Title: Chapter 25: Economic Policy in the Open Economy
1Chapter 25 Economic Policy in the Open Economy
2Opening blurb
- The hot currency topic today, as it has been for
several years, is the renminbi (aka yuan) - there has been great debate concerning whether
the yuan is undervalued, how much and what is the
best policy to deal with it. - There is also great debate about whether a
floating yuan would be better for the world, or
whether it would destabilize world markets. - Is there one answer to these questions? No. But,
3Opening blurb
- Is there one answer to what is the right policy
at this point in time? No. - But, in this chapter and the next, we will learn
about how countries can effectuate monetary and
fiscal policy under fixed and floating exchange
rates. - This will provide a conceptual framework for
thinking about these issues.
4Targets instruments
- In most cases, if policy-makers wish to achieve
two targets, they need two instruments to do so. - In the last chapter, we mentioned the use of
expansionary and contractionary policy to achieve
internal and external balance. - We noted that if the imbalances required contrary
policy direction then we might not be able to
easily achieve both targets (balances)
5Robert Mundell (nobel 1999)
- The most influential contributor to modelling
policy in the open economy is Robert Mundell. - born in Kingston, Ontario, Mundell argued that
under the Bretton-Woods system, the Federal
Reserve maintained stability, not the existence
of a fixed currency - analyzed policy in a small, open economy
- he also argued that progressive taxes could not
be maintained under flexible exchange rates. - father of supply-side economics and the monetary
approach to the Balance of Payments
6Mundell-Fleming Model
- Robert Mundell developed a model where monetary
and fiscal policy could be combined to reach both
an internal and external balance. - The trick is to aim one policy at one target and
another at a second. - Note Mundell defined External balance as
overall balance, the model is not designed to
achieve current account balance.
7Mundell-Fleming Model
- In this model, both monetary and fiscal policy
affect both the internal and external balances - interest rates affect the external balance much
more than the internal balance. - Therefore, monetary policy should be directed at
the external balance - Fiscal policy also affects the internal balance
more than the external balance - therefore fiscal policy should be aimed at the
internal balance
8Mundell-Fleming Model
- In the diagrammatic presentation of the model,
interest rates summarize monetary policy. - The relationship between interest rates and
fiscal policy (G T ) that will maintain a
balance is positive
9Mundell-Fleming Model
- Starting at internal balance
- If (G T) rises, this causes excess demand,
therefore, a contractionary monetary policy (rise
in interest rate) is needed to return to balance. - therefore, the Internal Balance curve is upward
sloping - Starting at external balance
- If (G T) rises, this causes imports to rise,
and a deficit, therefore an increase in interest
rates is needed to attract foreign funds - therefore the External Balance curve is also
upward sloping
10Mundell-Fleming Model
- As noted above, the external market responds
quickly and greatly to a change in interest rates - therefore a small increase in interest rates
would require a large increase in net government
spending (G T) to restore the external balance. - Or, from another point of view, a high increase
in (G T) requires only a small upward
adjustment in interest rates to restore external
balance.
11Mundell-Fleming Model
- In the next slide, we have the Mundell-Fleming
diagram. - The IB curve is steeper than the EB curve for
reasons noted above. - To the left (above) IB, fiscal policy and
monetary policy are too restrictive for internal
balance to the right of IB, they are both too
expansionary for internal Balance - To the left (above) EB, fiscal and monetary
policy are too restrictive for external balance.
12Mundell-Fleming diagram
IB
II
i
I
EB
i
III
IV
G - T
G - T
13Internal and external imbalances
- Once again, we have four cases for imbalances
(they are numbered differently than in the last
chapter) - I (unacceptably) high unemployment balance of
payments surplus - II rapid inflation balance of payments surplus
- III rapid inflation balance of payments deficit
- IV high unemployment balance of payments deficit
14Internal and external imbalances
- In this case, however, we also have clear policy
prescriptions - I (unacceptably) high unemployment balance of
payments surplus - expansionary fiscal policy accompanied by
expansionary monetary policy - II unacceptably rapid inflation balance of
payments surplus - contractionary fiscal policy accompanied by
expansionary monetary policy.
