Title: 11' Aggregate Demand II
111. Aggregate Demand II
- Agenda
- How is the IS-LM model used for analyzing
economic fluctuation and policies? - How is the IS-LM model related to the AD-AS model?
2Keynesian cross, Liquid preference, IS-LM and
AD-AS
Y C(Y-T) I(r) G
M/P L(rpe, Y)
IS curve for given G, T, pairs of (Y, r)
satisfying Y C(Y-T) I(r) G
LM curve for given M, P, pe, pairs of (Y, r)
satisfying M/P L(rpe, Y)
AD curve for given T, G, M, pe, pairs of (Y, P)
satisfying both Y C(Y-T) I(r) G and M/P
L(rpe, Y)
3Summary of the IS-LM model
- How to analyze the effects of policies or events
by the IS-LM model - Find how the IS curve and/or the LM curve shift.
- Find how the output (Y) and the real interest
rate (r) move. - Find how the investment (I) changes by the change
in real interest rate (r), and how the
consumption (C) changes by the change in
disposable income (Y-T). - Consumption positively depends on the disposable
income. - Investment negatively depends on the real
interest rate.
4How fiscal policy shifts the IS curve and change
the short-run equilibrium
If government purchase increases by DG
? The IS curve shifts to the right by DG/(1-MPC)
? The equilibrium moves from A to B
Government purchases increases ? the output
increases (So consumption increases) ? the
demand for money increases ? but the money supply
is fixed ? the real interest rate increases ? the
investment decreases
B
A
Note that the increase in output is smaller in
the IS-LM model than it is in the Keynesian cross
5How monetary policy shifts the LM curve and
change the short-run equilibrium
If money supply increases,
? The LM curve shifts to the right (downward).
? The equilibrium moves from A to B
Money supply increases ? the real money balance
increases (so people start to deposit the money
or to buy bonds) ? the real interest
decreases ? the investment increases ? the output
increases (so the consumption increases)
A
B
This is called monetary transmission mechanism.
6The interaction between monetary and fiscal policy
- In general, the impact of a change in one policy
depends on other policies. - For example, if the government increases the
taxes, the impact depends on the monetary policy - The central bank will
- (a) hold the money supply constant
- (b) hold the interest rate constant
- (C) hold the output constant
-
- The different mixes of monetary and fiscal policy
will achieve the different goals.
7The effect of a tax increase monetary policy (a)
(a) If the central bank holds the money supply
constant.
? The IS curve shifts to the left by
DTMPC/(1-MPC)
? But the LM curve stays the same.
The impact of a tax increase Output ?(-)
Interest rate ?(-) Consumption ?(-)
Investment ?()
A
B
The decrease in output is partially offset by the
increase in investment.
8The effect of a tax increase monetary policy (b)
(b) If the central bank holds real interest rate
constant.
? The IS curve shifts to the left by
DTMPC/(1-MPC)
? In order to hold the real interest rate
constant, the central bank contracts the money
supply (The LM curve shifts to the left)
The effect of a tax increase Output ?(-)
Interest rate no change (0) Consumption ?(-)
Investment no change (0)
B
A
The decrease in output is larger than (a) because
the investment does not increase. (the same
effect as the Keynesian cross model)
9The effect of a tax increase monetary policy (c)
(c) If the central bank holds output constant.
? The IS curve shifts to the left by
DTMPC/(1-MPC)
? In order to hold the output constant, the
central bank expands the money supply (The LM
curve shifts to the right)
The impact of a tax increase Output no change
(0) Interest rate ?(-) Consumption ?(-)
Investment ?()
A
The output does not change but the components
change. (The consumption decreases and the
investment increases)
B
10From the IS-LM to the AD curve (1)
The higher price level, the lower real money
balances (M/P) ? The LM curve shifts to the left,
and the lower output
The AD curve summarizes the relationship between
P and Y.
Y1
A change in output in the IS-LM model resulting
from a change in the price level represents a
movement along the AD curve
11From the IS-LM to the AD curve (2)
An expansionary fiscal (or monetary) policy
increases the output for any given price level.
The AD curve shifts to the right.
Y1
A change in output in the IS-LM model for a fixed
price level represents a shift in the AD curve
12The IS-LM model in the short run and long run
Assuming the central bank holds money supply
constant, if government purchases increases (G?)
In the short run, the IS curve shifts to the
right. (A?B)
The AD curve shifts to the right. B is the
short-run equilibrium.
In the long run, the price level increases
(P1?P2).
So the LM curve shifts to the left. (B?C)
C is the new equilibrium in the short-run and
long-run
13The short-run effects of an increase in
government purchases
In the short run, the economy moves from A to B.
The output (Y) ?() Y increases from YLR to
YSR The price level (P) No change (0) The price
is fixed at P1 The real interest rate (r) ?()
because the higher Y requires the higher r to
hold the L(rpe, Y) constant. The consumption
(C) ?() because the disposable income (Y-T)
increases. The investment (I) ?(-) because the
real interest increases.
14The long-run effects of an increase in government
purchases
In the long run, the economy moves from A to C.
The output (Y) No change (0) the LM curve shifts
to the left until YYLR (natural level). The
price level (P) ?() because P increases until
YYLR The real interest rate (r) ??() more
increase is required due to the decline in M/P.
(Alternatively, r must increase until SI, i.e.,
YYLR) The consumption (C) No change (0) Y comes
back to the original level, so Y-T does not
change. The investment (I) ??(-) because r rises
more.
15The effects of monetary expansion
LM1(PP2, MM2)
If the central bank raises money supply (M?)
In the short run, the LM curve shifts to the
right. (A?B)
The AD curve shifts to the right. B is the
short-run equilibrium.
In the long run, the price level increases (P1?P2)
until the LM curve comes back to the original
curve. (B?C)
C is the same equilibrium as A except the price
level.
16The short-run effects of monetary expansion
LM1(PP2, MM2)
In the short run, the economy moves from A to B.
The output (Y) ?() Y increases from YLR to
YSR The price level (P) No change (0) The price
is fixed at P1 The real interest rate (r) ?(-)
because the M/P increases (the LM curve shifts to
the right) The consumption (C) ?() because the
(Y-T) increases. The investment (I) ?()
because r decreases.
17The long-run effects of monetary expansion
LM1(PP2, MM2)
In the long run, the economy moves from A to C.
The output (Y) No change (0) the LM curve shifts
to the left until YYLR (natural level). The
price level (P) ?() because P increases until
YYLR The real interest rate (r) No change (0)
LM curve comes back The consumption (C) No change
(0) Y-T does not change. The investment (I) No
change (0) r does not chage
Monetary neutrality
18Summary
- The IS-LM model and the AD curve say
- The intersection of the IS and LM curves shows
the equilibrium points (Y, r) for a given price
level. - The expansionary fiscal policy (G?or T?) shifts
the IS curve to the right, so the output and the
interest rate increases (Y?and r?). Thus,
consumption increases but the investment
decreases (C?and I?). - The monetary expansionary policy (M?) shifts the
LM curve to the right, so the output increases
but the interest rate decreases (Y?and r?). Thus,
both consumption and investment increases (C?and
I?). - The AD curve summarizes the results from the
IS-LM model by showing the output at any given
price level.