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Professor McElroy TA: Mannig Simidian Review Session for Exam 1 Mechanics: AD/AS FP & MP Review of Basics: Chapter 1-2 (PPF & Classical Mechanics) 1) Most exam questions will revolve around the impact of either a Policy Change (g0, t0 or M0) or an Outside Event (c0, i0, x0 or j0 or k, inst). 2) Read the question carefully to figure out which of these variables change, hence which of the underlying curves will shift. a) c0, i0, and x0 all shift IS & AD (via the z0 term). b) g0 and t0 also shift IS & AD (but in opposite directions). c) j0 shifts LM & AD (with +j0 shifting LM to the left). d) M0 also shifts LM & AD. e) k, inst shift AS* 3) Make the appropriate shifts in the diagram to either IS & AD, LM & AD, or AS*. 4) Now you can read the short and long run effects on y, r, and P directly from the diagram. 5) Once you determine how y, r, and P are affected, you can plug in those effects into equations 1-10 to determine how the rest of the economy is affected. Suppose there is a +x0. Look at the appropriate equation that captures the x0 term: y z 0 g 0 c1t 0) (i 2 x 2)r 1 / (1 c1 c1t 1 x1) z 0 c0 i 0 x 0 Notice that z0 was increased, thus increasing the value of the horizontal intercept which translates into a rightward shift of the IS and AD curves. LM´ r In the short-run, we move along ASSR from point A to point B. But as the output market clears, in the long-run, the price level will increase from P0 to P2. This +P decreases the value of the P LM equation’s horizontal intercept which P2 translates into a leftward shift of the LM p0 curve. ( M 0/ P 0) j 0 j2 j1 r j1 y Finally, this leaves us at point C in both diagrams. P2 IS IS´ C LMP0 B A ASLR C A B y ASSR ADAD´ y Now it’s time to determine the effects on the variables in the economy. For the variables y, p, and r, you can read the effects right off the diagrams. The other variables c, i, x, and b require you to plug in the effects of y and r to determine what happens. Remember that SR is the movement from A to B. y +, because y moved from y* to y´ LM´P2 IS IS´ r LMP0 p 0, because prices are sticky in the SR. C r +, because r rises as IS slides up along the LM curve. c +, because a +y increases the level of consumption (c=c0+c1(y-t)). i – , since r increased, the level of investment decreased (i=i0-i2r). x ?, +r and +y both decrease net exports (?x=x0-x1y-x2r),but since our initial step was a +x, we can’t tell from this information which will dominate. b –, since y rose, tax revenues rise and decrease the deficit (b= g-t). B A p p2 p0 ASLR y C B A y* y´ ASSR AD´ AD y For the variables y, p, and r, you can read the effects right off the diagrams. The other variables c, i, x, and b require you to plug in the effects of y and r to determine what happens. Remember that LR is the movement from A to C. y 0, because rising P shifts LM to left, returning r y to y*as required by long run AS*. P +, in order to eliminate the excess demand at P0. r +, reflecting the leftward shift in LM due to +P. c 0, since both y and t are back to their initial levels.(c=c0+c1(y-t)). i – –, since r has risen even more due to the p + P (i=i0-i2r). x ?, since +r decreases net exports p2 (?x=x0-x1y-x2r),but since our initial p 0 step was a +x0, we can’t tell from this information which will dominate. b 0, because neither FP nor the tax base change (b= g0-t0-t1y). LM´P2 IS IS´ C LMP0 B A ASLR y C B A y* y´ ASSR AD´ AD y If... 1) y= c + i + x + g 2) c= co + ci (y-t) 3) t= to + ti y 4) i= io - i2 r 5) x = xo - xiy -x2 r 6) g = go 7) L/P=M/P 8) L/P=j0+j1y-j2r 9) M=M0 10SR) P=P0 10LR) y*=F(n*,K0,I0nst) IS Aggregate Demand (Equ. 1-9) LM Aggregate Supply What happens if there is a +c0, +i0 or a +x0? What is the impact on y,p,r,c,i,x,b? r IS IS’ LMp2 LMp0 C B A p p2 p0 y ASLR C A ASSR B AD AD’ y 1) Either +c0,+i0or a +x0causes the IS curve to shift right to IS’. 2) This leads to a rightward shift in AD to AD’. Short Run: Move from A to B. Long Run: Market clears at p0 to p2 from B to C. 3) +P causes LMp0 to shift leftward to LMp2. r IS IS’ LMp2 LMp0 C B Short Run: A p p2 p0 y ASLR C A ASSR B AD AD’ y y p r c i x b + 0 + + ? ? - Long Run: 0 + ++ ? ? ? 0 What is the impact of a +g on the macroeconomy? • “It depends” on how the government finances its spending. • It has three options: (+g= +t0) Theft (taxes: coercion now), (+g= +b) Borrowing (bonds: coersion later), (+g= +M0) Counterfeiting (Printing money). Tax-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+g0=+t0) Bond-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+g0=+b) Money-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+g0 =+M0) +g=+t r P P2 P0 +g=+b IS IS LM LM r IS AS* y P P2 ASSR AD AD y IS IS AS* +g=+M LM LM r y P P2 ASSR AD AD LM IS IS AS* LM LM y ASSR AD ADAD y y SR: small impact on AD. SR:stronger impact on AD SR:strongest impact on AD. LR: small impact on P, r. LR:stronger impact on r,P. LR: Stongest impact on y,r. Tax-Financed Increase in Government Spending (+g0=+t0) r IS IS’’ Result: LMp2 IS’ LMp0 A small rightward shift in both IS (IS to IS’’) and AD (AD to AD’’) and a movement along ASSR to point B. E B A Given our IS equation: y=(z0+g0-c1t0)-(i2+x2)r +g shifts IS to IS’. But, +t shifts IS back to the left (to IS ’’). Note: the shift leftward from IS’ to IS ’’ is less than the pE original rightward shift because the tax-multiplier (-c1t0) is less than the expenditure multiplier 0 (). p p y ASLR E A ASSR B AD AD’’ y As the market clears, the rising price level contracts LM and the economy moves to point E. End of Mechanics Fiscal Policy What is Fiscal Policy? • Choices about public spending and how to finance that spending. • It is a system for transfering reserces from the private to public sector. “Private vs. Public Choice” “It Depends” Questions • What is the impact of a +g on the macroeconomy? • What is the size of the national debt and the deficit? • What is the impact of continued b>0 on y,p,r,c,i,x etc..? • Are continued gov’t defecits sistainable? ? What is the size of the national debt and the deficit? Annual Deficit (1997) Annual Deficit (1996) Annual Deficit (1995) ……. …... National Debt A meaningful deficit... • Exclude funds borrowed from federal agencies. • Include the deficits of local and stage governments. • Modify the real value of outstanding public debt. to reflect current inflation. • Include hidden liabilities that currently escape detection in accounting system. The Cyclical Deficit • Changes in the cash flow deficit arise purely from fluctuations of real output (y) around its full employment level. • For example: A recession causes a lower tax base and therefore decreases the government collections. t=t0+t1y b=g-t Structural Deficit • Reflects one or more changes in the fiscal policy instruments g0 or t0 and results in a shift in the IS and AD curves. g0, t0, or t1 Monetary Policy Money Commodity Symbol Invention Without Money Self-suffiency Barter Functions of Money • • • • Make Transactions Store Purchasing Power Measure Economic Performance Measure fullfillment of contracts Here’s what Money Does... Monetization brings efficiency... PPF1 PPF2 nst i ) The better the money, the farther out the PPF. How does money do this? Fiat money: A declaration of legal tender. Back to Classical Model: Quantity Theory of Money • MV=Py • Take the logs: ln M + ln V = ln P + ln y • Next solve for ln P: ln M +ln V - ln y = ln P • Then, take the derivative of the logs to get the percent changes: d ln M dt + d ln V d ln y d ln P = dt dt dt %M + %V - %y* = %P = P Growth of Money Supply + Growth of Money Demand - Growth of output = Inflation (P ) %M = %y* - %V Non-inflationary condition for Monetary Policy. How does the Fed Control the Money Supply? • To expand the Money Supply: They buy ___________ and pay for it with new money. • To reduce the Money Supply: They sell ___________ and receive the existing dollars and then destroy it. But this is difficult to do… The criteria for choosing__________. 1. Storage Cost 2. Equity U.S. Treasury Bonds •To expand the Money Supply: They buy U.S. Treasury Bonds and pay for it with new money. •To reduce the Money Supply: They sell U.S. Treasury Bonds and receive the existing dollars and then destroy it. The Fed Controls the Money Supply through... 1) Open Market Operations (buying and selling U.S. Treasury bonds). 2) Reserve Requirements (never really used). 3) Discount rate which member banks can borrow from the Fed (not meeting the reserave requirements). What impact does M have on y, p, r….? • Whether y=y*, or y<y*. • Whether SR or LR. • Continued +M or one shot +M. • Depends on Interest Rates (nominal or real). Fisher Equation: R = r + Pe Actual (Market) Nominal rate of interest Real rate of interest Inflation One shot +M +M SR -r +y -R r IS +LM, +AD . A In the short-run, prices are stickey, so inflation is zero. (Point A to B.) Plug in the latter effects of the AD/AS diagram into the fisher equation to see the effect on the Nomonal interest rate (R). e 0 R= r+ P In the long-run, prices will adjust so quickly to point c, that the market will not incur any inflation, despite the new price level P1. LR r =R =y=0 LM P P1 P0 LM’ . B . . . y C A B AD y AD’ Continuous +M (Increasing rate of gr wth of the money suppy) SR: The AD/AS diagram +M tells us....-r +y LR: Prices adjust, shifting LM back leftward, r =0, but with +P. The fisher equation tells us +Pe +R (R=0r+Pe) In the LR, prices will adjust and the Nominal Interest Rate (R) will rise. Any attempts to -r, at y* will only increase the price level and R. Money Neutrality: “You can’t print your way to prosperity.” Changes in Monetary Policies have no lasting effect on r, but changes in Fiscal Policies do. Distinction between Short-term and Long-term Interest Rates on Bonds (3 mos.) RST= r + Pe (10 yr.) RLT= r + Pe How will the bond market react to a sudden +M, what happens to R? +M SR -r RST LR r =0 + DPe You would be quite rich if you predict interest rates.