Title: COORDINATING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY:
1- COORDINATING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
- AGGREGATE DEMAND SUPPLY
2ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS
- Movements of GDP away from potential output
- Also referred to as business cycles
3KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS
- Models based on the idea that demand determines
output in the short run - Short run -- The period of time when prices are
fixed
4REAL SHOCKS TO THE ECONOMY
- One cause of economic fluctuations
- Developing countries dependent on agriculture,
which suffer loss to cash crop - Sharp increases in the price of oil can hurt
modern economies - Wars can devastate entire regions of the world
- Natural disasters can cause sharp reductions in
GDP - Major shifts in technology leading to the birth
of new industries have profound effects on the
economy
5REAL BUSINESS CYCLE THEORY
- School of economic thought that emphasizes the
role that shocks to technology can play in
causing economic fluctuations - Led by Edward Prescott of the University of
Minnesota - Developed models that integrate technology shocks
into classical models - Changes in technology will usually change the
level of full employment or potential output - It portrays economic fluctuations as movements in
potential output, not as deviations away from
potential output
6INITIAL PATTERN OF DEMAND AND PRICES
Price
S
P0
D
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Q0
7INITIAL PATTERNS OF DEMAND AND PRICES
Price
Price
S
S
P0
P1
D
D
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Quantity
Roller blades
Q0
Q1
8DEMAND AND PRICES AFTER CHANGES IN TASTES
Price
Price
S
S
P1
PA
DB
D
D
DA
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Quantity
Roller blades
Q1
QA
Suppose rollerblading starts to replace tennis.
Demand shifts to DA in the market in tennis
racquets and DB in the market for roller blades.
9DEMAND AND PRICES AFTER CHANGES IN TASTES
Price
Price
S
S
PB
P0
P1
PA
DB
D
D
DA
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Quantity
Roller blades
Q0
Q1
QA
QB
Suppose rollerblading starts to replace tennis.
Demand shifts to DA in the market in tennis
racquets and DB in the market for roller blades.
Prices of rollerblades will rise to PB, prices
of tennis racquets will fall to PA.
10PRICES AND ECONOMIC COORDINATION
- The change in tastes from tennis racquets to
rollerblading has caused the economy to produce
more roller blades and fewer tennis racquets - The economy accomplishes this through prices
- When roller blading became more popular than
tennis, the price of roller blades rose and the
price of tennis racquets fell - The producers of roller blades were given a
signal to step up production - The producers of tennis racquets were given a
signal to cut back their production - Workers will leave tennis racquet industry to be
employed by roller blade industry
11FUTURE PRICES
- There is no price for automobiles to be delivered
five years from now, so automobiles do not
receive any direct signals that consumers wish to
purchase automobiles in the future - Only a few commodities, such as metals and
certain agricultural commodities, can be traded
for future delivery in worldwide markets
12TOO LITTLE INFORMATION
- Prices may not always contain all the information
that producers need - What matters to any firm is the real price its
price relative to all other prices in the economy - Reality Principle What matters to people is the
real value or purchasing power of money or
income, not its face value
13TOO LITTLE INFORMATION
- Problems can occur if firms are uncertain about
whether a change in their output price is an
increase in the real price or only on the nominal
or dollar price - If producers believe demand for their product has
fallen, they will cut back production - If this happened throughout the economy, it would
lead to a recession
14STICKY PRICES
- If prices are sticky or not sufficiently
flexible, prices will not coordinate activity as
efficiently - In modern economies, some prices are flexible,
while others are not - Auction Prices -- those determined on nearly a
daily basis - Prices for fresh fish, vegetables, and other food
are very flexible - Custom Prices -- those that adjust rather slowly
- Prices for industrial commodities, such as steel
rods or machine tools, are custom prices
15STICKY PRICES IN THE MARKET FOR TENNIS RACQUETS
Price
S
P0
E
D
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Q0
16STICKY PRICES IN THE MARKET FOR TENNIS RACQUETS
Price
S
F
P0
E
D
DA
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Q0
17STICKY PRICES IN THE MARKET FOR TENNIS RACQUETS
Price
S
F
P0
E
D
DA
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Q0
18STICKY PRICES IN THE MARKET FOR TENNIS RACQUETS
Price
S
F
P0
E
D
DA
Tennis Racquets
Quantity
Q0
When demand falls to DA, prices are sticky and
remain at P0. The result is unsold production
measured by the distance between E and F.