15Internal and external imbalances
- III unacceptably rapid inflation balance of
payments deficit - contractionary fiscal policy contractionary
monetary policy - IV unacceptably high unemployment balance of
payments deficit - expansionary fiscal policy contractionary
monetary policy -
16Building a macroeconomic model for the open
economy
- General equilibrium in the open economy
- The IS/LM/BP model
17First, review the construction of IS/LM ---
starting with LM curve
- Recall from Chapter 22
- Equilibrium in the money market is defined by
- Money Supply
- Ms a(DRIR) a(BR C)
- Money supply can be defined using domestic
reserves plus international reserves (both held
by central bank) - or bank reserves plus currency held by non-bank
public
18LM curve
- Recall from Chapter 22
- Money Demand
- Md L f(Y, i , P, W, E(p), O)
- Money demand depends on income (), interest rate
(-), price level (), wealth (), expected
inflation (-) and other factors (?)
19LM curve
- We begin by drawing the money market, with the
interest rate as the price of money. - Assuming the money supply is set by the central
bank, Ms is vertical - Demand for money is a decreasing function of the
interest rate. - All else equal, if the interest rate is too high,
there is an excess supply of money (demand A,
supply B) - if the interest rate is too low, there is an
excess demand for money (demand A, supply
B)
20Money supply and demand Building the LM curve
Ms
i
.
.
A
B
i1
.
q
ie
.
.
A
i2
Lf(i)
B
Money
21LM curve
- To construct an LM curve, however, we need to
examine how the demand for money changes with
income Y , as well as interest rates. - Because income is not on the axes of this graph,
a change in income will shift the relevant curve - If income increases, demand for money rises.
- The demand curve shifts up, or right.
22Money supply and demand Building the LM curve
Ms
i
.
i1
.
i0
.
Lf(Y1,i)
i2
Lf(Y0,i)
Lf(Y2,i)
Money
23LM curve
- Transferring this graph to i-Y space interest
rate and income - we see that there is a positive relationship
between the interest rate and the exchange rate. - We also see that, the stronger the demand
reaction to a change in income, the steeper the
LM curve. - In other words, if an increase in income leads to
a big jump in the demand for money, then, given
fixed supply, a big increase in the price of
money (interest rate) is needed to return to
equilibrium.
24LM curve
- Finally,
- to the right of the LM curve, there is excess
demand for money (income is too high for the
prevailing interest rate) - to the left of the LM curve, there is an excess
supply of money (income is too low the for
prevailing interest rate)
25LM curve
Ms
i
LM
i
i1
i1
i0
Lf(Y1,i)
i0
Lf(Y0,i)
i2
i2
Lf(Y2,i)
Money
Y
Y1
Y0
Y2
26You do
- Start with an LM curve (just draw one)
- Now show a new curve for each of the following
cases - money supply increases
- the response of liquidity demand for money based
on income increases
27Next class
- IS curve
- BP curve
- Putting it all together.
28IS curve
- this curve represents the
- Injections Leakages
- Recall, injections leakages is simply a
rearranging of the income expenditure
equations. - but, the IS curve it is named for
- Investment Savings
- because they are the major components, (and
because we assume, even in the simplest model,
that investment is affected by the interest rate)
29IS curve
- Review Injections leakages
- I X G S M T
- Saving and imports depend on income, so
- I X G S(Y) M(Y) T
IGX SMT
SMT
IGX
0
Y
Y0
30IS curve
- The IS curve is built by varying the rate of
interest and examining the effect of this on the
equilibrium income. - As interest rates fall, investment increases, the
IGX curve shifts up. - investment and interest rates move in opposite
directions from each other. - As interest rates increase, investment falls.
