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Download Chapter 4 The Classical Model
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Chapter 4 The Classical Model Aggregate Supply The distribution of output The Equation of Exchange • Irving Fisher divided nominal GDP by the money supply Py V s M P Price Level y real income M money supply s • Fisher thought that V (velocity) was constant. • He thought up reasons why V might be constant – The technical pay structure of the economy • Suppose V really is constant • The classical economists also believed y was constant as well Py V s M M sV Py 1 s M Py V • So if money supply doubles P must double as well (V and y don’t change) The Cambridge Equation • Recall the functions of money – Money is used as a medium of exchange – Money is used as a store of wealth • The classical economist did not believe people held money as a store of wealth • The opportunity cost of holding money is foregone interest earnings. • People held the bulk of their money in bonds. • People would hold a small amount of wealth in the form of money to minimize transactions costs. • The number of transactions are proportional to nominal income M kPy d • In equilibrium M s M d kPy Note simularity to 1 s M Py V • Aggregate Demand.xls • The classical model is said to produce a dichotomy – The real economy (y is determined by real factors – the labor market) – The monetary economy that only affects the price level but not the real economy How output is distributed in the classical model • • • • • Household get their income y First they pay taxes T Next they decide how much to save S They consume what is left over Y=C+S+T The bond market • Households save by purchasing bonds • Firms borrow by selling bonds • The government borrows by selling bonds. Bond supply: S B government bonds + corporate bonds Bond demand: D B household savings S The bonds used in this class are called consuls-they have no maturity date and pay a fixed amount, say $50 each year. The price of consuls is determined in the bond market For a consul that pay $50/Year Price r (interest) $250 20% $500 10% $1000 5% • Household (savers) will purchase more bonds as the price falls (they get a higher interest rate). • Firms will supply more bonds as the price rises (they pay lower interest rate). • The government doesn’t care. P B S B D B B How savings and borrowing affect bond prices • If household buy more bonds (save more) the demand curve for bonds will shift right and bond prices will rise (interest rates fall) • If the government or firms borrow more the supply curve for bonds will shift to the right and bond prices will fall (interest rates rise). Loanable funds market • Economists prefer to use interest rates rather than bond prices. • Households are lenders. They will lend (save) more if interest rates increase. • Businesses borrow. The will borrow (invest) more if interest rates fall. • Government borrows (G-T). Classical savings function s s0 sr r • sr 0 r s(r)=s 0 +s r r r1 s0 s Classical investment function i (r ) i0 ir r • ir 0 r i(r)=i0 +ir r r1 i1 i0 i Interest rate determination in the classical model • s(r)=i(r) r i(r)=i0 +ir r s(r)=s 0 +s r r re i=s i,s Government budget deficit • Government must borrow (g-t) r s(r) re i(r)+(g- t) i(r) s=i+(g-t) i+(g-t),s