19WAGES
- Wages, the price of labor, adjust extremely
slowly - Workers often have long-term contracts that do
not allow wages to change at all during a given
year - Even unskilled, low-wage workers are often
protected from decreases in their wages by
minimum wage laws - For most firms, wages are the single most
important cost of doing business - If wages are sticky, their overall costs will be
sticky - Stickiness of wages reinforces stickiness of
prices
20SHORT-RUN PRICES ARE STICKY
- Firms let demand determine level of output in the
short run - Automaker may have higher demand if autos are
popular or lower demand if autos are unpopular - Steelmaker who provides steel to automaker may
provide more or less steel without adjusting
price - The same principle applies to workers
- During good times a company will employ many
workers and may even require some to work
overtime with no wage change - The short run in macroeconomics is the period
when prices are fixed
21LONG-RUN PRICES
- In the long run, price adjust fully to changes in
demand - Over short periods of time, the presence of
formal and informal contracts mean that demand
will be reflected primarily in changes in output,
not prices
22AGGREGATE DEMAND
- The aggregate demand curve plots the total demand
for GDP as a function of price level - The aggregate demand curve is downward sloping
- As the price level falls, the total demand for
goods and services increases
23AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
AD aggregate demand
Real GDP, Y
The aggregate demand curve plots the total demand
for real GDP as a function of the price level.
The aggregate demand curve slopes downward,
indicating that aggregate demand increases as the
price level falls.
24REALITY PRINCIPLE
- What matters to people is the real value or
purchasing power of money or income, not its face
value.
25WEALTH EFFECT
- Increase in spending that occurs because the real
value of money increases when the price level
falls - One of the key reasons that aggregate demand
slopes downward
26TWO OTHER REASONS WHY DEMAND CURVE SLOPES DOWNWARD
- Interest rate effect
- With a given supply of money in the economy, a
lower price level will lead to lower interest
rates - As interest rates fall, demand for investment
goods in the economy increase. - Effects from international trade
- In an open economy, a lower price level will
mean that domestic goods become cheaper relative
to foreign goods and demand for domestic goods
will increase
27SHIFTS OF AGGREGATE DEMAND
- At any price level, an increase in aggregate
demand means that total demand for real GDP has
increased, and the curve shifts to the right - Factors that decrease the aggregate demand will
shift the aggregate demand curve to the left - At any price level, a decrease in aggregate
demand means that total demand for real GDP has
decreased
28KEY FACTORS THAT SHIFT THE AGGREGATE DEMAND CURVE
- Changes in the supply of money
- Changes in taxes
- Changes in government spending
- other factors
29CHANGES IN THE SUPPLY OF MONEY
- An increase in the supply of money in the economy
will increase aggregate demand and shift the
demand curve right - At any price level, a higher supply of money will
mean more consumer wealth and an increased demand
for goods and services - A decrease in the supply of money will decrease
aggregate demand and shift the aggregate demand
curve to the left
30CHANGES IN TAXES
- A decrease in taxes will increase aggregate
demand and shift the aggregate demand curve to
the right - Lower taxes will increase income available to
households and increase their spending on goods
and services - Increases in taxes will decrease the aggregate
demand and shift the aggregate demand curve left
31CHANGES IN GOVERNMENT SPENDING
- An increase in government spending will increase
aggregate demand and shift the aggregate demand
curve right - Since the government is a source of demand for
goods and services, higher government spending
naturally leads to an increase in total demand
for goods and services - Decreases in government spending will decrease
aggregate demand and shift the curve to the left
32OTHER FACTORS
- Any change in demand from households, firms, or
the foreign sector will also change aggregate
demand - When shifts in aggregate demand are discussed,
any changes that arise from movements in the
price level are not to be included
33FACTORS THAT SHIFT DEMAND
- Factors That Increase Factors That Decrease
Aggregate Demand Aggregate Demand - Decrease in Taxes Increase in Taxes
- Increase in Decrease in Government
Spending Government Spending - Increase in Money Decrease in Money
Supply Supply
34SHIFTING AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
Original aggregate demand
Output, Y
35SHIFTING AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
Increased aggregate demand
Original aggregate demand
Output, Y
36SHIFTING AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
Increased aggregate demand
Original aggregate demand
Output, Y
Decreases in taxes, increases in government
spending, or an increase in the supply of money
all shift the aggregate demand curve to the
right.
