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Chapter 14: Stabilization Policy

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1 Chapter 14: Stabilization Policy

2 Policy Activism Economy is not self-correcting. We need to implement stabilization policy to correct business cycles. Use fiscal and monetary policy to prevent recession and control inflation. Example of active monetary policy: M2 Growth = 3% + (u – 6%) whenever correction is required

3 Policy Passivism Government budgetary actions and stabilization attempts are the source of economic instability. Government can make matters worse as it did in the Great Depression by implementing concretionary policies of tax and interest rate increases! Example of passive monetary policy: M2 Growth = 3% annually

4 Policy Lags Inside lags: time between a shock to the economy and policy action responding to that shock Outside lags: time between implementation of a policy action and its effect on the economy

5 Policy Lags: Inside Lags
Recognition lag: The time it takes for policy makers to recognize the existence of a boom or slump. Formulation lag: The time it takes to design policy measures to correct a boom or slump.

6 Policy Limitations: Outside Lags
Implementation lag: The time it takes to put the desired policy measures into effect in correcting a boom or slump. Response lag: The time it takes for the economy to adjust to new conditions after policy measures are implemented.

7 Duration of Lags Monetary policy requires shorter formulation and implementation lags as the FED decides how to correct a boom or slump. Fiscal policy requires longer formulation and implementation lags as a tax or spending policy must be approved by the Congress and implemented by federal agencies.

8 Automatic Stabilization
Boom: greater employment, inflation, and nominal wage will move workers into higher tax brackets. Paying more taxes reduce disposable income and consumption spending, slowing the economy. Slump: greater unemployment and lower inflation and nominal wage will move workers into lower tax brackets. Paying less taxes increases disposable income and consumption spending, stimulating the economy.

9 Forecasting: Leading Indicators
Manufacturing production workweek Weekly unemployment claims New orders for consumer goods and materials Vendor performance Orders for plants and equipment Change in manufactures’ unfilled orders New building permits issued Change in sensitive materials prices Index of stock prices Real money supply (M2) Index of consumer expectations

10 Macroeconomic Forecasting
Economists apply empirical models to macro data to forecast conditions. While minimizing the forecast error, there still are discrepancies between actual and predicted values because, despite sophistication, models can’t account for all possible effects.

11 Forecasting Errors

12 Forecasting Errors Generating 6-months forecasts, economists could not correctly predict the rapid Rise in unemployment rate from to Fall in unemployment rate from to

13 Formation of Expectations
Adaptive expectations: expectations are formed using past information on the indicator being considered Rational expectations: expectations are formed using past and present information on all possible variables that affect the indicator being considered

14 Robert Lucas’ Critique
Policy makers must take into account how people’s expectations respond to policy changes Traditional methods of policy evaluation do not adequately take into account the policy effects on people’s expectations

15 Sacrifice Ratio & Expectations
Sacrifice Ratio: the percentage of real GDP that must be given up to lower inflation by 1 percent. Policy makers prefer to live with inflation since they find the Sacrifice Ratio to be too high for the public. Rational-expectations advocates assert that Sacrifice Ratio estimation is subject to Lucas critique; it assumes expectations are formed adaptively rather than rationally.

16 Distrust of Policy Makers
Policy can be implemented to manipulate the economy for political purposes (e.g., the short-run Phillips Curve) Time inconsistency of discretionary policy: promise one policy, but implement another policy; e.g., promise an investment tax credit, but after factories are built increase corporate income tax rate

17 Political Business Cycle
Business cycle induced by policy makers: slow the economy in the first two years of a political administration stimulate the economy in the last two years to cause a boom just in time for the next election Data partly supports this idea for the Republican presidents

18 Economic Growth and Politics

19 Rules of Monetary Policy
Respond to policy shocks (e.g., energy crisis) Target GDP growth to achieve natural unemployment rate Target inflation to keep it low

20 Inflation & Central Bank

21 Rules of Fiscal Policy Budgetary balance or surplus
Deficit spending to cause growth to shift the burden to the next generation through debt Tax smoothing to reduce distortions by keeping rates relatively stable


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