The IGX curve shifts down. - The level of equilibrium income is higher when
interest rates are lower.
31IS curve
- Assume i1 lt i0 and i2 gt i0
- Result Y1 gt Y0 and Y2 lt Y0
IGX SMT
SMT
I(i1) GX
I(i0) GX
I(i2) GX
0
Y
Y0
Y2
Y1
32IS curve
- We can now move the injections leakages curve
to (Y, i ) space. - This yields the traditional IS curve.
- Each rate of interest and income level along the
IS curve represents an equilibrium in the real
market. - That is income expenditure along the IS curve.
33IS curve
- Assume i1 lt i0 and i2 gt i0
i
IGX SMT
SMT
i2
I(i1) GX
i0
I(i0) GX
I(i2) GX
i1
IS
0
Y
Y0
Y2
Y1
Y
Y1
Y0
Y2
34IS curve
- Notice how the shape of the IS curve is affected
by the slope of S(Y) TM(Y) - if savings and/ or imports are more responsive to
income, the IS curve is steeper. - Notice also how the shape of the IS curve depends
on the size of the shift in IGX when interest
rate changes. - if Investment is very responsive to a change in
the interest rate, IS is flatter.
35IS curve
- To the right of the IS curve, the interest rate
is too high for the level of income - Therefore, S(Y)TM(Y) gt I(i) GX
- The level of income is generating too much
savings for the injections into the economy. The
interest rate will fall because of the excess
savings and return the economy to equilibrium. - If the interest rate does not rise, then income
will fall as the leakages lower income to
equilibrium
36IS curve
- From the other perspective to the right of the
IS curve, the income level is too high for the
level of interest - Therefore, S(Y)TM(Y) gt I(i)GX
- The level of income is generating too much
savings for the injections into the economy. The
interest rate will fall because of the excess
savings and return the economy to equilibrium. - If the interest rate does not fall, then income
will fall as the leakages lower income to
equilibrium - Or both these will cause a return to equilibrium
37IS Curve You do
- Draw an IS curve, label it IS0
- Draw a second IS curve, assuming autonomous
savings are higher than the level in the first IS
curve. label it IS1 - Draw a third IS curve, assuming that the marginal
propensity to import is higher than it is in your
first IS curve. label it IS2 - Draw an IS curve,assuming that investment is less
responsive to a change in interest rates than the
case in IS0 , label it IS3
38IS-LM Closed economy equilibrium
- The equilibrium in the IS-LM diagram represents
the simultaneous determination of income and
interest rate when the monetary sector and real
sector of the economy are in equilibrium. - If the economy is not in equilibrium, market
forces push it toward equilibrium.
39IS-LM Closed economy equilibrium
i
LM
A
G
ie
IS
Ye
Y
- At point A, the interest rate is too high for
both markets. - Lower investment pushes i down while reducing Y
- The demand for money is too low for monetary
equilibrium, the excess supply of money also
lowers interest rates.
40Equilibrium in the Balance of Payments the BP
curve
- The BP curve represents the combinations of
income and interest rates that yield equilibrium
in the Balance of Payments. - By equilibrium, we mean both current account plus
capital account (or overall balance) - For this chapter, the BP curve is drawn for a
fixed exchange rate
41BP curve
- The shape of the BP curve will depend on how the
balance of payments are affected by income and
interest rates. - Income affects imports
- as income increases, so do imports.
- as imports increase, the Balance of Payments
deteriorates - to offset the effect of imports, an increase in
the interest rate is needed. It will cause
capital flows to enter the country, and return
the country to BoP equilibrium
42BP curve
- The shape of the BP curve will depend on how the
balance of payments are affected by income and
interest rates. - We can see from the above, that the
responsiveness of capital flows will affect the
slope of the BP curve. - If capital is perfectly mobile,
- a small increase in the interest rate causes an
infinite increase in capital inflows, - the BP curve is horizontal
43BP curve
- If capital is perfectly immobile,
- no capital is allowed to flow into or out of the
country. - then an increase in the interest rate will have
no effect on capital flows and the BoP, - the BP curve is vertical
- In between these two extremes, capital is
imperfectly mobile - an increase in the interest rate causes an inflow
of capital - the BP curve is upward sloping.