37SHIFTING AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
Increased aggregate demand
Original aggregate demand
Decreased aggregate demand
Output, Y
Decreases in taxes, increases in government
spending, or an increase in the supply of money
all shift the aggregate demand curve to the
right.
38SHIFTING AGGREGATE DEMAND
Price Level
P
Increased aggregate demand
Original aggregate demand
Decreased aggregate demand
Output, Y
Decreases in taxes, increases in government
spending, or an increase in the supply of money
all shift the aggregate demand curve to the
right. Higher taxes, lower government spending,
or a lower supply of money shift the curve to
the left.
39AGGREGATE SUPPLY
- Depicts the relationship between the level of
prices and real GDP - Two different aggregate supply curves, which
correspond to the long run and the short run - -- classical aggregate supply curve
- -- Keynesian aggregate supply curve
40CLASSICAL AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE
- Aggregate supply curve for the long run when the
economy is at full employment - Full-employment output depends solely on the
supply of capital and labor and the state of
technology - full-employment output does not depend on the
price level - Classical aggregate supply curve is plotted as a
vertical line (unaffected by prices)
41CLASSICAL AGGREGATE SUPPLY
AS
p
Price
y
y
Output,
In the long run, the level of output y is
independent of the price level.
42AGGREGATE DEMAND AND CLASSICAL AGGREGATE SUPPLY
p
Classical
AS
Price
Original AD
y
y
Output,
Output and prices are determined at the
intersection of AD and AS.
43COMBINING AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
- The price level and level of output are
determined by the intersection of aggregate
supply and aggregate demand - At that point, total amount demanded will just
equal the total amount supplied - The position of the aggregate demand curve will
depend on the level of taxes, government
spending, and the supply of money - The full-employment output determines the
classical aggregate supply curve
44AGGREGATE DEMAND AND CLASSICAL AGGREGATE SUPPLY
p
Classical
AS
Price
Increased AD
Original AD
y
y
Output,
Output and prices are determined at the
intersection of AD and AS. An increase in
aggregate demand to a higher price level.
45COMBINING AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
- An increase in demand will shift the aggregate
demand curve right - With a classical aggregate supply curve, the
increase in aggregate demand will raise the
prices but leave the level of output unchanged
46THE KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE
- The Keynesian aggregate supply curve is
horizontal in the short run - Firms are assumed to supply all output that is
demanded at the current price - Formal and informal contracts commit producers to
supply all that is demanded at the going price - The entire Keynesian supply curve can shift up or
down as prices adjust to their long-run levels
47KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
p
Price
Keynesian AS
p0
y
Output,
48AGGREGATE DEMAND AND KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
p
Price
E0
Keynesian AS
p0
Original AD
y 0
y
Output,
49AGGREGATE DEMAND AND KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
p
Price
E0
E1
Keynesian AS
p0
Increased AD
Original AD
y 0
y
Output,
y 1
With a Keynesian aggregate supply curve, shifts
in aggregate demand lead to changes in output
but no changes in prices.
50AGGREGATE DEMAND AND KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
CURVES
- The intersection of AD and AS curves determines
the price level and the level of output at point
E - Since aggregate demand is horizontal, aggregate
demand totally determines the level of output - As aggregate demand increases, the new
equilibrium will be at the same price p0, but
output will increase from y0 to y1 - The Keynesian aggregate supply curve need not
correspond to full-employment output - Changes in demand will lead to economic
fluctuations with sticky prices and a Keynesian
aggregate supply curve
51SUPPLY SHOCKS
- External disturbances that shift the aggregate
supply curve - Most important illustrations of supply shocks for
the world economy have been sharp increases in
the price of oil that occurred in 1973 and 1979 - When oil prices increased sharply, firms would no
longer sell all the goods and services that were
demanded at the current price - To maintain their profit levels, firms raised
their prices
52A SUPPLY SHOCK
p
Price
AS (before the shock)
p0
AD
y
Output,
y0
53A SUPPLY SHOCK
p
Price
AS (after the shock)
AS (before the shock)
p0
AD
y
Output,
y0
An adverse supply shock, such as an increase in
the price of oil, will shift up the AS curve.
