Title: The Aggregate Production Function
1The Aggregate Production Function
- Requires Assumptions about
- What input aggregates to use
- How inputs affect output
2The inputs
- GDP f(L, K, MFP)
- Contribution of L (Labor)
- Contribution of K (capital)
- Multi-Factor Productivity (MFP)
- Know-how not specific to K or L contributions
- Important but unobservable input into production
3How inputs affect output
- Diminishing returns to K or L
- Marginal productivity of K falls as K increases
(holding L constant) - Marginal productivity of L falls as L increases
(holding K constant)
4How inputs affect output
- MFP exogenous and has constant returns
- Constant returns means infinite MFP means
infinite output, so there is infinite demand - MFP exogenous means supply is not affected by
economic activity or by prices (demand)
5How inputs affect output
- K affects GDP with a delay (lag)
- Implication Firms adjust L if want to change
output in the near-term
6Deriving Labor Demand from the production
function for GDP
- Assume perfect competition
- Wage Pmpl
- w/p mpl
- w/p real wage
- Assume diminishing returns to L
- As L up, mpl falls
- Therefore firms willing to pay lower w/p as add L
7Things that shift Ld
- Change in technology
- Change in amount of capital in use
- Change in quality of capital in use
- Aka capital deepening
w/p
Ld
L
8Labor Supply
- Assume people can either enjoy leisure, do
market work, or do work outside the marketplace
that earns no pay (home production) - Opportunity cost of working is leisure/home-produc
tion foregone - As labor time increases, leisure/home-production
time falls - Assume diminishing returns to leisure and
home-production in utility - As leisure/home-production time falls, it gets
more valuable - Need to receive a higher w/p if are going to give
up more leisure or non-market work
9Things that shift Ls
w/p
- Demographic changes
- Changes in unemployment, welfare, or social
security benefits - Cultural changes (entry/exit of women/men from
workforce)
Ls
L
10Labor market equilibrium
w/p
- At (w/p), everyone who wants a job has a job
(LsL) - At (w/p), the marginal worker is getting paid
exactly what s/he is worth (purchasing power
equal to output produced at L)
Ls
(w/p)
Ld
L
L
11Labor market dynamics moving to equilibrium
- We assume perfect competition always holds true
- We are always on Ld
- Example technology improves
w/p
Ls
(w/p)
Ld1
L
L
12Labor market dynamics moving to equilibrium
- We assume perfect competition always holds true
- We are always on Ld
- Example population decreases
w/p
Ls
(w/p)
Ld1
L
L
13Problem with the model no equilibrium
unemployment
- Obvious fact in the data that there is
unemployment in equilibrium - Perfectly competitive model implies no
unemployment in equilibrium
14Why labor markets dont satisfy perfect
competition
- Search frictions imply no pressure on wages
even though workers and firms are refusing to
match with each other - Not all jobs or employees are alike
- It takes time to find a good match
- Its worth it to take time to find a good match!
15Why labor markets dont satisfy perfect
competition
- Hiring and firing costs put a wedge between the
wage paid and marginal productivity of labor - It may be cheaper to hold onto workers even if
w/p gt mpl - It may too expensive to hire workers even if
their marginal productivity would equal the
equilibrium real wage
16Models of labor market frictions can explain
- unemployment in equilibrium
- why identical workers may earn different wages at
different firms even in equilibrium - why employment rises (falls) about 2 quarters
after GDP rises (falls)
17The market for capital
- Unlike work, capital goods are durable
- New capital goods are called investments
- The Fixed I in the AE approach to GDP
- Not all capital is used each period (capacity
utilization varies over time), and some old
capital is useless (depreciates) - Were ignoring these two things in Econ 2!
- Well study capital markets more carefully in
Chapter 7 but introduce them now
18Investment Supply Savings
- Investment Supply is just the amount of money
supplied to buy investment goods - Firms either use their own Savings or they borrow
someone elses Savings in order to pay for new K - Investment Supply Savings
19The Investment Supply Curve
- The Opportunity Cost of Saving is Consumption
forgone - The real return from Saving is the real interest
rate r - Assume diminishing returns to C
- As S up, C gets more valuable
- Require higher r to give up more S
20Things that shift Savings
- Change in income
- Change in expected future income
- Demographic changes
- Change in spending
r
IsS
I
21Why r is the cost of new capital
- Case 1 Firm buys capital good with own S
- Opportunity cost is r could have earned elsewhere
- Case 2 Firm borrows someone elses S
- Actual real cost is the interest rate must pay on
the loan (r) - Case 3 Firm rents the capital good
- Under perfect competition, rental rate cost to
the capital owner r
22Deriving Investment Demand from the production
function for GDP
- Assume perfect competition
- r mpk
- r is the real interest rate
- Assume diminishing returns to K (I)
- As I up, mpk falls
- Therefore firms willing to pay lower r as add I
23Things that shift Id
- Change in technology
- Change in the quality of capital
- Long-run changes in employment
- Changes in the quality of labor
r
Id
I
24Capital market equilibrium
r
- At r, everyone who wants to make a loan has made
one (SI) - At r, the marginal investment is producing
exactly what it costs to get the loan - Always stay on Id
- Perfect competition assumed to always hold
SIs
r
Id
I
I