Supplemental Slides From Class Aggregate Supply Chapter 13-7 th and 14-8 th edition.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ECON 671 – International Economics
Advertisements

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply in the Long Run A brief introduction to business cycles.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Theory: Sticky Wages and Prices.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Appendix 11.A Labor Contracts and Nominal-Wage Rigidity.
Chapter 13: Aggregate Supply
Diploma Macro Paper 2 Monetary Macroeconomics Lecture 6 Mark Hayes
Introduction Until now, we assumed P was “stuck” in the short run, implying a horizontal SRAS curve. Now, we consider two prominent models of aggregate.
Appendix 11.A Labor Contracts and Nominal-Wage Rigidity.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich macro © 2002 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved Topic 11: Aggregate.
MACROECONOMICS Chapter 13
Activity 41 The neutrality of money. Money is neutral In the long run changes in money supply will only change price level and have no change on real.
Equilibrium in the AD/AS Model Module 19. Learning Objectives The difference between short-run and long- run macroeconomic equilibrium. The causes and.
Source: Mankiw (2000) Macroeconomics, Fourth edition Chapter 9, Fifth edition Chapter 9 1 The Macroeconomy in the Short-Run Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
Abel, Bernanke and Croushore (chapters 9.4, 9.5 and 9.6)
Chapter Nine 1 CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
The New Classical model and Aggregate Supply
Chapter 11 Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market-Clearing Macroeconomics Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc.
Chapter objectives difference between short run & long run
Economics 282 University of Alberta
New-Keynesian Theory of Aggregate Supply Efficiency Wages.
Ch. 7: Aggregate Demand and Supply
The Theory of Aggregate Supply
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations macro © 2002 Worth.
We will cover… models of aggregate supply in which output depends positively on the price level in the short run Two models presented in the book the short-run.
1 AD and AS together Here we put Aggregate Supply and Demand together and use the model to help use understand the actual performance of the macroeconomic.
Economics 282 University of Alberta
Economics 282 University of Alberta
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 22 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations macro © 2002 Worth.
Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Analysis: Non–Market-Clearing Macroeconomics Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc.
Office Hours: Monday 3:00-4:00 – LUMS C85
Classical Business Cycle Analysis: Market-Clearing Macroeconomics
In this chapter, you will learn:
Office Hours: Monday 3:00-4:00 – LUMS C85
Aggregate Demand and Supply. Aggregate Demand (AD)
The Phillips Curve The Phillips Curve
National Income and Price Determination: Equilibrium in AD/AS Model
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 20 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply.
MACROECONOMICS © 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw Aggregate Supply and the Short-Run Tradeoff.
MACROECONOMICS © 2011 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved S E V E N T H E D I T I O N PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw C H A P.
0 CHAPTER 10 Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations macro © 2002 Worth.
1 Aggregate Supply CHAPTER 11 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Macroeconomics fifth edition Eva Hromadkova PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations macro © 2002 Worth.
Aggregate Supply How the Aggregate supply curve illustrates the relationship between the aggregate price level and the quantity of aggregate output supplied.
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada24.1 Chapter 24 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
MACROECONOMICS © 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
XVII. New Keynesian Economics. XVII.1 AD – AS model once again Agregate demand : both in long and short term decreasing function of price Agregate supply.
Lecture 10 Aggregate Supply. slide 1 Three models of aggregate supply 1.The sticky-wage model 2.The imperfect-information model 3.The sticky-price model.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich macro © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
Slide 0 CHAPTER 13 Aggregate Supply In Chapter 13, you will learn…  three models of aggregate supply in which output depends positively on the price level.
Slide 0 The sticky-wage model If it turns out thatthen unemployment and output are at their natural rates Real wage is less than its target, so firms hire.
Macroeconomics Lecture 25. Review of the previous Lecture Economic Fluctuation –Long Run vs Short Run –Model of Aggregate Demand and Supply.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 23 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
1 Appendix 14A The Self-Correcting Aggregate Demand and Supply Model ©2004 South-Western.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER NINE Introduction to Economic Fluctuations macro © 2002 Worth.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 9-1 Chapter Outline The FE Line: Equilibrium in the Labor Market The IS Curve: Equilibrium in the Goods.
Phillips Curve Analysis Inflation & Unemployment Managing the short run trade-off.
20 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply. Short-Run Economic Fluctuations Economic activity fluctuates from year to year. In most years production of.
AGGREGATE DEMAND and AGGREGATE SUPPLY II.  how to derive un upward sloping aggregate supply in the short-run:  Sticky prices;  Sticky wages;  Lucas’
Review of the previous lecture 1. IS-LM model  a theory of aggregate demand  exogenous: M, G, T, P exogenous in short run, Y in long run  endogenous:
Money, Output, and Prices in the Long Run. Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of an Increase in the Money Supply Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of an Increase.
Expectations and Macroeconomic Stabilization Policies Adaptive and Rational Expectations.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.15-1 Chapter 15 Issues in Stabilization Policy.
Aggregate Supply & SR Tradeoff between Inflation and Unemployment
Labor Contracts and Nominal-Wage Rigidity
Presentation transcript:

Supplemental Slides From Class Aggregate Supply Chapter 13-7 th and 14-8 th edition

The sticky-wage model – not in the 7 th and 8 th editions  Assumes that firms and workers negotiate contracts and fix the nominal wage before they know what the price level will turn out to be.  The nominal wage they set is based on a target real wage and the expected price level:

The sticky-wage model If it turns out thatthen Unemployment and output are at their natural rates. Actual real wage is less than the target, firms hire more workers and output rises above its natural rate. Actual real wage exceeds its target, so firms hire fewer workers and output falls below its natural rate.

The sticky-wage model  Implies that the real wage should be counter-cyclical, should move in the opposite direction as output during business cycles:  In booms, when P typically rises, real wage should fall.  In recessions, when P typically falls, real wage should rise.  This prediction does not come true in the real world.

The imperfect-information model Assumptions:  All wages and prices are perfectly flexible, all markets are clear. (drops the assumption of imperfect competition)  Each supplier produces one good and consumes a lot of others.  Each supplier knows the nominal price of their own good, but not all of the other goods - does not know the overall price level.

The imperfect-information model, also called the Misperceptions Theory  Q: What is the best time for an individual producer to increase production?  A: When there has been an increase in demand for her specific product  In that case, price of the good she produces rises relative to the goods that she consumes  Producer will want to take advantage of relative increase in demand  Q: What will be the effect of an increase in aggregate demand (say, from higher M)?  A: All prices will rise  But individual producers will not be able to distinguish this increase from a shift in specific demand  So individual producers will increase production somewhat, at least temporarily

 The price of bread is the baker's nominal wage; the price of bread relative to the general price level is the baker's real wage. If the relative price of bread rises, the baker may work more and produce more bread.  If the baker can't observe the general price level as easily as the price of bread, he or she must estimate the relative price of bread  If the price of bread rises 5% and the baker thinks inflation is 5%, there's no change in the relative price of bread, so there's no change in the baker's labor supply  But suppose the baker expects the general price level to rise by 5%, but sees the price of bread rising by 8%; then the baker will work more in response to the wage increase Example: A bakery that makes bread

 With many producers thinking this way, if everyone expects prices to increase 5% but they actually increase 8%, they'll work more  So an increase in the price level that is higher than expected induces people to work more and thus increases the economy's output  Similarly, an increase in the price level that is lower than expected reduces output Generalizing this example

Summary & implications Y P LRAS Producers often fooled Producers rarely fooled

What shifts the curves?  Change in P e  When P > Pe, expectations adjust and Pe rises over time  This increase in Pe shifts the SRAS curve up  When P < Pe, expectations adjust and Pe falls over time  This decrease in Pe shifts the SRAS curve down  Eventually, Y always returns to full employment

Imperfect Information - Misperceptions Theory and the Non-neutrality of Money  Monetary policy and the misperceptions theory  Because of misperceptions, unanticipated monetary policy has real effects; but anticipated monetary policy has no real effects because there are no misperceptions

An unanticipated increase in the money supply (same as Mankiw’s slide in the book)

Monetary policy and the misperceptions theory  Initial equilibrium where AD 1 intersects SRAS 1 and LRAS (point E)  Unanticipated increase in money supply shifts AD curve to AD 2  The price level rises to P 2 and output rises above its full-employment level, so money isn't neutral  As people get information about the true price level, their expectations change, and the SRAS curve shifts left to SRAS 2, with output returning to its full-employment level  So, unanticipated monetary policy isn't neutral in the short run, but it is neutral in the long run

The Misperceptions Theory and the Nonneutrality of Money  Anticipated changes in the money supply  If people anticipate the change in the money supply and thus in the price level, they aren't fooled, there are no misperception, and the SRAS curve shifts immediately to its higher level  So anticipated monetary is neutral in both the short run and the long run

An anticipated increase in the money supply. Go directly from P1 to P3 - directly from point E to H. There is no SR equilibrium at point F as in the earlier slide.