54A SUPPLY SHOCK
p
Price
AS (after the shock)
p1
AS (before the shock)
p0
AD
y
Output,
y1
y0
An adverse supply shock, such as an increase in
the price of oil, will shift up the AS curve.
The result will be higher prices and a lower
level of output.
55LINKS BETWEEN SHORT RUN AND LONG RUN
- Provided by adjustments of wages and prices
- -- sticky and do not move immediately in the
short run - -- Over time adjust and the economy reaches
its long-run equilibrium - Wage and price adjustments provide the links
between Keynesian and classical economics
56WAGES AND PRICES IN AN ECONOMY PRODUCING AT A
LEVEL ABOVE FULL EMPLOYMENT
- The Wage Price Spiral
- Firms find it increasingly difficult to hire and
retain workers - Workers find it easy to obtain a job and easy to
change jobs - To attract workers and to prevent others from
quitting, firms raise their wages to try to
outbid their competitors - The actions of firms start a process in which
wages increase throughout the economy
57PRICES IN AN ECONOMY PRODUCING AT A LEVEL ABOVE
FULL EMPLOYMENT
- The Wage Price Spiral
- For most firms, wages are the largest single cost
of production - As their labor costs increase, firms have no
choice but to increase prices as well - As prices rise, workers know they need higher
dollar or nominal wages to maintain their real
wage - The Reality Principle
- What matters to people is the real value or
purchasing power of money or income, not its face
value
58UNEMPLOYMENT, OUTPUT, AND WAGES AND PRICE CHANGES
- When unemployment is
- below the natural rate above the natural rate
- output is
- above potential below potential
- wages and prices
- rise fall
- When output exceeds potential output, wages and
prices throughout the economy will rise above the
previous inflation rate - If output is less than potential output, wages
and prices will fall to previous inflation rates
59AGGREGATE DEMAND
- The aggregate demand curve is plotted with the
price on the vertical axis and real output on the
horizontal axis - It shows the total level of demand for goods and
services for any level of output
60AGGREGATE SUPPLY
- The classical aggregate supply curve (long run)
is a vertical line at the full-employment level
of output - The Keynesian aggregate supply curve (short run)
is a horizontal line at the current level of
prices - The Keynesian aggregate supply curve is
horizontal because changes in demand lead to very
small changes in prices over short periods of time
61AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
AD
Output, y
62AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
Keynesian AS
AD
Output, y
63AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
A
Keynesian AS
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
The aggregate demand curve, AD, intersects the
Keynesian aggregate supply curve at point A.
64AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
Classical AS
A
Keynesian AS
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
The aggregate demand curve, AD, intersects the
Keynesian aggregate supply curve at point A.
65AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
Classical AS
D
pF
A
Keynesian AS
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
yF
The aggregate demand curve, AD, intersects the
Keynesian aggregate supply curve at point A and
the classical aggregate supply curve at point D.
66RELATING KEYNESIAN TO CLASSICAL POSITIONS
- At the intersection of aggregate demand and
Keynesian aggregate supply curves, the current
level of output Y0, exceeds the full-employment
level of output, YF - Unemployment rate is below the natural rate
- Firms find it difficult to hire and retain
workers, and wage-price spiral begins - As level of prices increase, Keynesian aggregate
supply curve shifts up over time - The shift in the Keynesian aggregate supply curve
will bring the economy to long-run equilibrium - -- the intersection of classical AS and AD
67SHIFTS IN KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
As prices rise in the economy, the Keynesian
aggregate supply curve shifts up.
68SHIFTS IN KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
B
p1
AS1
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
As prices rise in the economy, the Keynesian
aggregate supply curve shifts up. The economy
moves from point A to point B.
69SHIFTS IN KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
C
p2
AS2
B
p1
AS1
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
As prices rise in the economy, the Keynesian
aggregate supply curve shifts up. The economy
moves from point A to point B. The process will
continue.
