Title: Macroeconomic Links: Interest rates, Output and Inflation
1Macroeconomic Links Interest rates, Output and
Inflation
2We learned how the interest rate is determined.
Now, we discuss what the interaction of interest
rates and output
- Its All Connected
- Y C I G AE
- Money Demand Money Supply interest
rate (r) - The interest rate, r, can affect Y
- and Y can affect the interest rate
- There is a value of output (income) (Y) and a
level of the interest rate (r) that are
consistent with the existence of equilibrium in
both markets.
3The keys to the link
- r and Y
- Money supply inversely related to the interest
rate - Greater income Greater transaction demands
- Greater Money Demand (shifts to the right)
- Y positively related to Money Demand, positively
related to interest rates - Investment (I) depends on r
- Why?
- How?
- I is inversely related to r
4What happens if the interest rate increases?
- r
- Investment will go down.
- When I goes down, output goes down
- The reverse is true, too
5What happens when Y increases?
- Y
- Households make more transactions with greater
income - Transaction demand goes up, money demand shifts
up (right) - r goes up
- And the reverse is true, too
6Monetary policy can affect Y. Fiscal policy can
affect r
- Expansionary and Contractionary
- Expansionary
- Expansionary fiscal policy is either an increase
in government spending or a reduction in net
taxes aimed at increasing aggregate output
(income) (Y). - Expansionary monetary policy is an increase in
the money supply aimed at increasing aggregate
output (income) (Y). - Contractionary
- Contractionary fiscal policy refers to a decrease
in government spending or an increase in net
taxes aimed at decreasing aggregate output
(income) (Y). - Contractionary monetary policy refers to a
decrease in the money supply aimed at decreasing
aggregate output (income) (Y).
7Expansionary fiscal policy not so simple
- Expansionary Fiscal Policy
- Either G goes up or T goes down
- When G goes up, Y goes up!
- The government spending multiplier
- But those multipliers were assuming nothing else
changed particularly, that interest rates did
not change - Real world multipliers must be modified when both
the interest rate (and price level) are allowed
to change
8The crowding-out effect occurs when an increase
in government spending crowds out some of the
private investment spending
- Crowding Out
- Y increases less than if r did not increase
9Expansionary Monetary Policy
- Increase the Money Supply
- Increase the money supply, interest rates go down
- Because money demand also goes
- up, the interest rates decrease
- less than if money demand
- did not increase
10What if we combine expansionary fiscal policy
with expansionary monetary policy?
- Fed Accommodation
- An expansionary fiscal policy (higher government
spending or lower taxes) will increase aggregate
output (income). - Higher income will shift the money demand curve
to the right, and put upward pressure on the
interest rate. - If the money supply were unchanged following an
increase in the demand for money, the interest
rate would rise. - But if the Fed were to accommodate the fiscal
expansion, the interest rate would not rise.
11Contractionary fiscal policy
- Decrease G or increase T
- At first
- But then, money demand shifts down (left)
- So output does not shift down as much as before
(when interest rates were constant)
12Contractionary monetary policy
- Money Supply Shifts Down (Left)
- At first
- But then, money demand shifts down
- So interest rates do not rise as much as before
AND output will not fall as much
13Now, lets throw price changes into the mix, too!
- Increase in Price Level
- Price level goes up, my coffee now costs 2
instead of 1. - I need to carry more money in my pocket
- Demand for Money shifts up (right)
- Inverse relationship between Y and P a
negatively sloped aggregate demand curve - We already built the AD curve because of changes
in real wealth - Another reason for negative AD curve is because
of interest rate changes
14The AD curve is Zen-like everything (except for
prices) is in equilibrium at every point
- Zen and the AD Curve
- At all points on this curve,
- both the goods market and the
- money market are in equilibrium
- Final step finding the equilibrium price level
15What can cause a shift in the AD curve?
- Shifts in AD
- An increase in the quantity of money supplied at
a given price level shifts the aggregate demand
curve to the right. - An increase in government purchases or a decrease
in net taxes shifts the aggregate demand curve to
the right.
16Aggregate supply is the total supply of all goods
and services in the economy.
- AS
- Graph that shows the relationship between the
aggregate quantity of output supplied by all
firms in an economy and the overall price level. - There is a different AS curve for the short run
and the long run - In the short run, the aggregate supply curve (the
price/output response curve) has a positive
slope.
17In the short run, the relationship between price
levels and aggregate output vary widely
- Short Run AS
- At low levels of aggregate output, the curve is
fairly flat. - As the economy approaches capacity, the curve
becomes nearly vertical. - At capacity, the curve is vertical.
- When the economy is operating at low levels of
output, an increase in aggregate demand is likely
to result in an increase in output with little or
no increase in the overall price level - Why?
- Lag in price changes
- As the economy approaches maximum capacity, firms
respond to further increases in demand only by
raising prices.
18Short Run AS
19What can cause a shift in the AS curve?
- Supply Shocks
- Costs
- Technological change
- Regulation
- Weather
20The equilibrium price level is the point at which
the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves
intersect.
- Equilibrium
- P0 and Y0 correspond to equilibrium in the goods
market and the money market and a set of
price/output decisions on the part of all the
firms in the economy.
21In the long run, there are no lags between prices
and costs
- Long Run AS
- Costs lag behind price-level changes in the short
run, resulting in an upward-sloping AS curve. - Costs and the price level move in tandem in the
long run, and the AS curve is vertical. - Y0 represents the level of output that can be
sustained in the long run without inflation. - Also called potential output or potential GDP.
22Policy and Prices
- Expansionary Policy
- Lets say there is an increase in the money
supply, a tax cut, or an increase in government
spending. - Expansionary policy works well when the economy
is on the flat portion of the AS curve, causing
little change in P relative to the output
increase.
23Policy and Prices
- Expansionary Policy (continued)
- On the steep portion of the AS curve,
expansionary policy does not work well. The
multiplier is close to zero. - When the economy is operating near full capacity,
an increase in AD will result in an increase in
the price level with little increase in output.
24In the long run, policy will not affect aggregate
output
25Now, we can really understand causes of inflation
- Inflation
- Recall change in price level
- Demand-pull inflation is inflation initiated by
an increase in aggregate demand.
- Cost-push, or supply-side, inflation is inflation
caused by an increase in costs.
26Supply-side inflation is really hard to deal with
- Supply side inflation
- Lets say there is a cost shock
- The government sees the decrease in output and
responds with expansionary policy - Prices have gone WAY up, output hasnt increased
- Stagflation
27Next Class
- Linking Inflation and Unemployment
- Sample Midterm
28Sentence