Macro Theory: Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics The AS/AD Model Part 1 – The Basics...
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Transcript of Macro Theory: Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics The AS/AD Model Part 1 – The Basics...
![Page 1: Macro Theory: Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics The AS/AD Model Part 1 – The Basics Part 1 – The Basics Part 2 – The Keynesian View Part 2 – The.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022062409/5697bfc51a28abf838ca6df4/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Macro Theory:
Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics
The AS/AD Model Part 1 – The Basics Part 2 – The Keynesian View
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Warning .. Warning .. Warning• Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand are not
like market supply & demand !!!!!
• The “static” analysis only hints at dynamic interpretation.
• Ceteris Paribus assumption problematic to the point of being wholly inappropriate.
Keynesian model notes:• Descriptive analysis.• No numerical interpretation.• Only AS/AD graphical
representation.
Part 1 – The Basics
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The Aggregate Demand Schedule
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
BP1
Q2
AP2
Q1
P = Price Level;CPI or GDP deflator
Q = real output;Real GDP
AD = Agg. Demand;From 4 sectors – HH, Bus, G, Foreign
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Aggregate Demand
• The price level and real output demanded are inversely related.
• A fall in the price level will increase quantity demanded.
• Why? -- the Wealth Effect
• All prices and wages change.• But, the fixed wealth is … well, still fixed!• So, with lower prices we feel wealthier. Woo Hoo!• And, so we want to buy more stuff.
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Aggregate Demand
• What about:
Interest effect Foreign trade effect Exchange rate effect
• AD can shift to the left or right. Increase AD – shift to the right. Decrease AD – shift to the left. Whenever C, I, G, net X increase/decrease. Why? Due to changes in optimism & pessimism, and
due to fiscal & monetary policies.
Can’t do “all else equal.”e.g. Lower prices: Consumption, but one price is wages!!! If they fall, then we’d see a Consumption!!!
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The Aggregate Demand Schedule
AD2
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
AD3
Increases inC, I, G, net
X
Decreases in
C, I, G, net X
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Long Run Equilibrium betweenAggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
•There is an Aggregate Supply that reflects fully employed resource use.
•Output level:Q* or RGDP* or potential RGDP
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
AS1
P1
•Shifts in AD can only change the price level and not real output (nor employment).
Classical Model of the Economy
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What affects the Aggregate Supply?
• Labor force participation.
• Labor productivity.
• Marginal tax rates on wages.
• Provision of government benefits that affect household incentives w.r.t. supply labor.
• State of technology.
• Capital stock.A change in these
factors can AS (shift right)
or AS (shift left)
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Short Run Aggregate Supply – Wage Inflexibility
• Nominal wages are sluggish upwards:A rise in prices has delayed effect on wages.
• Nominal wages are inflexible downwards:A fall in prices will result in employment and
income.
• Workers have money illusion:Higher nominal wages are viewed as real wage.So, more workers available even though real wage
has not risen. e.g. if prices rise 5% and wages rise 3%…
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Short Run Aggregate Supply
• The Short Run will adjust to the Long Run: An AD will P and Q, but only in the SR.
Prices rise but wages lag. Firms employment and output.
Eventually, workers realize their real wages (W/P) are falling, get comparable wage, AS. The temporary profit motive has been eliminated.
• What about:
Sticky prices Misperception Intertemporal substitution
Unnecessary complicationsto explain the SR AS.
Inflexible wages is all we need.
What happens if there is a AD?
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From SR to LR Aggregate SupplyAn increase
in AD triggers events.
Prices rise,wages lag,
output rises.
Eventually,wages catch up
and AS declines.
In LR, onlyprices rise.AD
1
P
Q or R-GDP
ASLR
P1
AS1
AD2
P2
Q2Q*
P3
AS2
AS3
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AS/AD Model – Hints at 4 types of changes
• Inflation with growth due to rising AD.
• Depression with deflation due to falling AD.
• Growth with deflation due to rising AS.
• Depression with inflation due to falling AS. (stagflation)
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
ASLR
P1
AS1
Q*
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Macro Theory:
Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics
The AS/AD Model II -Keynesian Version
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AS/AD Model – Long Run & Short Run
AD shows demand from 4 sectors of economy.
