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Stabilization Policy Lecture 23

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1 Stabilization Policy Lecture 23
Dr. Jennifer P. Wissink ©2018 Jennifer P. Wissink, all rights reserved. November 13, 2018 1

2 Announcements: MACRO Fall 2018
Prelim 2 grads are done – please see announcement memo on Blackboard. Check your finals schedules and sign up for makeup if need be via Blackboard. Keep moving along with the MEL quizzes. Quiz (#09) is due TONIGHT! Final HWPS is available in back. It will be due on the LAST lecture. CES event this week on Thursday: Summer Experiences Panel on Thursday, November 15, 5:00 pm in Stimson 206. “Join us for the Summer Experiences Panel to see what internships are possible with an Economics degree! Guest speakers include those who have interned in Banking, the Federal Reserve, Economic Research, Economic Consulting, and other like fields. This is a wonderful opportunity for underclassmen looking for ways to apply their economics background for a rewarding summer opportunity.”  Free food will be provided, so make sure to stop by! Check out the Facebook event page for more information and updates. 

3 Stabilization Woe: “The Fool in the Shower”
Attempts to stabilize the economy can prove destabilizing because of time lags. Milton Friedman likened these attempts to a “fool in the shower.” The government is constantly stimulating or contracting the economy at the wrong time.

4 “The Fool in the Shower”
An expansionary policy that should have begun to take effect at point A does not actually begin to have an impact until point D, when the economy is already on an upswing.

5 “The Fool in the Shower”
Hence, the policy pushes the economy to points F’ and G’ (instead of F and G). Income varies more widely than it would have if no policy had been implemented. If the government is the fool, can the Fed help control it?

6 The Typical Fed Response to the State of the Economy
The Fed is likely to lower the interest rate (via an increase the money supply) during times of low output and low inflation. easy money This shifts AD to the right. When the economy is on the flat portion of the AS curve, an increase in the money supply will lead to an increase in output with very little increase in the price level.

7 The Typical Fed Response to the State of the Economy
On the other hand… The Fed is likely to increase the interest rate (via a decrease the money supply) during times of high output and high inflation. tight money This shifts AD to the left. When the economy is on the relatively steep portion of the AS curve, contraction of the money supply will lead to a decrease in the price level, with little decrease in output. Famous/Funny quote by Harry S. Truman on what kind of economist he wants... “Give me a one-handed economist! All my economists say, On the one hand,... and on the other.”

8 The Typical Fed Response to the State of the Economy
Stagflation is a more difficult problem for the Fed to help solve. If the Fed lowers the interest rate, output will rise, but so will the inflation rate (which is already too high). If the Fed increases the interest rate, the inflation rate will fall, but so will output (which is already too low). Supply side policies are more important when it comes to dealing with stagflation. GROWTH!

9 The Typical Fiscal Response to the State of the Economy
Basic Policy Tools: G = government expenditures T = taxes Typically see expansionary policy (which shifts AD to right) when at low Y* and little inflation, and just the opposite with high Y* and troublesome inflation. Same concerns as with the Fed with stagflation. Note: Some G and T “policy” is built into the system by existing laws. The system has built in automatic stabilizers automatic destabilizers

10 Economic Stability & Fiscal Policy
Automatic stabilizers refer to revenue and expenditure items in the federal budget that automatically change with the economy in such a way as to stabilize Y* or GDP. the tax code the government safety net, social insurance Automatic destabilizers refer to revenue and expenditure items in the federal budget that automatically change with the economy in such a way as to destabilize Y* or GDP. deficit targeting policy

11 FIGURE 9.6 The Federal Government Surplus (+) or Deficit (−) as a Percentage of GDP, 1993 I–2014 IV
MyEconLab Real-time data

12 Fiscal Policy: Deficit Targeting
The Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Balanced Budget Act, passed by the U.S. Congress and signed by President Reagan in 1985, is a law that set out to reduce the federal deficit by $36 billion per year, with a deficit of zero slated for 1991. In practice, these targets never came close to being achieved. The deficits were: -149,730million in 1987 -155,178million in 1988 -152,639million in 1989 -221,036million in 1990

13 Fiscal Policy: The Effects of G on the Deficit
Consider: Government Expenditures (G) and Taxes (T) Recall: when G>T  we run a deficit. Recall: when G<T  we have a surplus. Consider: Changes in Y* and the deficit first... When Y* falls (contracts) the deficit tends to rise. WHY? Taxable income of households and taxable profits of firms fall. Automatic government payments also rise. When Y* rises (expands) the deficit tends to fall. WHY? Reverse the argument above... Now... recall... a decrease in G causes the economy to contract. Two effects on the deficit: tends to reduce the deficit since you’ve reduced G, but… tends to increase the deficit since you will contract the economy Now... recall... an increase in G causes the economy to expand. tends to increase the deficit since you’ve increased G, but… tends to decrease the deficit since you will expand the economy

14 Fiscal Policy: The Effects of Tax Policy on the Deficit
Very similar to what we just said about G, but more complicated and harder to predict! Basically, a decrease in Taxes works “like” an increase in G. An increase in Taxes works “like” a decrease in G. BIG QUESTIONS WITH TAX POLICY: Whose taxes are changing? How do these people behave as a consequence?

