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CH 3 Macroeconomics AAU

1) The document outlines the aggregate demand (AD) model in a closed economy. It defines the AD curve and shows the relationship between price level and output demanded based on the quantity theory of money. 2) An increase in the money supply shifts the AD curve to the right, raising both price level and output in the long run but only output in the short run when prices are sticky. 3) In the long run, aggregate supply is vertical as output is determined by resource endowments, while in the short run aggregate supply is horizontal as prices are fixed and firms produce whatever is demanded.

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Faris Khalid
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© © All Rights Reserved
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
401 views90 pages

CH 3 Macroeconomics AAU

1) The document outlines the aggregate demand (AD) model in a closed economy. It defines the AD curve and shows the relationship between price level and output demanded based on the quantity theory of money. 2) An increase in the money supply shifts the AD curve to the right, raising both price level and output in the long run but only output in the short run when prices are sticky. 3) In the long run, aggregate supply is vertical as output is determined by resource endowments, while in the short run aggregate supply is horizontal as prices are fixed and firms produce whatever is demanded.

Uploaded by

Faris Khalid
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CH-3: AGGREGATE DEMAND IN CLOSED ECONOMY

Simple Economic Model: Saving and Investment

 In this section, we will see some important


identities from a set of national income
relationship,
 To begin with, let us put the following
assumptions:
 Disposal income is equal to GDP
 No depreciation
 No tax and government transfer payments
 National income=GDP
 No government and foreign sector
 Output produced equals out put sold
 Then, output= expenditure
1
C + I ………………………….(1)
12/1/2015
SAVING & INVESTMENT- SIMPLE CLOSED ECONOMY MODEL…COND.
 With no government & external sector; the private
sector receives the whole disposal income,
 The private income will partly consumed and partly
saved
Y = C +S …………..…………………..(2)
 Next, combining identity (1) & (2), we have

C + I = Y = C+S ……………………..(3)
o The left-hand side of the identity shows components
of demand; while the right-hand side‟s shows the
allocation of income.
o To see the relation between saving & investment,
identity (3) can be rewritten as:
I = Y-C = S …………………………….(4) 2

12/1/2015
SAVING & INVESTMENT- OPEN ECONOMY – WITH GOVERNMENT
& FOREIGN TRADE
 Now consider an economy with government sector,
where:
 Gov‟t purchase is denoted by „G‟,
 Gov‟t tax receipt is denoted by „TA‟,
 Gov‟t Net Trasfer by „TR‟
 Net Expert = Export-Import = NX
o Now, we can write identity (1) above as:
Y = C + I + G + NX………………………….(5)
o Note that part of income spent on tax & the private
sector receives net transfer(TR), in additional to
national income, Disposal Income(YD) is thus equal to
income plus transfer less tax
YD = Y + TR –TA ……………..…………...(6) 3

12/1/2015
SAVING & INVESTMENT- OPEN ECONOMY – WITH GOVERNMENT &
FOREIGN TRADE
 Disposal income in-turn is allocated to:
YD = C + S …………………………..(7)
 Combining (6) and (7), we have:
C +S = YD = Y +TR-TA ……………..(8a)
or
C = YD-S = Y + TR-TA-S …………..(8b)
 Substituting the right hand side of (8b) into (5) and rearranging,
we get:
S-I = (G +TR-TA) + NX …………………(9)
 The right hand side expression( G +TR-TA) is gov’t budget deficit,

 Identity (9) shows that excess of saving over investment(S-I) of


private sector is equal to the government budget deficit plus
trade surplus.

12/1/2015
1. THE AGGREGATE DEMAND (AD) ANALYSIS

Mankiw, Chapters 10~12


Blanchard and Johnson, Chapters 5, 7~8 12/1/2015
THE MODEL OF AGGREGATE DEMAND(AD)

 Is the paradigm most mainstream economists and


policymakers use to think about economic fluctuations
and policies to stabilize the economy

 Shows how the price level and aggregate output are


determined,

 Shows how the economy’s behavior is different in the


short run and long run 6

12/1/2015
AGGREGATE DEMAND

 The aggregate demand curve shows the


relationship between the price level and the
quantity of output demanded.

 For our introductory analysis of AD model, we


use a simple theory of aggregate demand based
on the quantity theory of money.