70SHIFTS IN KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
D
p3
AS3
C
p2
AS2
B
p1
AS1
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
As prices rise in the economy, the Keynesian
aggregate supply curve shifts up. The economy
moves from point A to point B. The process will
continue until the economy reaches point D.
71SHIFTS IN KEYNESIAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Price , p
D
p3
AS3
C
p2
AS2
B
p1
AS1
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
y0
yF
As prices rise in the economy, the Keynesian
aggregate supply curve shifts up. The economy
moves from point A to point B. The process will
continue until the economy reaches point D. The
price-wage spiral stops when the economy reaches
full employment. Unemployment is at the natural
rate.
72RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
AD
Output, y
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment,
73RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
AS1
p1
AD
Output, y
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment, wages and prices will fall.
74RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
B
AS1
p1
AD
Output, y
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment, wages and prices will fall.
75RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
B
AS1
p1
D
AS2
p2
AD
Output, y
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment, wages and prices will fall.
76RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
B
AS1
p1
D
AS2
p2
AD
Output, y
yF
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment, wages and prices will fall. As the
aggregate supply curve shifts down, the economy
will return to full employment at D.
77RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Price , p
A
AS0
p0
B
AS1
p1
D
AS2
p2
AD
Output, y
yF
If the initial level of output is less than full
employment, wages and prices will fall. As the
aggregate supply curve shifts down, the economy
will return to full employment at D.
78THE ECONOMY WILL EVENTUALLY RETURN TO FULL
EMPLOYMENT
- If output exceeds full employment, prices will
rise and output will fall back to full employment - If output is less than full employment, prices
will fall as the economy returns to full
employment
79MOVING FROM THE SHORT TO THE LONG RUN
- Economists disagree about the time it takes
range between 2 and 6 years - Alternatives bring long-run (full employment)
about - -- Do nothing and allow adjustment process,
with falling wages and prices to return the
economy to full employment - -- Use expansionary policies (open market
purchases, increases in government spending or
tax cuts) to shift the aggregate demand curve
right - -- Use contractionary policies to reduce
demand / level of GDP until it reaches potential
output
80USING ECONOMIC POLICY TO FIGHT A RECESSION
Price , p
A
p0
AD0
Output, y
yF
81USING ECONOMIC POLICY TO FIGHT A RECESSION
Price , p
A
p0
D
AD0
Output, y
yF
82USING ECONOMIC POLICY TO FIGHT A RECESSION
Price , p
A
p0
D
AD0
Output, y
yF
Rather than letting the economy naturally return
to full employment at D,
83USING ECONOMIC POLICY TO FIGHT A RECESSION
Price , p
A
p0
D
AD1
AD0
Output, y
yF
Rather than letting the economy naturally return
to full employment at D, we can increase
aggregate demand from AD0 to AD1
84USING ECONOMIC POLICY TO FIGHT A RECESSION
Price , p
E
A
p0
D
AD1
AD0
Output, y
yF
Rather than letting the economy naturally return
to full employment at D, we can increase
aggregate demand from AD0 to AD1 to bring the
economy to full employment at E.
85ACTIVE ECONOMIC POLICIES AND ECONOMIC STABILITY
- Active economic policies are more likely to
destabilize the economy if the adjustment process
operates quickly - Economists who believe the economy adjusts
rapidly to full employment generally oppose using
monetary or fiscal policy to try to stabilize the
economy - Economists who believe the adjustment process
operates slowly are more sympathetic to using
monetary or fiscal policy to stabilize the
economy - It is possible for the speed of adjustment to
vary over time, making decisions about policy
more difficult
86THE ADJUSTMENT PROCESS
- Interest rates are determined by the demand and
supply of money - Interest rates determine the level of investment
spending in the economy - Investment spending, along with consumption,
government spending and net exports determines
the level of GDP
87MODEL OF DEMAND WITH MONEY
Interest Rates
Ms
r0
A
88MODEL OF DEMAND WITH MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Ms
r0
r0
Md (P0 )
Money
Investment
I0
A
B
89MODEL OF DEMAND WITH MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
Md (P0 )
Money
Investment
I0
y0
Output
A
B
C
90MODEL OF DEMAND WITH MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
C I0 G NX
Md (P0 )
Money
Investment
I0
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
At the current price level, P0, the economy is
producing y0, which is below full employment, yF
91APPLYING THE REALITY PRINCIPLE
- Reality Principle What matters to people is the
real value or purchasing power of money or
income, not its face value. - The amount of money that people want to hold will
depend on the price level - If prices are cut in half, you need to hold only
half as much money to purchase the same goods and
services - Decreases in the price level will cause the
money demand curve to shift left
92RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
Md (P0 )
Money
Investment
I0
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls
93RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
Md (P0 )
Money
Investment
I0
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls. This reduces the demand for money
and interest rates.
94RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
r1
Md (P0 )
r1
Md (P1)
Money
Investment
I0
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls. This reduces the demand for money
and interest rates.
95RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
r1
Md (P0 )
r1
Md (P1)
I0
I1
Money
Investment
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls. This reduces the demand for money
and interest rates. Lower interest rates
increase investment
96RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
r1
Md (P0 )
r1
Md (P1)
I0
I1
Money
Investment
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls. This reduces the demand for money
and interest rates. Lower interest rates
increase investment and stimulate spending.
97RETURNING TO FULL EMPLOYMENT
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms
450
C I 1 G NX
r0
r0
C I0 G NX
r1
Md (P0 )
r1
Md (P1)
I0
I1
Money
Investment
y0
yF
Output
A
B
C
When output is below full employment, the price
level falls. This reduces the demand for money
and interest rates. Lower interest rates
increase investment and stimulate spending. The
economy returns to full employment.
98IF OUTPUT IS BELOW FULL EMPLOYMENT
- Unemployment exceeds the natural rate, and there
will be excess unemployment - Wages and prices will start to fall
- Falling prices will decrease the demand for
holding money - Interest rates will fall
- Investment spending will increase with falling
interest rates - As investment increases, the total demand line
shifts up and raises the level of output until
full-employment output is reached - This process works in reverse if output exceeds
potential
99NEUTRALITY OF MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms0
450
C I F G NX
rF
rF
Md
I
IF
I0
Money
yF
Output
Investment
C
A
B
Starting at full employment,
100NEUTRALITY OF MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms0
Ms1
450
C I 0 G NX
C I F G NX
rF
rF
r0
r0
Md
I
IF
I0
Money
yF
y0
Output
Investment
C
A
B
Starting at full employment, an increase in the
supply of money will initially reduce interest
rates from rF to r0, raise investment spending
from I F to I 0 and increase output above full
employment from yF to y0.
101NEUTRALITY OF MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms0
Ms1
450
C I 0 G NX
C I F G NX
rF
rF
r0
r0
Md
I
IF
I0
Money
yF
y0
Output
Investment
C
A
B
Starting at full employment, an increase in the
supply of money will initially reduce interest
rates from rF to r0, raise investment spending
from IF to I0 and increase output above full
employment from yF to y0. As wages and prices
increase, the demand for money increases
102NEUTRALITY OF MONEY
Interest Rates
Interest Rates
Total Demand
Ms0
Ms1
450
C I 0 G NX
C I F G NX
rF
rF
r0
r0
Md
I
IF
I0
Money
yF
y0
Output
Investment
C
A
B
Starting at full employment, an increase in the
supply of money will initially reduce interest
rates from rF to r0, raise investment spending
from IF to I0 and increase output above full
employment from yF to y0. As wages and prices
increase, the demand for money increases,
restoring interest rates, investment and output
to full employment.
103LONG-RUN EFFECTS OF AN INCREASE IN THE MONEY
SUPPLY
- If the economy is at full employment and the
Bank increases the money supply - In the Short Run
- Interest rates will decline
- The level of investment spending will increase
- The increased demand for output will raise the
output above full employment - In the Long Run
- Wages and prices will start to increase
- The demand for money will increase
- Interest Rates will increase
- Investment will start to fall and output will fall
104LONG-RUN NEUTRALITY OF MONEY
- In the long run, increases in the supply of
money have no effect on real variables, only on
prices.