AS in LR shows full employment of resources.
AS in SR shows effect of inflexible wages.
Keynesian argument
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
ASLR
P1
AS1
Q*
Part 2 – The Keynesian View
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The Keynesian Perspective
• The short run is more important to us.
• We live our lives through the SR not the LR and the LR may take too long!
• We need a theory of the SR to smooth out the business cycle.
• Equilibrium occurs whenplanned spending equalsrealized spending.
In fact, Keynes didn’t really have a business cycle theory (“animal
spirits”). He had a theory of how to deal with a business cycle.
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Equilibrium in the Keynesian Model
• When planned spending = realized spending
• Assumes planned C, G, net X = realized C, G, net X
• But, planned I may not equal realized I
If AD>AS then Ip>Ir and inventories fall
unexpectedly.
And business will I which production and income/employment.
If AD<AS then Ip<Ir and inventories build up
unexpectedly.
And business will I which production and income/employment.
Recall from our discussion of GDP = the change in business inventories, although very small in absolute terms, is a closely
watched variable because it tells us what will happen to business investment …
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Details of the Keynesian Model
• Changes in spending have a multiplier effect
on income.
C=$100 will Y=$100; some of this is spent, so C=$80 which Y=$80; some of this is spent, so C=$64 which Y=$64 …
True for in C, I, G, net X
• This only applies when there is no inflation.
All income changes are “real.”
• In a recession, additional resources can be employed without raising wages/prices.
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Keynesian theory in AS/AD Model
AD1
P
Q or R-GDP
ASLR
AS1
Q*Q1
AD2
Q2 Q3
AD3
Introduce a flat AS.
Introduce disequilibrium at Q1 with AD2.
Equilibrium process moves us to Q2.
But, we still have a depression.
If we can further increase spending to AD3 we can boost employment and output.
Continue until we reach Q*.
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Fiscal Policies
• Government spending & taxes.
• G has a direct effect on AD (just as C, I, net X)
• Since G is discretionary, it can be controlled, unlike others.
• Taxes have a more complicated effect.To keep things simple, assume “lump sum taxes.”T will affect both consumption and saving.
e.g., if taxes are raised by $400 then maybe consumption will fall by $320, and saving will fall by $80 to compensate.
Since changes in income are driven by multiplier effects on spending, the effects are not offsetting!!!! [T = lesser C Y]
Odd Keynesian balanced budget multiplier = 1, where ∆G = ∆T = ∆Y
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Fiscal Policies
• Transfer payments can be included here.Recall that they are not included as G in GDP.But, we can consider these as “negative taxes.”That is, total government spending = G + TP,
while total government revenue = T + TP. So an TP can be thought of as an equivalent T
An TP will C and S, so overall Y just like a T
• Some fiscal policies may be “automatic stabilizers.”
With unemployment, transfer payments rise automatically.
e.g., Unemployment insurance, food stamps, welfare.
This would tend to boost AD without explicit Congressional
approval.Also, taxes serve this purpose. As the economy
slides into recession, incomes fall and so do tax
payments.
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Taxes, Spending, Debt & Deficits
• A change in taxes should affect AD & ASIs the effect on AS larger?
• The Laffer Curve and tax collection.Of course the purpose isn’tto maximize tax revenues!
• If G is financed by borrowing, how will we react?Ricardian equivalence - do we plan on a future tax
burden?The “crowding out” issue.
• Should budget be set to balance at full employment?
Keynes – No! Balance over the business cycle.Buchanan – Politicians will never do that!“Structural deficit” – what remains at full
employment.
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2014:Q4
$18.1 t
2014:Q4
102.5%
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2014$485 b
20142.78%
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2014:Q4
$3.9 t.
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CBO; By 2038 %GDP:
Fed’l spending 26%
Fed’l revenue 19.5%
Interest on debt 5%
2014:Q4
$420.5 b.
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Macro Theory:
Dr. D. Foster – ECO 285 – Macroeconomics
The AS/AD Model Part 1 – The Basics Part 2 – The Keynesian View