12/1/2015
THE QUANTITY EQUATION AS AGGREGATE DEMAND
 An aggregate demand curve shows the relationship
between the price level and the quantity of output
demanded,
 For our introductory analysis of AD model, we use a simple
theory of aggregate demand based on the quantity theory
of money , which is given as:
MV = PY (quantity equation)

 Quantity theory of money (QTM) states that the general price


level of goods and services is directly proportional to the amount of
money in circulation, or money supply,

 For given values of M and V, this equation implies an


inverse relationship between P and Y, 8

12/1/2015
THE DOWNWARD-SLOPING AD CURVE

P
An increase in the
price level causes
a fall in real
money balances
(M/P ),
causing a
decrease in the
demand for goods AD
& services.
Y
The demand for output is proportional to real money balances9
according to the simple money demand function implied by the
quantity theory of money. 12/1/2015
SHIFTING THE AD CURVE

P
An increase in the
money supply
shifts the AD
curve to the right.

AD2
AD1
Y
With velocity of money fixed, the quantity equation implies that PY is
determined by M., 10
 An increase in M causes an increase in PY, which means :
o higher Y for each value of P, or
o higher P for each value of Y. 12/1/2015
AGGREGATE SUPPLY IN THE LONG RUN

 In the long run, output is determined by factor


supplies and technology
Y  F (K , L )
 Output
Y is the full-employment or natural
level of output (“potential GDP” ), at
which the economy’s resources are
fully employed.

NB: “Full employment” means that


unemployment equals its natural rate (not zero). 11

12/1/2015
THE LONG-RUN AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE
P LRAS
Y does not
depend on P,
so LRAS is
vertical.

Y
Y
 F (K , L ) 12

12/1/2015
LONG-RUN EFFECTS OF AN INCREASE IN M

P LRAS
An increase
in M shifts
AD to the
right.
In the long P2
run, this raises
the price P1 AD2
level… AD1

…but leaves Y
output the
Y
13
same.
12/1/2015
AGGREGATE SUPPLY IN THE SHORT RUN

 Many prices are sticky in the short run.


 For now, we assume
 all prices are stuck at a predetermined level in the short
run.
 firms are willing to sell as much at that price level as their
customers are willing to buy.
 Therefore, the short-run aggregate supply (SRAS)
curve is horizontal:

14

12/1/2015
THE SHORT-RUN AGGREGATE SUPPLY CURVE

P
The SRAS
curve is
horizontal:
The price level
is fixed at a
predetermined SRAS
P
level, and firms
sell as much as
buyers
demand. Y
15

12/1/2015
SHORT-RUN EFFECTS OF AN INCREASE IN M
ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

In the short P
…an increase
run when in aggregate
prices are demand…
sticky,…

SRAS
P
AD2
AD1
Y
…causes Y1 Y2
output to rise. 16

12/1/2015
FROM THE SHORT RUN TO THE LONG RUN

Over time, prices gradually become “unstuck.”


When they do, will they rise or fall?

In the short-run then over time,


equilibrium, if P will…
Y Y rise
Y Y fall

Y Y remain constant

NB: The adjustment of prices is what moves


the economy to its long-run equilibrium. 17

12/1/2015
THE SR & LR EFFECTS OF M > 0

A = initial P LRAS
equilibrium

B = new short-run
equilibrium P2 C
after Central B SRAS
Bank/National P A AD2
Bank/
AD1
increases M
Y
C = long-run Y Y2
equilibrium 18

12/1/2015
 Long run:
 prices flexible
 output determined by factors of production &
technology
 unemployment equals its natural rate

 Short run:
 prices fixed
 output determined by aggregate demand
 unemployment negatively related to output

19

12/1/2015
THE KEYNESIAN CROSS - ASSUME CLOSED ECONOMY
 A simple closed-economy model in which income is determined by expenditure.
(due to J. M. Keynes)
 Actual expenditure-is the amount households, firms and the gov’t spend on goods
& services; which is equal to economies gross output(GDP)

 Planned expenditure- is the amount households, firms and the gov’t would like to
spend on goods and services

 Notation:
PE = C + I + G = planned expenditure; where C = c(Y-T)
(assume gov‟t purchase and Tax is fixed)
Y = real GDP = actual expenditure
I = planned investment (assume it is exogenously fixed;

 Difference between actual & planned expenditure = unplanned inventory


investment.
 This happen b/s firms may engage in unplanned inventory investment as their
sales may not meet their expectation