44BP curve
i
i
i
BP
BP
BP
0
Y
0
Y
Y
0
perfectly immobile capital
perfectly mobile capital
imperfectly mobile capital
45Putting it all together Fixed Exchange rates
- Equilibrium in the open economy occurs when all
three markets are in equilibrium. - We need
- money market equilibrium
- real economy equilibrium (income expenditure)
- balance of payments equilibrium
46Putting it all together Fixed Exchange rates
- To analyze movement to equilibrium, we will
examine how the markets react to a shock - A shock is an exogenous change in some variable
in the economy - it is usually represented by a shift in the
curves - it may sometimes represent a change in slope
- We will then examine the effects of
- fiscal policy
- monetary policy
47First shock
- There is an increase in exogenous exports.
- Effects
- there is more foreign exchange flowing into the
country. - At the old equilibrium, there is a BoP surplus.
- The BoP curve shifts right.
- each interest rate can support a higher income
(and import) level. for BoP equilibrium
48First shock Increase in exports
- Effects
- The BoP curve shifts right.
- each interest rate can support a higher income
(and import) level. for BoP equilibrium - The IS curve shifts right
- Injections have increased, therefore at every
interest rate, a higher level of income (and
leakages) can occur for real economy equilibrium. - NOTE these two shifts are directly caused by the
increase in exports.
49First shock Increase in exports
- Effects
- The BoP curve shifts right.
- The IS curve shifts right
- The LM curve will also shift right
- Under fixed exchange rates, the BoP surplus
causes an increase in the money supply. - the money supply will only be in balance when the
BoP is in balance. - The LM curve shifts to accommodate the BoP
imbalance.
50Important to remember
- Under fixed exchange rates
- The IS curve and / or the BP curve may shift due
to an initial shock or policy change - The LM curve ALWAYS shifts to return the economy
to equilibrium at the new intersection of the IS
and BP curve. - This is because an imbalance in the balance of
payments affect the Money Supply
51You do Autonomous increase in Savings.
- Effects
- IS curve shifts . Why?
- BP curve shifts Why?
- LM curve shifts Why?
52Fiscal policy
- The government increases spending
- This shock is analogous to the increase in
exports for the IS curve, - But it causes no independent shift in the BP
curve. - So, what happens?
53Fiscal policy
- Fiscal policy is the use of spending and taxes to
affect the economy. - Example
- The government increases spending, hoping to
increase income. - This affects the real internal economy directly.
- Therefore, the only curve to shift as a direct
result of the policy is the IS curve. - The BP curve does not shift.
- The LM curve will shift to adjust the economy
back to equilibrium (under fixed exchange rates)
54Fiscal policy
- Whether or not fiscal policy affects the level of
income in the economy depends on the degree of
capital mobility. - The effect on the interest rate will also depend
on the degree of capital mobility
55Fiscal policy
- We can consider 4 cases
- capital is completely immobile internationally
(BP curve vertical) - capital is very immobile internationally (BP
curve is steeper than LM curve) - capital is fairly mobile internationally (such
that international capital reacts more to a
change in exchange rates than internal money
demand) (BP curve is flatter than LM curve) - capital is perfectly mobile (BP curve is flat)
56Fiscal policy
- Cases 1. and 2.
- In cases where capital is immobile, either
completely or partly, - the increase in spending causes imports to rise
(recall M M(Y) ) - this causes a BoP deficit
- which results in a decrease in the money supply.
- The LM curve shifts left, and the interest rate
rises further. - This chokes off some or all of the increase in
income that would result from fiscal expansion.
