Title: Chapter 15 The Role of Macroeconomic Policy
1Chapter 15The Role of Macroeconomic Policy
2Old and New Macroeconomic Policy Trade-offs (a)
- Old trade-off the Phillips curve
- Policy can lower unemployment but increase
average inflation. - If inflation is seen as very costly then policy
actions will result in higher unemployment. - If unemployment is seen as very costly then
policy actions will result in higher inflation. - In the 1970s a recognition that U sustained
- Unemployment returns to the natural rate in the
long run. - Choice is between lower or higher inflation in
the long run.
3Old and New Macroeconomic Policy Trade-offs (b)
- New trade-off Output stability vs. Inflation
stability - John Taylor
- Attempts to stabilize output lead to greater
fluctuations in inflation. - Attempts to stabilize inflation lead to greater
fluctuations in output. - If policymakers focus too much on stabilizing
inflation they get undesirable fluctuations in
output and employment. - Policymakers face a trade-off between stability
in the real economy or inflation. - Policymakers should focus on stabilizing the
economy, and not on achieving a particular output
or inflation outcome.
4Automatic Stabilizers (a)
- Fiscal policies changes in government purchases
and taxes - The most important automatic fiscal stabilizer is
the income tax. - When income increases, tax collections increase.
- Taxes tend to put limits on spending increases
during a boom. - This helps keep output closer to potential
output. - When income decreases, tax collections fall.
- This supports income and spending during
downturns.
5Automatic Stabilizers (b)
- Transfer payments such as Social Security and
welfare also function as automatic fiscal
stabilizers. - When income falls, these programs support
household income, so consumption spending does
not fall as much. - These programs shrink when income rises.
6Automatic Stabilizers (c)
- Automatic stabilizers make the slope of the ADI
curve steeper since they help dampen the
fluctuations in output keeping output closer to
potential than otherwise
7Automatic Stabilizers and the Government Budget
- Budget deficit government spending - net taxes
- Where net taxes taxes - transfers
- When income increases, taxes rise and transfers
fall, so net taxes increase. - This means the government budget deficit moves in
the opposite direction of income - The government budget deficit changes
automatically with the economy. - The government budget deficit is countercyclical.
8The Structural or Full-Employment Deficit
- The structural or full-employment deficit or
surplus is the deficit or surplus that is
independent of the business cycle. - A government is fiscally responsible if the
structural or full-employment deficit is zero.
9Discretionary Fiscal Policy
- Discretionary fiscal policy deliberate action by
the government using taxing and spending programs
to achieve its macroeconomic goals - Represented by shifts in the ADI curve for a
given level of inflation - The Kennedy tax cut of 1964
- The tax surcharge for the Vietnam War
- Fiscal policy is not flexible or quick enough to
react to short-run fluctuations. - It takes longer than a year to be implemented and
have an effect. - Since WWII the average recession has lasted less
than one year. - By the time discretionary fiscal policy has an
effect the problem may no longer exist.
10Using Discretionary Fiscal Policy to End a
Recession
- When government spending increases, the ADI curve
shifts right. - Output moves back to potential Yf.
11Monetary Policy (a)
- FOMC meets about every six weeks to decide on
monetary policy. - FOMC controls bank reserves to target federal
funds rate - Federal funds rate and prime interest rate move
together - The prime interest rate affects the cost of
borrowing for firms and households. - The nominal federal funds rate is now the main
policy tool of U.S. monetary policy.
12Monetary Policy (b)
13The Monetary Policy Rule (a)
- The policy rule indicates how much the Fed should
raise the real interest rate when inflation
rises. - To implement the rule, the Fed adjusts the total
supply of reserves to achieve the appropriate
federal funds rate.
14The Monetary Policy Rule (b)
- The federal funds rate is a nominal interest
rate, i r ?. - Suppose ? ? or the Fed expects ? to rise.
- The Fed reduces reserves so the increase in the
nominal federal funds rate exceeds the increase
in inflation. - Di Dp 0 so Dr 0, which decreases aggregate
spending
15The Monetary Policy Rule (c)
16Graphical Representation of the Monetary Policy
Rule
- If inflation rises, the Fed raises the real
interest rate. - The difference between the policy rule and the
45-degree line is the real interest rate.
17The Fed Responds to Other Variables
- The Fed may also respond to
- Stability and growth of output
- Unemployment
- If unemployment rises, the Fed will lower real
interest rates. - In most cases it is consistent with the Fed's
cutting rates when inflation falls since falling
inflation is related to high unemployment. - Expectations of future output and inflation
changes - For example in early 2001, the Fed cut the
federal funds rate because it believed a
recession was around the corner.
18Real Interest Rates and Nominal Interest Rates (a)
- If at full employment the government deficit
increases, national savings falls, so rf rises. - This is represented by a shift up of the policy
rule curve. - This is not an automatic action the central bank
must decide to change nominal interest rates. - In the past, failure by the Fed to adjust the
nominal interest rate has resulted in poor
economic performance.
19Real Interest Rates and Nominal Interest Rates (b)
20Fiscal Policy When the Feds Policy Rule Does Not
Adjust and When It Does
21Explicit Inflation Targets
- Many countries have explicit targets or ranges
for inflation. - The Bank of England targets inflation at 2.
- The Bank of New Zealand has a target range of
03 inflation. - The European Central Bank also has a range of
02 inflation. - The Fed has no explicit inflation target but, its
actions are consistent with a 13 range for
inflation.
22Changing the Inflation Target (a)
- Suppose the central bank wishes to lower the
inflation target that is, lower the amount of
inflation in the economy. - To do so, it must first raise the nominal
interest rate. - This raises the real interest rate for a given
rate of inflation. - This means that to lower the inflation target,
the policy rule curve must shift upward
initially. - Spending and output fall, unemployment rises, and
wage and price inflation fall.
23Changing the Inflation Target (b)