 When sales less than product their planned stock of inventory rise; and when
they sales is more than planned, their inventory stock drop.
20

12/1/2015
ELEMENTS OF THE KEYNESIAN CROSS

consumption function: C  C (Y T )
govt policy variables: G  G , T T
for now, planned
investment is exogenous: I I

planned expenditure: PE  C (Y T )  I  G

equilibrium condition:
actual expenditure = planned expenditure
Y  PE 21

12/1/2015
GRAPHING PLANNED EXPENDITURE

PE
planned
expenditure
PE =C +I +G

MPC
1

income, output, Y

22

12/1/2015
GRAPHING THE EQUILIBRIUM CONDITION

PE
planned PE =Y
expenditure

No unplanned Inventory
Investment, or no shortage
or excess inventory
investment

45º

income, output, Y

23

12/1/2015
THE EQUILIBRIUM VALUE OF INCOME

PE
planned PE =Y
expenditure
PE =C +I +G

income, output, Y
Equilibrium
income 24

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT-AN
INCREASE IN GOVERNMENT PURCHASES( G)

PE
At Y1, PE =C +I +G2
there is now an
unplanned drop PE =C +I +G1
in inventory…

G
…so firms
increase output,
and income Y
rises toward a
new equilibrium. PE1 = Y1 Y PE2 = Y2
25

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT-AN INCREASE
IN GOVERNMENT PURCHASES…(COND.)

SOLVING FOR Y
Y  C  I  G equilibrium condition

Y  C  I  G in changes

 C  G because I exogenous

 MPC  Y  G because C = MPC Y,


assume T = 0)
Collect terms with Y Solve for Y :
on the left side of the
equals sign:  1 
Y     G
(1  MPC)Y  G  1  MPC 
26

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT-GOVERNMENT
PURCHASE MULTIPLIER

Definition: the increase in income resulting


from a $1 increase in G.
In this model, the govt
Y 1
purchases multiplier equals 
G 1  MPC

Example: If MPC = 0.8, then

Y 1 An increase in G
  5 causes income to
G 1  0.8
increase 5 times
as much! 27

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT-GOVERNMENT
PURCHASE MULTIPLIER

WHY THE MULTIPLIER IS GREATER THAN 1?

 Initially, the increase in G causes an equal


increase in Y: Y = G.

 But Y  C
 further Y
 further C
 further Y

 So the final impact on income is much bigger


than the initial G. 28

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT- AN
INCREASE IN TAXES

PE
Initially, the tax
increase reduces PE =C1 +I +G
consumption and PE =C2 +I +G
therefore PE:

C = MPC T At Y1, there is now


an unplanned
inventory buildup…
…so firms
reduce output,
and income falls Y
toward a new
PE2 = Y2 Y PE1 = Y1
equilibrium 29

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT- AN
INCREASE IN TAXES…COND.

SOLVING FOR Y
eq’m condition in
Y  C  I  G
changes
 C I and G exogenous

 MPC   Y  T 
Solving for Y : (1  MPC)Y   MPC  T

  MPC 
Final result: Y     T
 1  MPC 
30

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT- TAX
MULTIPLIER

def: the change in income resulting from


a $1 increase in T :
Y  MPC

T 1  MPC

If MPC = 0.8, then the tax multiplier equals

Y  0.8  0.8
   4
T 1  0.8 0.2
31

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND MULTIPLIER EFFECT- TAX
MULTIPLIER

…is negative:
A tax increase reduces C, which reduces income.
…is greater than one (in absolute value):
A change in taxes has a multiplier effect on
income.
…is smaller than the govt spending multiplier:
Consumers save the fraction (1 – MPC) of a tax
cut,
so the initial boost in spending from a tax cut is
smaller than from an equal increase in G.

32

12/1/2015
PRACTICE WITH THE KEYNESIAN CROSS

Use a graph of the Keynesian cross


to show the effects of an increase in
planned investment(I) on the
equilibrium level of income/output.

