Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Unit 9: Keynesian Theory & Fiscal Policy “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” "In the long-run we are.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Unit 9: Keynesian Theory & Fiscal Policy “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” "In the long-run we are."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 9: Keynesian Theory & Fiscal Policy “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” "In the long-run we are all dead." --- John Maynard Keynes Created: 2013 by Jim Luke. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License

2 Why A New Theory? New Data. Classical Theory Can’t Explain Great Depression

3 Why? Classical Theory Can’t Explain Great Depression

4 Crash and Great Depression U.S. Depression Data192919311933193719381940 Real GNP101.484.368.3103.9103.7113.0 Consumer Price Index 122.5108.792.4102.799.4100.2 Unemployment (% )3.116.125.213.816.513.9  Unprecedented Deflation + Unemployment  Larger  Longer  Persistent, not temporary  Worldwide

5 Slide 5 Context: Keynesian Theory Global Economy Stumbles  Versailles Treaty & Inflations  Failed Gold Standard  Tariff Wars  Declining Trade  Financial bubbles Great Depression Rise of Fascism & Communism  Fears capitalism won’t survive

6 Slide 6 Keynesian Questions Is market capitalism inherently unstable? Can depressions continue forever? Any alternative to state socialism? Can “democratic” governments restore full- employment in a modern industrial economies?

7 Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License Assumptions Compared Classical Competitive markets Flexible prices Current income/prices drive C & I S = I Conclusion: SRAS/LRAS matter Keynes Monopolistic markets Sticky prices Expectations drive C & I I =/= S. Conclusion: AD matters

8 Slide 8 Keynesian Insights Wages & Prices are 'sticky'  “Efficiency” wages  Monopolistic firms reduce output not prices Expectations  Plans  Spending  but can be wrong  Say’s Law won’t hold Expectations are irrational  Assume current trends continue  Excessively optimistic or pessimistic AD Shifts  creates recession or inflation

9 Slide 9 Keynesian Insight: Wages & Prices are “sticky”  “Efficiency” wages  Monopolistic firms reduce output not prices

10 Slide 10 Keynesian Insight: Expectations  Plans  Spending  AD shifts  Firms produce to expected demand  Say’s Law won’t hold

11 Slide 11 Keynesian Insight: Expectations are irrational  Assume current trends continue  Excessively optimistic or pessimistic  “Animal Spirits”

12 Slide 12 Keynesian Insight: AD Shifts  creates recession or inflation Equilibrium (stability) is possible at less than full employment.

13 Let’s take another look at spending and Aggregate Demand: C, I, and G

14 C: Consumer Spending C based on expectations for future:  Job security  Price levels  Interest rates  Life expectancy  Wealth, not just income

15 I: Investment “Forward looking” decisions Two major determinants  Market interest rate  Business expectations NOTE: Not the current level of income!

16 Business Expectations Factors:  Wars  Future resource costs  Technological change  Changes in tax structure  Other destabilizing events  Recent growth rates  “Animal spirits”

17 G: Government Purchases Budget controlled of public officials  G “autonomous”  No reason gov’t cannot borrow short-run  G could be independent of T

18 The Keynesian Theory Using AD-AS Model The Classical Theory says the economy corrects itself in the long-run. But after seven years of continuing depression, in 1936 John Maynard Keynes counters with the observation that “in the long-run we are all dead”.

19 Circular Flow: Keynesian View Govt may run deficits or surpluses. G not equal to T Expectations & plans, not Interest rates drive S. (“save for a rainy day”). Closed economy: Ignore ROW. Spending on I depends on expectations, not interest rate Financial markets may not reach equilibrium. S > I

20 Recessionary Gap: High unemployment P Price Level (price index) Real GDP @start Price Index @start start LRAS SR-AS AD Real GDP if we had full employm ent Gap represents amount of unemploymen t Prices & wages are “sticky” – SRAS stays where it is. Firms lay-off workers instead of cutting wages.

21 Recessionary Gap shifts AD P Price Level (price index) Real GDP @start Price Index @start start LRAS SR-AS AD at start Real GDP if we had full employment Real GDP declines further instead of recovering. The economy moves AWAY from full employment. Workers & firms cut spending plans RESULT: AD shifts to the left, making the recessionary gap worse. AD after layoffs & loss of confidence after Real GDP declines even further Price Index after

22 Conclusions from Keynesian Model - Recession Modern industrial economy:  Can get “stuck” in long recession with very high unemployment  May NOT automatically correct itself. Conclusion:  Optimism, expectations, plans are critical THE Rx: Counter-cyclical Fiscal policy “manage” AD

23 Slide 23 Keynesian Rx: Fiscal Policy to Manage AD Improve Confidence & Expectations  Disaster safety nets  Unemployment insurance  Social Security  Banking deposit insurance  Securities regulation Manage business cycle  Counter-cyclical fiscal policy  Change G to offset changes in C and I  Borrow in recession, surplus in boom

24 Recessionary Gap: Keynesian Rx Fiscal Policy: Increase G and/or Decrease T to offset Declines in C and I. P Price Level (price index) Real GDP @start Price Index unchanged start LRAS SR-AS AD at start Real GDP if we had full employment Government Increases G or decreases T, with result AD shifts right. AD after govt fiscal stimulus after

25 Inflationary Gap: Keynesian Rx Fiscal Policy: Cut G and/or raise T  reduce AD P Price Level (price index) Real GDP @start start LRAS SR-AS AD at start Real GDP if we had full employment Government decreases G or increases T, with result AD shifts left AD after govt fiscal policy after

26 Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License Fiscal Policy Government purchases, transfer payments, taxes, and borrowing as they affect macroeconomic variables

27 Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License Automatic Stabilizers Spending and taxes automatically change in response to economic change: Unemployment compensation Welfare assistance Income tax collections

28 Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License Discretionary Fiscal Policy Congress & President must decide to spend more/tax less and pass a new law or budget to do it. often called “stimulus” program

29 Slide 29 Fiscal Policy - How Federal Budget, Expenditures & Tax Revenues G+G transfer > T  budget deficit G+G transfer < T  budget surplus G+G transfer = T  balanced budget Stimulus effect: Raise G, lower T Increase deficit (or reduce the surplus) Contractionary effect: lower G, raise T Increase surplus (or reduce deficit)

30 Which Is Better: T or G? Spending Multiplier:  MPC: marginal propensity to consume  = 1/(1–MPC)  If MPC is 0.8  1 / 0.2  5  initial increase G of $100 billion will eventually boost real GDP by 5 times, or $500 billion In theory, multiplier of G is greater than multiplier of T  Increased G is directly spent –all affects GDP  Part of a Tax cut is saved and doesn’t affect GDP  BUT, timing is important too

31 Slide 31 Keynesian Theory: Summary Industrial Economy inherently unstable  Equilibrium possible with unemployment  Extended depressions possible AD matters ‘Equilibrium’ : when actual = planned Confidence & Expectations important  Self-fulfilling Fiscal Policy can work


Download ppt "Unit 9: Keynesian Theory & Fiscal Policy “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” "In the long-run we are."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google