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Macroeconomics issues relatingto an economyasa whole,suchas unemployment, Macroeconomics examines is thuson Thefocusof macroeconomics inflation,groMh and the balanceof payments. agEregateeconomicvariables. goals Macroeconomi€ the following: governments aim at achieving and policymakers Generally, growth; satisfactoryand sustainablereal(non-inflationary) pricestability(whichimplieslow or no inflation); (andlow unemployment); highlevelsof employment rate(or,that the and the exchange in the balanceof payments long+unequilibrium policyobjectives); domestic on achieving foreignsectorshouldnot imposea constraint (fair) of income. equitable distribution activity Measuring overalleconomic Grossdomestic Grossdomesticproduct(GDP)is perhapsthe singlemost variable and it is definedasthe importantmacroeconomic valueof all flnal goodsand servicesproduceduzlthlnan economyover a certainperiodof time, usuallya yearor a quarter(by faclorsof productionresidingin the counlry) Bearin mindthat: . Onlyfinalgoodsand services are included..Intermediate goods(goodsusedin the productionof other goods) (definedasthe Onlythe 'value-added' are not included. a firm collectsfrom total revenues differencebetweenthe services good materials, the cost of raw of a and the sale to producethe and components the firm purchased good) contributedby eachfirm is included.lf a// produced goodsand services doublecountingwould were included, of the true valueof output. resultandthusoverestimation Usedgoodstransactions(e.9.the saleof a usedcar)are currentproduction. not includedsinceGDPmeasures (suchasthe buyingand sellingof Financial transactions shares,etc.)are not includedsincethey representonly (of the financialasset)and theydo transferof ownership not refleda contribution to currentproductlon. payments (suchaspensions and unemployment Transfer do not reflecta since they benefits) are not included current output. contribution to Thus: . Nominal GDP(or moneyGDP,or GDPai currentprices) Note that eventhough we are truly interestedln an is a measureof output of a cerlainperiodvaiuedat the output measure,we are forcedto sum values(pricestimes pricesprevailingin that sameperiod. dependentnot quantities) whichmakesour GDPmeasure . RealGDP(or GDPat constantprices)is a measure of but onlyon outputchanges(inwhichwe areinterested) pricesprevailing period valued at the output of a certain alsoon pricechanges(whichtypicallydo not interestus). period(knownasthe 'base'periodor, at some'reference' years lhr,s companson of GDPlguresi't successive year). measure of oulpul after having isolated base lt is a becomesa problemsince,assumingthat an increasein (or adjustedfar) the effect of inflation.lt is thus measured GDPis recorded,we cannotknow whetherthe bigger in termsof goods.Rea/GDPfiguresreflectthe voiumeof figure is due to an increasein output of goodsand services production,not the vaiue. (an producedor whetherit is due to an increasein prices . Toarriveat the realGDPfigurefor a certainyearwe increasein the generalor averagepricelevel,i.e.due to dividenominalGDPof that yearby a priceindexfor inflation).In otherwords,we cannotknow to what extent that year(usually the retailor consumerpriceindex)and the increasein the nominal(money)GDPfigure recordedis rrLlt,ply the resulT by 100: 'real'andto what extentit is'inflationary'. RealcDP = (nominalGDP/priceindex) * 100 . Forexample.if GDPmeasured at currentpricesincreased from one yearto the next by 5.5%, it cannot be known Ny'any other economicvariablesare alsooften adjusted what oroportionof this increaseis due to an output for inflation.Oneof the mostimportantfor our purposes is due to inflationlt could increase andwhat proDortion is the money(or nominal)wagerate,the paymentto by,say,4%(i.e. that outputincreased be,for example, workers.The real wage