33

12/1/2015 33
PRACTICE WITH THE KEYNESIAN CROSS

PE
At Y1, PE =C +I2 +G
there is now an
unplanned drop PE =C +I1 +G
in inventory…

I
…so firms
increase output,
and income Y
rises toward a
new equilibrium. PE1 = Y1 Y PE2 = Y2 34

34
12/1/2015
THE IS CURVE

def: a graph of all combinations of r and Y that


result in goods market equilibrium
i.e. actual expenditure (output)
= planned expenditure
The equation for the IS curve is:

Y  C (Y T )  I (r )  G

35

12/1/2015
DERIVING THE IS CURVE -FROM KEYNESIAL CROSS

PE PE =Y PE =C +I (r )+G
2

r  I PE =C +I (r1 )+G

 PE I

 Y Y1 Y2 Y
r
r1

r2
IS
Y1 Y2 Y
36

12/1/2015
WHY THE IS CURVE IS NEGATIVELY SLOPED ?

A fall in the interest rate motivates firms


to increase investment spending, which
drives up total planned spending (PE ).

 To restore equilibrium in the goods


market, output (a.k.a. actual expenditure,
Y ) must increase.

37

12/1/2015
HOW FISCAL POLICY SHIFTS IS CURVE ?

 We can use the IS-LM model to see how


fiscal policy (G and T ) affects
aggregate demand and output.

 Let‟sstart by using the Keynesian cross


to see how fiscal policy shifts the IS
curve…

39
SHIFTING THE IS CURVE: G

PE PE =Y PE =C +I (r )+G
At any value of r, 1 2

G  PE  Y PE =C +I (r1 )+G1


…so the IS curve
shifts to the right.

The horizontal Y1 Y2 Y
r
distance of the
IS shift equals r1

1
Y  G Y
1 MPC IS1 IS2
Y1 Y2 Y
40

12/1/2015
SHIFTING THE IS CURVE: T

Use the diagram of the Keynesian


cross or loanable funds model to
show how an increase in taxes shifts
the IS curve.

Ifyou can, determine the size of the


shift.
41

12/1/2015 41
SHIFTING THE IS CURVE: T

PE =Y PE =C +I (r )+G

12/1/2015
At any value of r, PE 1 1

T  C  PE PE =C2 +I (r1 )+G


…so the IS curve
shifts to the left.

Y2 Y1 Y
The horizontal r
distance of the r1
IS shift equals
MPC Y
Y  T
1 MPC IS2 IS1
42
Y2 Y1 Y
42
MONEY MARKET AND THE LM CURVE

THE THEORY OF LIQUIDITY PREFERENCE

 Due to John Maynard Keynes.

 A simple theory in which the interest rate is


determined by money supply and money
demand.

43

12/1/2015
MONEY SUPPLY
r
M P
s
The supply of interest
real money rate
balances
is fixed:

M P M P
s

M/P
M P real money
balances
44

12/1/2015
MONEY DEMAND
r
M P
s
Demand for interest
real money rate
balances:

M P
d
 L (r )

L (r )
We are assuming the price level M/P
is fixed, so  = 0 and r = i. M P real money
balances
45

12/1/2015
EQUILIBRIUM
r
The interest interest M P
s

rate adjusts rate


to equate the
supply and
demand for
money: r1

M P  L (r ) L (r )

M/P
M P real money
balances
46

12/1/2015
HOW THE CENTRAL BANK RAISES THE INTEREST RATE ?

r
interest
To increase r, rate
Central
Bank/National
Bank/ reduces M
r2

r1
L (r )

M/P
M2 M1 real money
P P balances
47

12/1/2015
THE LM CURVE

Now let‟s put Y back into the money demand


function:
M P
d
 L (r ,Y )
The LM curve is a graph of all combinations
of r and Y that equate the supply and
demand for real money balances.
The equation for the LM curve is:
M P  L (r ,Y )
48

12/1/2015
DERIVING THE LM CURVE

(a) The market for


(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM

r2 r2

L (r , Y2 )
r1 r1
L (r , Y1 )
M1 M/P Y1 Y2 Y
P 49

12/1/2015
WHY THE LM CURVE IS UPWARD SLOPING ?

 An increase in income raises money demand.

 Since the supply of real balances is fixed, there is


now excess demand in the money market at the
initial interest rate.

 The interest rate must rise to restore equilibrium


in the money market.

50

12/1/2015
HOW M SHIFTS THE LM CURVE-REDUCTION IN
MONEY SUPPLY (ASSUMING CONSTANT PRICE)

(a) The market for


(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM2

LM1
r2 r2

r1 r1
L ( r , Y1 )

M2 M1 M/P Y1 Y
P P 51

12/1/2015
SHIFTING THE LM CURVE

 Suppose a wave of credit card fraud causes consumers


to use cash more frequently in transactions.