15 Fiscal Policy: Consequences for Economic Stability & Deficit Reduction
Congress often has two options (1) Choose a target deficit and adjust government spending and taxation to achieve this target. (2) Decide how much to spend and tax regardless of the consequences on the deficit. Congress often stuck with the following problem

16 Deficit Targeting as an Automatic Destabilizer
With deficit targeting, the contraction in the economy would be larger. With deficit targeting, taxes could be rising or government spending declining while the economy is experiencing a contraction.

17 So What Do We Do? Good question. Options Worry about spend less
on what? tax more on whom? Worry about Short run? Long run? Both?

18 The Last Wrinkle: International Trade
All economies, regardless of their size, depend to some extent on other economies and are affected by events outside their borders. It’s an OPEN Economy! 1970s: imports roughly 7% of US GDP : imports roughly 18%, 14%, 16%, 18% of US GDP Want to see others? The “internationalization” or “globalization” of the U.S. economy has occurred everywhere: in the private and public sectors, in input and output markets, in business firms and households.

19 Basics: Trade Surpluses & Deficits
Trade Surplus: When a country exports more than it imports. Trade Deficit: When a country imports more than it exports.

20 TABLE 19.1 U.S. Balance of Trade (Exports Minus Imports), 1929–2012 (Billions of Dollars)
+0.4 1991 −27.0 1933 +0.1 1992 −32.8 1945 −0.8 1993 −64.4 1955 +0.5 1994 −92.7 1960 +4.2 1995 −90.7 1965 +5.6 1996 −96.3 1970 +4.0 1997 −101.4 1975 +16.0 1998 −161.8 1976 −1.6 1999 −262.1 1977 −23.1 2000 −382.1 1978 −25.4 2001 −371.0 1979 −22.5 2002 −427.2 1980 −13.1 2003 −504.1 1981 −12.5 2004 −618.7 1982 −20.0 2005 −722.7 1983 −51.7 2006 −769.3 1984 −102.7 2007 −713.1 1985 −115.2 2008 −709.7 1986 −132.5 2009 −388.7 1987 −145.0 2010 2011 −511.6 −568.1 1988 −110.1 1989 −87.9 2012 −566.7 1990 −77.6

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22 The Economic Basis for Trade: Recall Comparative Advantage
David Ricardo’s theory of comparative advantage: “specialization and free trade will benefit all trading partners (real wages will rise), even those that may be absolutely more efficient producers.” Recall England and Portugal Wine Cloth i>clicker question: Given the table, suppose Portugal and England are going to trade wine and cloth with each other. Suppose Portugal is making wine and England cloth. What is the lowest price (in terms of cloth) we would expect to see barrels of wine selling for? 1/10 a yard of cloth 1/20 a yard of cloth 10 yards of cloth 20 yards of cloth 10 barrels of wine LABOR (L) HOURS REQUIRED ENGLAND PORTUGAL 1 yd. cloth 2 hours 1 hour 1 barrel wine 40 hours 10 hours

23 From Terms of Trade to Exchange Rates
The ratio at which a country can trade domestic products for imported products is the terms of trade. Was easy with only two goods like guns & butter. We looked at internal MOC versus terms of trade. When we have more than two goods and two countries and lots of trade  money  currencies  currencies need to be exchanged  foreign exchange rates. An exchange rate is the ratio at which two currencies are traded, or the price of one currency in terms of another. For any pair of countries, there is a range of exchange rates that can lead to both countries realizing the gains from specialization and comparative advantage.

24 Exchange Rates and Comparative Advantage
If exchange rates end up in the right ranges, the free market will drive each country to shift resources into those sectors in which it enjoys a comparative advantage. Only those products in which a country has a comparative advantage will be competitive in world markets.

25 Sources of Comparative Advantage
The Heckscher-Ohlin (H-O) Theorem is a theory that explains the existence of a country’s comparative advantage by its factor endowments. Factor endowments: the quantity and quality of labor, land, and natural resources of a country. Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin: economists from Sweden, circa Ohlin was jointly awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1977 together with the British economist James Meade "for their pathbreaking contribution to the theory of international trade and international capital movements". . According to the H-O theorem, a country has a comparative advantage in the production of a product if that country is relatively well endowed with inputs used intensively in the production of that product.

26 Sources of Comparative Advantage
A country with a great deal of good fertile land… California & Iowa in agriculture Brazil and coffee beans A country with a large amount of accumulated capital… New Jersey in oil refining South Korea and passenger cars A country well-endowed with human capital… New York in highly technical financial services US and advanced education Check out this site! Very interesting and oddly fun.

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29 Other Suggested Explanations for Observed Trade Flows
Product differentiation and competitive markets Acquired comparative advantage Economies of scale and scope However, because evidence suggests that economies of scale are exhausted at relatively small size in most industries, it seems unlikely that they constitute a valid explanation of world trade patterns. Trading Environments, Openness of Economy Free Trade Policy Protectionist Policy


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