Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Self-Correcting Economy

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Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Self-Correcting Economy The Role of Aggregate Demand & Supply Endogenizing the Price Level Inflation Deflation Price Stability The Aggregate Demand Curve Relates Y and P Derived from the IS-LM model when prices change The (Short-run) Aggregate Supply Curve October 12 & 14, 1999 1 October 12 & 14, 1999 2 Figure 7-1 Effect on Real Income of Different Values of the Price Level Flexible Prices and the AD Curve Effect of Changing Prices on the LM Curve Assume constant M(s) and allow P to change» Figure 7-1 The AD curve: all possible Y and P consistent with a fixed M(s) a fixed IS curve AD curve slopes downward to the right all points are equilibrium in money & commodity market AD curve is curved because a decline in P boost M(s)/P by more the lower is P October 12 & 14, 1999 3 October 12 & 14, 1999 4 Figure 7-2 The Effect on the AD Curve of a Doubling of the Nominal Money Supply Shifting the AD Curve with Monetary and Fiscal Policy Effects of a Change in the Nominal M(s)» Figure 7-2 Where is the new equilibrium? October 12 & 14, 1999 5 October 12 & 14, 1999 6 1

Figure 7-3 The Effect on the AD Curve of a Decline in Planned Autonomous Spending Shifting the AD Curve with Monetary and Fiscal Policy (continued) Effects of a Change in Autonomous Spending Consumer or business confidence G, T(a), or t NX(a)» Figure 7-3 Where is the new equilibrium? October 12 & 14, 1999 7 October 12 & 14, 1999 8 Figure 7-4 Effect of a Rightward Shift in the AD Curve with Three Alternative Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curves Alternative Shapes of the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve SAS Curve shows how businesses what businesses are willing to produce at different P How an increase in AD is divided between Y and P depends on the shape of the SAS curve» Figure 7-4 Comparative statics versus dynamics October 12 & 14, 1999 9 October 12 & 14, 1999 10 The AS Curve When the Nominal Wage Rate is Constant The Short-Run AS Curve» Figure 7-5 The demand for labor with fixed factors of production Land, capital, materials, energy, and technology The production function with fixed productivity The Short-run Aggregate Supply Curve Upward sloping Assumes fixed W, therefore short-run October 12 & 14, 1999 11 Figure 7-5 The Labor Demand Curve, the Production Function, and the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve October 12 & 14, 1999 12 2

Figure 7-6 The Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve for Two Different Values of the Wage Rate, W 0 and W 1 How the Wage Rate is Set The Equilibrium Real Wage Rate Distinguishing the nominal and real wage rates» Figure 7-6 Determinants of the equilibrium real wage rate The Demand for and Supply of Labor» Figure 7-7 Factors that shift the labor supply curve Disequilibrium dynamics» Figure 7-7 October 12 & 14, 1999 13 October 12 & 14, 1999 14 Figure 7-7 Determination of the Equilibrium Real Wage Rate and Long Run» Figure 7-8 Initial Short-Run Effect of a Fiscal Expansion The effect on the Price level The effect on the multiplier October 12 & 14, 1999 15 October 12 & 14, 1999 16 Figure 7-8 Effects on the Price Level and Real Income of an Increase in Planned Autonomous Spending from A 0 and A 1 and Long Run (continued)» Figure 7-8 The Rising Nominal Wage Rate and the Arrival at Long-Run Equilibrium October 12 & 14, 1999 17 October 12 & 14, 1999 18 3