 Use the liquidity preference model to show how these


events shift the LM curve.

52

12/1/2015 52
SHIFTING THE LM CURVE

(a) The market for


(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM2

LM1
r2 r2
L ( r , Y2 )
r1 r1
L (r , Y1 )

M1 M/P Y1 Y53
P
12/1/2015 53
THE SHORT-RUN EQUILIBRIUM

The short-run equilibrium is r


the combination of r and Y
LM
that simultaneously
satisfies the equilibrium
conditions in the goods &
money markets:
IS
Y  C (Y T )  I (r )  G
Y
M P  L (r ,Y ) Equilibrium
Equilibrium
interest
rate level of
income 54

12/1/2015
THE BIG PICTURE

Keynesian IS
cross curve
IS-LM
model Explanation
Theory of LM of short-run
liquidity curve fluctuations
preference
Agg.
demand
curve Model of
Agg.
Demand
Agg.
and Agg.
supply
Supply
curve
55

12/1/2015
SUMMARY
1. Long run: prices are flexible, output and employment
are always at their natural rates, and the classical
theory applies.
Short run: prices are sticky, shocks can push output
and employment away from their natural rates.
2. Aggregate demand and supply:
a framework to analyze economic fluctuations

56

12/1/2015 56
SUMMARY
3. The aggregate demand curve slopes downward.
4. The long-run aggregate supply curve is vertical,
because output depends on technology and factor
supplies, but not prices.
5. The short-run aggregate supply curve is horizontal,
because prices are sticky at predetermined levels.

57

57
12/1/2015
SUMMARY
6. Keynesian cross
 basic model of income determination
 takes fiscal policy & investment as exogenous
 fiscal policy has a multiplier effect on income

7. IS curve
 comes from Keynesian cross when planned
investment depends negatively on interest rate
 shows all combinations of r and Y
that equate planned expenditure with
actual expenditure on goods & services 58

58
12/1/2015
SUMMARY
8. Theory of liquidity preference
 basic model of interest rate determination
 takes money supply & price level as exogenous
 an increase in the money supply lowers the
interest rate
9. LM curve
 comes from liquidity preference theory when
money demand depends positively on income
 shows all combinations of r and Y that equate
demand for real money balances with supply
59

12/1/2015 59
SUMMARY
10. IS-LM model
 Intersection of IS and LM curves shows the
unique point (Y, r ) that satisfies equilibrium in
both the goods and money markets.

60

12/1/2015 60
2. THE AGGREGATE DEMAND AND
AGGREGATE SUPPLY

61

Mankiw, Chapters 10~12


Blanchard and Johnson, Chapters 5, 7~8 12/1/2015
EQUILIBRIUM IN THE IS -LM MODEL

The IS curve represents


r
equilibrium in the goods
market.
LM

Y  C (Y  T )  I (r )  G
r1
The LM curve represents
money market equilibrium.
M P  L (r ,Y ) IS
Y
The intersection determines Y1
the unique combination of Y and r
that satisfies equilibrium in both markets. 62
POLICY ANALYSIS WITH THE IS -LM MODEL

Y  C (Y  T )  I (r )  G r
LM
M P  L (r ,Y )

We can use the IS-LM


model to analyze the r1
effects of
•fiscal policy: G and/or T IS
•monetary policy: M Y
Y1

63

12/1/2015
AN INCREASE IN GOVERNMENT PURCHASES
1. IS curve shifts right
1 r
by G LM
1  MPC
causing output & r2
income to rise. 2.
r1
2. This raises money
demand, causing the 1. IS2
interest rate to IS1
rise… Y
Y1 Y2
3. …which reduces
3.
investment, so the final
increase in Y 64
1
is smaller than G
1  MPC 12/1/2015
CHANGE IN TAX (TAX CUT)
Consumers save r
(1MPC) of the tax cut, LM
so the initial boost in
spending is smaller for
T than for an equal r2
2.
G… r1
and the IS curve shifts 1. IS2
by 1. MPC IS1
T
1  MPC Y
Y1 Y2
…so the effects on r 2.
2
and Y are smaller
for T than for an 65

equal G. 12/1/2015


MONETARY POLICY: AN INCREASE IN M

1. M > 0 shifts r
LM1
the LM curve down
(or to the right) LM2

2. …causing the r1
interest rate to fall r2

3. …which increases IS
investment, Y
Y1 Y2
causing output &
income to rise.
66

12/1/2015
INTERACTION BETWEEN MONETARY & FISCAL POLICY

 Model:
 Monetary & fiscal policy variables (M, G, and T ) are
exogenous.

