nonconventional Monetary Policy and Quantitative Easing Liquidity Provision Asset Purchases Quantitative Easing Versus Credit Easing Management of Expectations POLICY AND PRACTICE: Abenomics and the Shift in Japanese Monetary Policy in 2013 DATA ANALYSIS PART 5 Finance and the Macroeconomy Chapter 14 THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

THE ROLE OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM Direct Finance Indirect Finance INFORMATION CHALLENGES AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM Asymmetric Information Financial Intermediaries Free-Rider Problem Financial Intermediaries Address Asymmetric Information Problems Collateral and Asymmetric Information Problems APPLICATION: The Tyranny of Collateral GOVERNMENT REGULATION AND SUPERVISION OF THE FINANCIAL SECTOR Government Regulation to Promote Transparency Government-Directed Credit Government Safety Net The Enron Implosion Role of Prudential Regulation and Supervision FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND ECONOMIC GROWTH: THE EVIDENCE APPLICATION: Is China a Counter-Example to the Importance of Financial Development to Economic Growth? DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 14 Web Appendix FREE TRADE, FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION, AND GROWTH Chapter 15 FINANCIAL CRISES AND THE ECONOMY ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION AND FINANCIAL CRISES Asymmetric Information Problems What is a Financial Crisis? DYNAMICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES Stage One: Initiation of Financial Crisis Stage Two: Banking Crisis Stage Three: Debt Deflation APPLICATION: The Mother of All Financial Crises: The Great Depression Stock Market Crash Bank Panics Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Worsen Debt Deflation Recovery Begins International Dimensions APPLICATION: The Global Financial Crisis of 20072009 Causes of the 20072009 Financial Crisis Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs)

Effects of the 20072009 Financial Crisis Residential Housing Prices: Boom and Bust POLICY AND PRACTICE: Was the Fed to Blame for the Housing Price Bubble? Ireland and the 20072009 Financial Crisis Height of the 20072009 Financial Crisis WHY THE 20072009 FINANCIAL CRISIS DID NOT LEAD TO A DEPRESSION Aggressive Federal Reserve Actions POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Federal Reserves Nonconventional Monetary Policies and Quantitative Easing During the Global Financial Crisis Liquidity Provision Asset Purchases (Quantitative Easing) Management of Expectations: Commitment to Future Policy Actions Worldwide Government Intervention Through Bailouts Aggressive Fiscal Policy POLICY AND PRACTICE: Japans Lost Decade, 19922002 POLICY RESPONSE TO ASSET-PRICE BUBBLES Types of Asset-Price Bubbles POLICY AND PRACTICE: Debate Over Central Bank Response to Bubbles Regulatory Policy Responses to Asset Bubbles DATA ANALYSIS PART 6 Macroeconomic Policy Chapter 16 FISCAL POLICY AND THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET Government Spending Revenue Budget Deficits and Surpluses Government Budget Constraint SIZE OF THE GOVERNMENT DEBT Growth of U.S. Government Debt over Time POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Entitlements Debate: Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid International Comparison: The Size of Government Debt SOVEREIGN DEBT CRISES POLICY AND PRACTICE: The European Sovereign Debt Crisis FISCAL POLICY AND THE ECONOMY IN THE LONG RUN Why High Government Debt Is Not a Burden Why High Government Debt Is a Burden POLICY AND PRACTICE: Tax Smoothing FISCAL POLICY AND THE ECONOMY IN THE SHORT RUN Aggregate Demand and Fiscal Policy

Expenditure and Tax Multipliers POLICY AND PRACTICE: The 2009 Debate Over Tax-Based Versus Spending-Based Fiscal Stimulus Fiscal Multipliers at the Zero Lower Bound Aggregate Supply and Fiscal Policy Supply-Side Economics and Fiscal Policy Balancing the Budget: Expansionary or Contractionary? POLICY AND PRACTICE: Two Expansionary Fiscal Contractions: Denmark and Ireland POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Debate Over Fiscal Austerity in Europe BUDGET DEFICITS AND INFLATION Government-Issued Money Revenue from Seignorage BUDGET DEFICITS AND RICARDIAN EQUIVALENCE Implications of Ricardian Equivalence Objections to Ricardian Equivalence Bottom Line on Ricardian Equivalence POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Bush Tax Cuts and Ricardian Equivalence DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 16 Web Appendix OTHER MEASURES OF THE GOVERNMENT BUDGET DEFICIT Chapter 17 EXCHANGE RATES AND INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC POLICY FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET AND EXCHANGE RATES Foreign Exchange Rates The Distinction Between Real and Nominal Exchange Rates MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: Foreign Exchange Rates The Importance of Exchange Rates Foreign Exchange Trading EXCHANGE RATES IN THE LONG RUN Law of One Price Theory of Purchasing Power Parity Big Macs and PPP EXCHANGE RATES IN THE SHORT RUN Supply Curve for Domestic Assets Demand Curve for Domestic Assets Equilibrium in the Foreign Exchange Market ANALYSIS OF CHANGES IN EXCHANGE RATES Changes in the Demand for Domestic Assets APPLICATION: The Global Financial Crisis and the Dollar APPLICATION: Why Are Exchange Rates So Volatile? EXCHANGE RATES AND AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS INTERVENTION IN THE FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKET

Foreign Exchange Intervention Intervention and the Exchange Rate FIXED EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES Fixed Exchange Rate Regime Dynamics The Policy Trilemma Monetary Unions APPLICATION: How Did China Accumulate Over $3 Trillion of International Reserves? POLICY AND PRACTICE: Will the Euro Survive? TO PEG OR NOT TO PEG Advantages of Exchange-Rate Pegging Disadvantages of Exchange-Rate Pegging POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Collapse of the Argentine Currency Board DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 17 Web Appendix A THE INTEREST PARITY CONDITION Chapter 17 Web Appendix B SPECULATIVE ATTACKS AND FOREIGN EXCHANGE CRISES PART 7 Microeconomic Foundations of Macroeconomics Chapter 18 CONSUMPTION AND SAVING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CONSUMPTION AND SAVING INTERTEMPORAL CHOICE AND CONSUMPTION The Intertemporal Budget Constraint The Intertemporal Budget Constraint in Terms of Present Discounted Value Preferences Optimization THE INTERTEMPORAL CHOICE MODEL IN PRACTICE: INCOME AND WEALTH Response of Consumption to Income Response of Consumption to Wealth Consumption Smoothing THE INTERTEMPORAL CHOICE MODEL IN PRACTICE: INTEREST RATES Interest Rates and the Intertemporal Budget Line The Optimal Level of Consumption and the Intertemporal Budget Line Borrowing Constraints THE KEYNESIAN THEORY OF CONSUMPTION The Keynesian Consumption Function: Building Blocks Keynesian Consumption Function The Relationship of the Keynesian Consumption Function to Intertemporal Choice THE PERMANENT INCOME HYPOTHESIS The Permanent Income Consumption Function APPLICATION: Consumer Confidence and the Business Cycle Relationship of the Permanent Income Hypothesis and Intertemporal Choice

MACROECONOMICS IN THE NEWS: The Consumer Confidence and Consumer Sentiment Indices POLICY AND PRACTICE: The 2008 Tax Rebate THE LIFE-CYCLE HYPOTHESIS Life-Cycle Consumption Function Saving and Wealth Over the Life Cycle APPLICATION: Housing, the Stock Market, and thecollapse of Consumption in 2008 and 2009 TWO MODIFICATIONS OF THE THEORY: THE RANDOM WALK HYPOTHESIS AND BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS The Random Walk Hypothesis Behavioral Economics and Consumption POLICY AND PRACTICE: Behavioral Policies to Increase Saving DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 18 Web Appendix INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS: A GRAPHICAL ANALYSIS Chapter 19 INVESTMENT DATA ON INVESTMENT SPENDING THE NEOCLASSICAL THEORY OF INVESTMENT Determining the Level of Capital Stock User Cost of Capital Determining the Desired Level of Capital From the Desired Level of Capital to Investment Changes in the Desired Level of the Capital Stock Summary: Neoclassical Theory of Investment INVENTORY INVESTMENT Motivation for Holding Inventories The Theory of Inventory Investment TOBINS q AND INVESTMENT Tobins q Theory Tobins q Versus Neoclassical Theory APPLICATION: Stock Market Crashes and Recessions RESIDENTIAL INVESTMENT POLICY AND PRACTICE: U.S. Government Policies and the Housing Market DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 19 Web Appendix A MODEL OF HOUSING PRICES AND RESIDENTIAL INVESTMENT