and Long Run (continued)» Figure 7-8 The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve (LAS) Vertical at Y(n) W/P = W/P(e) October 12 & 14, 1999 19 Fiscal and Monetary Expansion (continued) Short-Run and Long-Run Equilibrium Short-Run Equilibrium Y = E(p), i.e. anywhere on the AD curve P is sufficient to generate output, i.e. anywhere on the SAS curve for a specified W(0) AD = SAS Long-Run Equilibrium Short-run equilibrium W/P = W/P(e) AD = SAS = LAS The Process of Dynamic Adjustment October 12 & 14, 1999 20 and Long Run (continued) Interpretations of the Business Cycle Real World Problems with Theory How to get workers off labor supply curve Countercyclical real wage movement Different labor markets internationally Puzzling questions How does the adjustment mechanism work? How stupid are workers? Will monetary and fiscal policy remain effective? October 12 & 14, 1999 21 Classical Macroeconomics: The Quantity Theory of Money and the Self-Correcting Economy Based on flexible wages and prices The Quantity Equation and the Quantity Theory of Money M(s) * V = P * Y True by definition because V = M(s) / [ P * Y ] October 12 & 14, 1999 22 Classical Macroeconomics (continued) The Quantity Theory (continued) Key assumption: V is fixed Key assumption: Y = Y(n) Then M(s) is proportional to P Classical Macroeconomics (continued) Self-Correction in the AD-AS Model There is no SAS curve» Figure 7-9 Adjustment dynamics in response to changes in AD Conclusion: because there would be no significant movement of Y from Y(n), business cycles would not appear Monetary and fiscal policy ineffective October 12 & 14, 1999 23 October 12 & 14, 1999 24 4

Figure 7-9 Effect of a Decline in Planned Spending When the Price Level Is Perfectly Flexible Classical Macroeconomics (continued) Classical View of Unemployment and Output Fluctuations Unemployment was transitory and due to nominal wage inflexibility October 12 & 14, 1999 25 October 12 & 14, 1999 26 Figure 7-10 The Lack of Effect of a Drop in the Price Level When There Is a Failure of Self-Correction The Keynesian Revolution: The Failure of Self-Correction Monetary Impotence and the Failure of Self- Correction in Extreme Cases Unresponsive expenditures: The vertical IS curve Changes in M(s) are impotent Changes in P are impotent; AD curve is vertical» Figure 7-10 The liquidity trap: A horizontal LM curve Changes in P are impotent; AD curve is vertical October 12 & 14, 1999 27 October 12 & 14, 1999 28 The Keynesian Revolution (continued) Fiscal Policy and the Real Balance Effect Introduction Fiscal policy can be used with a vertical IS curve Keynes effect: changes in M/P affect r Pigou effect: changes in M/P directly influence spending» AD curve must be negatively sloped Destabilizing effects of falling prices The expectations effect» May offset Pigou effect The redistribution effect» From high spending debtors to low spending savers October 12 & 14, 1999 29 The Keynesian Revolution (continued) Nominal Wage Rigidity Nominal wage rigidity implies little price deflation Keynes, Pigou, expectations and redistribution effects become irrelevant Disequilibrium dynamics» Figure 7-11 October 12 & 14, 1999 30 5

Figure 7-11 Effect of a Decline in Planned Spending When the Nominal Rate Is Fixed at W 0 The Keynesian Revolution (continued) Nominal Wage Rigidity (continued) Failure to attain equilibrium in the labor market Explains persistent unemployment Why would nominal wages be rigid?» Is this a realistic assumption? Is the SAS fixed?» Can disequilibrium persist? Market-clearing versus non-market clearing» What about countercyclical wage movements? October 12 & 14, 1999 31 October 12 & 14, 1999 32 What Caused the Great Depression? Introduction Was aggregate demand so low because of monetary policy impotent or a failure of self-correction? Did aggregate supply shift to generate selfcorrection or were nominal wages rigid? Were nominal wages rigid? Did real wages fluctuate countercyclically? The Great Depression (continued) Explanations of Weak Aggregate Demand Investment spending collapsed Real money supply soared Vertical IS curve or horizontal LM curve? Vertical IS requires changes in r not to stimulate I Horizontal LM requires changes in M/P not to affect r October 12 & 14, 1999 33 Monetary versus non-monetary factors October 12 & 14, 1999 34 Figure 7-12 The Price Level (P) and the Ratio of Actual to Natural Real GDP (Y/Y N ) During the Great Depression, 1929 41 The Great Depression (continued) Prices and the Output Ratio Were nominal wages rigid or was there selfcorrecting?» Figure 7-12 Absence of self-correction Data suggests shift in AD not movement along AD» Figure 7-12 Behavior of nominal and real wage rates Nominal wages decline only modestly, short-circuiting self-correction October 12 & 14, 1999 35 October 12 & 14, 1999 36 6