 Real world:
 Monetary policymakers may adjust M in response to
changes in fiscal policy,
or vice versa.

 Such interactions may alter the impact of the original


policy change.

67

12/1/2015
THE CENTRAL BANK RESPONSE TO G > 0
 Suppose gov‟t increases G.
 Possible Central Bank/National Bank/ responses:
1. hold M constant
2. hold r constant
3. hold Y constant
 In each case, the effects of the G are different…

68

12/1/2015
RESPONSE 1: HOLD M CONSTANT

If government raises r


G, the IS curve shifts LM1
right.

If central r2
bank/national bank/ r1
holds M constant, then
IS2
LM curve doesn‟t shift.
IS1
Results: Y
Y1 Y2
Y  Y 2  Y1
69
r  r2  r1
12/1/2015
RESPONSE 2: HOLD R CONSTANT

If government raises r


G, the IS curve shifts LM1
right. LM2

To keep r constant, r2


Fed increases M r1
to shift LM curve IS2
right. IS1
Results: Y
Y1 Y2 Y3
Y  Y 3  Y1
r  0
70

12/1/2015
RESPONSE 3: HOLD Y CONSTANT

If government raises G, r LM2


the IS curve shifts right. LM1

r3
To keep Y constant, Fed r2
reduces M to shift LM r1
curve left.
IS2
IS1
Results:
Y
Y1 Y2
Y  0
r  r3  r1 71

12/1/2015
SHOCKS IN THE IS -LM MODEL

IS shocks: exogenous changes in the


demand for goods & services.
Examples:
 stock market boom or crash
 change in households‟ wealth
 C
 change in business or consumer
confidence or expectations
 I and/or C
72

12/1/2015
SHOCKS IN THE IS -LM MODEL
LM shocks: exogenous changes in the
demand for money.
Examples:

 A wave of credit card fraud increases


demand for money.
 More ATMs or the Internet reduce
money demand.

73

12/1/2015
ANALYZE SHOCKS WITH THE IS-LM MODEL

Use the IS-LM model to analyze the effects of


1. a housing market crash that reduces consumers‟
wealth
2. consumers using cash in transactions more
frequently in response to an increase in identity
theft
For each shock,
a. use the IS-LM diagram to determine the effects
on Y and r.
b. figure out what happens to C, I, and the
74
unemployment rate.
12/1/2015 74
HOUSING MARKET CRASH

IS shifts left, causing


r and Y to fall. r
LM1
C falls due to lower
wealth and lower r1
income,
r2
I rises because
r is lower IS1
IS2
u rises because Y
Y2 Y1
Y is lower 75

(Okun’s law)
75
12/1/2015
INCREASE IN MONEY DEMAND

LM shifts left, causing


LM2
r to rise and Y to fall. r
LM1
C falls due to lower r2
income, r1
I falls because
r is higher
IS1
u rises because
Y
Y is lower Y2 Y1
(Okun’s law) 76

76
12/1/2015
IS-LM AND AGGREGATE DEMAND

 So far, we‟ve been using the IS-LM model to


analyze the short run, when the price level
is assumed fixed.
 However, a change in P would shift LM and
therefore affect Y.
 Theaggregate demand curve
captures this relationship between P and Y.

77

12/1/2015
DERIVING THE AD CURVE
r LM(P2)
Intuition for slope LM(P1)
r2
of AD curve:
r1
P  (M/P )
IS
 LM shifts left Y2 Y1 Y
P
 r
P2
 I
P1
 Y
AD
Y2 Y1 Y 78

12/1/2015
MONETARY POLICY AND THE AD CURVE

r LM(M1/P1)
The Central bank can
r1 LM(M2/P1)
increase aggregate
demand: r2

M  LM shifts right IS
Y1 Y2 Y
 r P

 I P1
 Y at each AD2
value of P AD1
Y1 Y2 Y 79

12/1/2015
FISCAL POLICY AND THE AD CURVE

Expansionary fiscal
r
policy (G and/or T ) LM
increases aggregate r2
demand: r1 IS2
T  C IS1
 Fiscal expansion Y1 Y2 Y
P
shift IS curve right
 Y at any given P1
value of P AD2
AD1
Y1 Y2 Y 80

12/1/2015
IS-LM AND AD-AS IN THE SHORT RUN & LONG RUN

The force that moves the economy from the


short run to the long run is the gradual
adjustment of prices.