Chapter 20 THE LABOR MARKET, EMPLOYMENT, AND UNEMPLOYMENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE U.S. LABOR MARKET Employment Ratio Unemployment Rate Real Wages SUPPLY AND DEMAND IN THE LABOR MARKET The Demand Curve for Labor The Supply Curve Equilibrium in the Labor Market RESPONSE OF EMPLOYMENT AND WAGES TO CHANGES IN LABOR DEMAND AND LABOR SUPPLY Changes in Labor Demand Changes in Labor Supply APPLICATION: Why Has Labor Force Participation ofwomen Increased? APPLICATION: Why Are Income Inequality and Returns to Education Increasing? DYNAMICS OF UNEMPLOYMENT Flows Into and Out of Employment Status Duration of Unemployment CAUSES OF UNEMPLOYMENT Frictional Unemployment POLICY AND PRACTICE: Unemployment Insurance and Unemployment Structural Unemployment Wage Rigidity POLICY AND PRACTICE: Minimum Wage Laws Efficiency Wages and Henry Ford NATURAL RATE OF UNEMPLOYMENT The Role of the Natural Rate of Unemployment in the AD/AS Model Sources of Changes in the Natural Rate of Unemployment APPLICATION: Why Are European Unemployment Rates Generally Much Higher Than U.S. Unemployment Rates? DATA ANALYSIS PART 8 Modern Business Cycle Analysis and Macroeconomic Policy Chapter 21 THE ROLE OF EXPECTATI ONS IN MACROECONOMIC POLICY RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS AND POLICY MAKING Adaptive Expectations Rational Expectations Microeconomic Rationale Behind the Theory Rational Expectations Theory and Macroeconomic Analysis Rational Expectations Revolution LUCAS CRITIQUE OF POLICY EVALUATION

Econometric Policy Evaluation APPLICATION: The Consumption Function POLICY CONDUCT: RULES OR DISCRETION? Discretion and the Time-Inconsistency Problem Types of Rules The Case for Rules POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Political Business Cycle and Richard Nixon The Case for Discretion POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Demise of Monetary Targeting in Switzerland Constrained Discretion THE ROLE OF CREDIBILITY AND A NOMINAL ANCHOR Benefits of a Credible Nominal Anchor Credibility and Aggregate Demand Shocks Credibility and Aggregate Supply Shocks APPLICATION: A Tale of Three Oil Price Shocks APPROACHES TO ESTABLISHING CENTRAL BANK CREDIBILITY Inflation Targeting POLICY AND PRACTICE: Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve Adoption of Inflation Targeting Nominal GDP Targeting Appoint Conservative Central Bankers POLICY AND PRACTICE: The Appointment of Paul Volcker, Anti-Inflation Hawk Increase Central Bank Independence DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 22 MODERN BUSINESS CYCLE THEORY REAL BUSINESS CYCLE MODEL Productivity Shocks and Business Cycle Fluctuations Solow Residuals and Business Cycle Fluctuations Employment and Unemployment in the Real Business Cycle Model Objections to the Real Business Cycle Model NEW KEYNESIAN MODEL Building Blocks of the New Keynesian Model Business Cycle Fluctuations in the New Keynesian Model Objections to the New Keynesian Model A COMPARISON OF BUSINESS CYCLE MODELS How Do the Models Differ? Short-Run Output and Price Responses: Implications for Stabilization Policy Anti-Inflation Policy

DATA ANALYSIS Chapter 22 Web Appendix THE NEW CLASSICAL MODEL Epilogue POLICY AND PRACTICE: WHERE DO MACROECONOMISTS AGREE AND DISAGREE? WHERE MACROECONOMISTS AGREE Inflation Is Always and Everywhere a Monetary Phenomenon The Benefits of Price Stability No Long-Run Trade-off Between Unemployment and Inflation The Crucial Role of Expectations The Taylor Principle The Time-Inconsistency Problem Central Bank Independence Commitment to a Nominal Anchor Credibility Institutions Rule WHERE MACROECONOMISTS DISAGREE Flexibility of Wages and Prices How Much Time It Takes to Get to the Long Run Sources of Business Cycle Fluctuations Effectiveness of Stabilization Policy Cost of Reducing Inflation The Dangers of Budget Deficits THE FUTURE OF BUSINESS CYCLE THEORY Web Chapter FINANCIAL CRISES IN EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES DYNAMICS OF FINANCIAL CRISES IN EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES Stage One: Initiation of Financial Crisis Stage Two: Currency Crisis Stage Three: Full-Fledged Financial Crisis APPLICATION: Crisis in South Korea, 19971998 Financial Liberalization/Globalization Mismanagement Perversion of the Financial Liberalization/Globalization Process: Chaebols and the South Korean Crisis Stock Market Decline and Failure of Firms Increase Uncertainty Aggregate Selection and Moral Hazard Problems Worsen, and Aggregate Demand Falls Currency Crisis Ensues Final Stage: Currency Crisis Triggers Full-Fledged Financial Crisis Recovery Commences APPLICATION: The Argentine Financial Crisis, 20012002

Severe Fiscal Imbalances Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Problems Worsen Bank Panic Begins Currency Crisis Ensues Currency Crisis Triggers Full-Fledged Financial Crisis Recovery Begins When an Advanced Economy Is Like an Emerging Market Economy: The Icelandic Financial Crisis of 2008 POLICY AND PRACTICE: Preventing Emerging Market Financial Crises Beef Up Prudential Regulation and Supervision of Banks Encourage Disclosure and Market-Based Discipline Limit Currency Mismatch Sequence Financial Liberalization AND Glossary Index