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Money Output & Prices in the Long Run Chapter 14-4 The Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of an Increase in the Money Supply LAS Curve LAS • Estimating potential output is inexact, so it is assumed to be the middle of a range bounded by a high level of potential output and a low level of potential output. C • The relationship between Price Level B A potential and actual output – where the economy is on SAS – determines shifts in SAS. SAS • When resources are over-utilized Underutilized resources (point C), factor prices may be bid up and the SAS shifts up. Overutilized resources • When resources are under-utilized Lowlevel potential output High-level potential output Real output (point A), factor prices may decrease and SAS shifts down. • When LAS = SAS (point B), there is no pressure for prices to rise or fall. Price level Inflationary Gap • An inflationary gap is the LAS amount by which equilibrium output is above potential output. D P2 SAS2 C SAS C 0 P0 AD Inflationary gap YP Real Y2 output • If the economy is at point C, resources are being used beyond their potential and the inflationary gap is YP – Y2. • If resources are used beyond their potential, eventually wages and prices increase. SAS shifts up to SAS2 and the economy is in long-run and short-run equilibrium at D at a higher price level, P2. Neutrality In the long run, changes in the money supply affect the aggregate price level but NOT real GDP or the interest rate. Monetary Neutrality In fact, there is monetary neutrality: changes in the money supply have no real effect on the economy. So monetary policy is ineffectual in the long run. This is the main point of this section! The Long-Run Relationship Between Money and Inflation MV=PQ Do you remember the above? The previous graph is showing that more money = higher prices We know this to be true in the long run, there is debate about the short run.