In the short-run then over time, the


equilibrium, if price level will
Y Y rise
Y Y fall

Y Y remain constant
81

12/1/2015
THE SR & LR EFFECTS OF AN IS SHOCK
r LRAS LM(P )
1
A negative IS shock
shifts IS and AD left,
causing Y to fall.
IS1
IS2
Y Y
P LRAS
P1 SRAS1

AD1
AD2
Y Y 82
12/1/2015
THE SR AND LR EFFECTS OF AN IS SHOCK

r LRAS LM(P )
1

In the new short-


run equilibrium, IS1
IS2
Y Y Y Y
P LRAS
P1 SRAS1

AD1
AD2
Y Y 83
12/1/2015
THE SR AND LR EFFECTS OF AN IS SHOCK
r LRAS LM(P )
In the new short- 1

run equilibrium,

Y Y IS1
IS2
Y Y
Over time, P gradually
falls, causing: P LRAS
•SRAS to move down P1 SRAS1

•M/P to increase,
which causes LM AD1
AD2
to move down
Y Y 84
12/1/2015
THE SR AND LR EFFECTS OF AN IS SHOCK

r LRAS LM(P )
1
LM(P2)

IS1
IS2
Y Y
Over time, P gradually
falls, causing: P LRAS
•SRAS to move down P1 SRAS1

•M/P to increase, P2 SRAS2


which causes LM AD1
to move down AD2
Y Y 85
12/1/2015
THE SR AND LR EFFECTS OF AN IS SHOCK

r LRAS LM(P )
1
LM(P2)

This process continues IS1


until economy reaches a IS2
long-run equilibrium Y
Y
with Y Y P LRAS
P1 SRAS1

P2 SRAS2
AD1
AD2
Y Y 86
12/1/2015
ANALYZE SR & LR EFFECTS OF M

a. Draw the IS-LM and AD-AS r LRAS LM(M /P )


1 1
diagrams as shown here.
b. Suppose NB /CB/increases
M. Show the short-run IS
effects on your graphs.
c. Show what happens in the Y Y
transition from the short run P LRAS
to the long run.
d. How do the new long-run SRAS1
P1
equilibrium values of the
endogenous variables
AD1
compare to their initial 87

values? Y Y
12/1/2015
87
SHORT-RUN EFFECTS OF M

LM and AD shift right. r LRAS LM(M /P )


1 1

r1 LM(M2/P1)
r2
r falls, Y rises above Y
IS

Y Y2 Y
P LRAS

P1 SRAS
AD2
AD1 88
Y Y2 Y
88
12/1/2015
TRANSITION FROM SHORT RUN TO LONG RUN

Over time, r LRAS LM(M /P )


1
2 1
3

 P rises r3 = r1 LM(M2/P1)

 SRAS moves upward r2


IS
 M/P falls
 LM moves leftward Y2 Y
Y
P LRAS
New long-run equilibrium P3 SRAS
 P higher P1 SRAS
 all real variables back at AD2
their initial values AD1 89
Money is neutral in the long run. Y Y2 Y
12/1/2015
89
SUMMARY
1. IS-LM model
 a theory of aggregate demand
 exogenous: M, G, T,
P exogenous in short run, Y in long run
 endogenous: r,
Y endogenous in short run, P in long run
 IS curve: goods market equilibrium
 LM curve: money market equilibrium
95

12/1/2015 90
SUMMARY
2. AD curve
 shows relation between P and the IS-LM model‟s
equilibrium Y.
 negative slope because
P  (M/P )  r  I  Y
 expansionary fiscal policy shifts IS curve right,
raises income, and shifts AD curve right.
 expansionary monetary policy shifts LM curve
right, raises income, and shifts AD curve right.
 IS or LM shocks shift the AD curve. 96

91
12/1/2015

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