is the wage rate adjustedfor by 4%) and that the remaining1.5olo realGDPincreased inflationand it is found by dividingit by the averaqelevel price i.e. inflation,or that levelincreases, was due to of prices.lt thus measures what workerscan actuallybuy onlyby 0.5% and pricesby 5 0% outputincreased with the moneytheyearn.lf a workergetsa 5yoincrease NominalGDPvs.real GDP 63 Thedistinction betweenmacroeconomics and microeconomics did not alwaysexist.Asa matterof fact, it is relatively newandstartedto bewidelyknownonly afterWorldWarll asa resultof the publication in '1936of lhe GeneralTheory of Employment,lnterestand Money writtenbyJohnMaynardKeynes who transformed the theoretical landscape of economics. . Figure3.1serves asa verybroadguideto the evolution of ideasin macroeconomics andpolicymaking. Eg|.Fe3.1 Timeline :---' ! . rsro __-_______-_---___----_--_---------------l | 1929 1935 : h-t929: The ctassical thoughtl 3ld@ l o f :'l-ssez-{aire, laissez. Fe/, Marketforces . tBrantee that an : a(onolnywill rest at, or . dce to {ullemolovment: There is thus no need {or ! tn government to t ftervene. (non-€divistg) Keyner'''General Theo4/ is publishedin 1936.There is no guaranteethata marketeconomywill rest at Sullemployment'. Thus, thereis an activerole{oa the government. Through f iscalpolicythe governmentcanstabilizethe economyand achievefull employment. Keynesian int€rventionistideasreign afterWWll until the mld 1970s.(activists) In th€ 1970s,Monetariim emerges at the university of chi(agowith Nobel PrizelaureateMilton FriedmEn beingthe most widely-knownadvocateo{ monetaristideas, Monetarirtsslowly deconstructed the Keynesian edifice,initially doubtingthe effectiveness of fiscalpolicyand later suggesting that even monetarypolicyshouldbe avoided.Markets'rule', In the 1980stheRational ExpeatationsSchool(l{ew Classic€l) of thought throughthe work of Lucat,Sargentand others emerges; the SupplySlde is emphasized. Theroleof the govelnmentisfurther questionedand relian<e on marketforcesisfurther emphasized. The Gen6ralTheorywas written in response to th€ GreatDepiesrionwhich startedin 1929and markedthe greatestand longestcontractionof output and employmentin the 20thcentury TheEestAsiancrisisin 1997{ (astdoubtson extremepro-market policiesand on the '\ilrashingtonConJensus'. lvlany5peak of the ne<essit}l to manage globalizatlon. Inequalitiet within and between countriesare rising, 65 Theconcept of equilibrium in economics Essentially, the conceptmeansthe sameas in the scjences: a systemis consideredto be in equilibrium if thereare no inherent(endogenous) forcesinducingchange. In our case,an economy(or economjcactivity, i.e.nationalincome,GDi) is consjdered to be in equilibrium if thereis no tendencyfor it to change(i.e.for the levelof total output to riseor fall). In equilibrium, aggregate demand(AD;seebelow)is equalto aggregate supply(AS;see page67) or, as explainedon page 69, injections(J)must equalwithdrawals 0iV). Introducing aggregate demandandaggregate supply Aggregatedemand . The term aggregate demand (AD)refersto total Figure 3.2 The aggregate demand curve s0endingon domesticgoodsand services. . Spending canoriginateeitherfrom the private sector (households andfirms)or from the oublic sector. 3 . Private sectorspendingincludes consumptjon .9 expenditures (C)thathouseholds makeand investment (l)that firmsmake. expenditures . Thepublicsectorexpenditures areusuallytermed government (G)in whichboth consumption expenditures and capitalpublicspendingare incluaeo. . Spending on domesticAoodscanalsooriginatefrom abroad.Theseare the exports(X)of an economy.Since (=c+t+G+NX) someof domesticspendingis on foreigngoods,imports (M) are subtractedto arriveat aggregatedemand. RealOutput/ Income(Yr) A D= C+ l+ G + ( X -M ) Theaggregate demandcurve(Fig.3.2) is downward slopjngbut not for the samereasons that