57Fiscal policy
- Cases 3. and 4.
- In cases where capital is mobile, completely or
partly, - the increase in spending causes imports to rise
(recall M M(Y) ) - this causes an increase in the interest rate
- which causes an inflow of capital
- which leads to a balance of payments surplus
- which results in an increase in the money supply.
- The LM curve shifts right and the interest rate
falls. - This increases income more than the closed
economy case.
58Fiscal policy graphical analysis
BP
BP
LM
LM
i
i
LM
LM
IS
IS
IS
IS
Y
Y
LM
LM
i
LM
i
LM
BP
BP
IS
IS
IS
IS
Y
Y
59Fiscal policy
- In the case of fixed exchange rates
- fiscal policy is most effective at increasing
income when capital is perfectly mobile. - in this case there is no effect on interest rates
- the BoP deficit caused by imports is completely
offset by capital flows - fiscal policy is least effective at increasing
income when capital is perfectly immobile - the BoP deficit caused by imports causes a
decrease in money supply, completely choking off
any income effect.
60Fiscal policy
- You do
- The government increases autonomous taxes
- What is the effect if capital is relatively
immobile (inelastic compared to money demand)? - What is the effect if capital is perfectly
mobile?
61Monetary policy under fixed exchange rates
- Given the analysis of shocks and fiscal policy,
we can predict the effectiveness of monetary
policy under fixed exchange rates - NONE.
- The money supply is determined by the Balance of
Payments. - if there is a surplus, money supply increases
- if there is a deficit, money supply falls
- Money supply change will change neither the
interest rate nor income.
62Monetary policy graphical analysis
BP
BP
LM
i
i
LM
LM
LM
IS
IS
Y
Y
LM
LM
i
LM
i
LM
BP
BP
IS
IS
Y
Y
63Effect of a change in the official exchange rate
- A change in the official exchange rate will have
a real effect in all four cases. - Example devaluation
- imports decrease
- exports increase
- there is a BoP surplus, BoP curve shifts right
- there is also an increase in injections into the
economy and a decrease in leakages, IS curve
shifts right - LM curve shifts to accomodate
64Effect of a change in the official exchange rate
- Case 1 and 2 completely immobile or relatively
immobile capital - IS and BP curves shift right
- there is a BoP surplus
- there are little or no capital inflows, and so
the surplus causes an increase in money supply - the LM curve shifts right
65Effect of a change in the official exchange rate
- Case 3 and 4 mobile or completely mobile capital
- IS and BP curves shift right
- there is a BoP surplus
- at the point of internal equilibrium (new IS, old
LM curve) the interest rate is also too high for
external balance. - both capital flows and expenditure switching
contribute to the surplus, causing an increase in
money supply - the LM curve shifts right
66Devaluation graphical analysis
BP
BP
BP
BP
LM
LM
i
i
LM
LM
i2
IS
IS
IS
IS
Y
Y2
Y0
Y2
Y
Y0
LM
LM
i
LM
i
LM
BP
BP
BP
IS
IS
IS
IS
Y2
Y
Y
Y0
Y0
Y2
67You do
- Revaluation of currency (increase in value)
- if capital is completely immobile
- if capital is very, but not completely mobile.
68In sum
- We first learned that, with a foreign sector,
internal equilibrium is not a guarantee of
external equilibrium - We then introduced a model where the three
markets were in equilibrium. - In this model, monetary policy is completely
ineffective within the country - that is, the external sector balance is
maintained by adjustments to the money supply
caused by inflows and outflows of reserves
69In sum
- On the other hand, fiscal policy has varying
levels of effectiveness depending on the mobility
of capital - the higher the mobility of capital, the more
effective is fiscal policy - Shocks to the real economy or the external
economy cause changes in income, the money market
adjusts to those shocks - Shocks to the money market are offset by the
reactions of the external markets. The LM curve
always adjusts to accomodate the IS-BP
equilibrium under fixed exchange rates.