the demandfor a singlegood is downwardsloping,as on the verticalaxjs we havethe averagepriceof all goodsand not of one good.In macroeconomics aggregate demandis negatively slopedbecause,as the averageprice levelincreases, plannedspendingdecreases peoplefeelpoorer because and domesticproductsbecomelesscompetitiveabroad. Tips DrawtheADeitherasa straight lineor slightly curved. It iseasierthoughto drawit with a ruler.Makesure youfullylabeltheaxes. Thevertical isnot ,price. but the'average pricelevel'as it isaggregate demand and notdemand for onegoodor a service. Thehorizontal is oftendenoted as'e'. Thisshouldbeavoided asit again ,CDp,should mayleadto confusion. alsobeavoided asGDPrefersto the actualoutputproduced andnot to planned output.'Realoutpuvincome, andyr are oftenconsidered anappropriate choice. Remember that outputandincome areconceptually identical terms. Aggregatesupply Figure3.3Theshort-runaggregatesupply:the typicalcase Aggregatesupply is definedasthe plannedlevelof output per periodat differentpricelevels. in The shapeof aggregatesupplyis controversial macroeconomics. 3 g betweenthe longrun It is instructive to initiallydistinguish (when all adjustmentshavebeenmade)and the short run (whenonlysomeadjustments arepossible). In the long run,aggregate supplyof an economyis and by its constrainedby the amount of its resources technology.As a result,Iong-runaggregatesupply(LRAS) level fixed(vertical) at the 'full employmenr' is considered areemployed. of outputwhereall resources Typically, in the shortrun though.As canrisesincefirms will be willingto offer moreif pricesrisebut money wagesincreaseat a slowerrate. Theslopeof the ASdetermines to what extenta rrse(i.e. as a risein real a shift to the right) of AD will be expressed RealOutput/ Income(Yr) output and thus employmentand to what extent it will be SeeFig.3.3. asa risein prices(i.e.inflation). expressed Variationsin aggregatesupp supplycurve Keynesian aggregate Theextreme TheintermediateKeynesian aggregaiesupplycurve demand that, asaggregate It is moreplausible to consider belowthe Foran economythat is operatingsignificantly increases, some industrieswill reachcapacitylevelsof full employmentlevelof output. the extremeKeynesian output beforeothers.An economyafter all consistsof aggregatesupplyis assumedperfectlyelasticat the many differentindustrieseachemployingmany different prevailingaverageprice level. for example, types of factorsof production.Engineers, 'operatingsignificantly means belowfull employment' than bricklayers. may be in shorter supply but to work many workers eager that there are very in AD, output Thisimpliesthat,followingan increase and unableto find a job aswell as manymachines but priceswill in the economycancontinueto increase factoriesavailablethat are not being used. upward givingriseto an 'intermediate' alsobe increasing in aggregate demandwill be expressed Thus,any increase supplycurveasin slopingsectionHFon the aggregate in the asa risein realoutputwithoutanyincrease Fi g.3.5. averagepricelevel.The expansionof output can take As the economyis getting closerand closerto the placewithout firms havingto offer higherwage ratesto full employmentlevelof output Yfe the aggregate attract moreworkersand face highercosts. . Oncethe economyreachedthe full employmentlevelof supplycurvebecomessteeperand steeperAt the full employmentlevelof output it becomesvertical. outputYfe asin Fig.3.4 then ASwould becomevertical. . Any further increasein aggregatedemandcannot lead aggregatesupplycurve Figure3.5TheintermediateKeynesian to an expansionof output asthere are no more factors demand in aggregate available to employ.Theincrease will onlyleadto a higherpricelevel. t case Figure3.4The aggregatesupplycurve:extremeKeynesian ; .E 3 t Y fe RealOutput/ Income(Yr) Yfe RealoutDut/ In<ome(Yr) 67 .lt E o c (u (o |rt Theclassical(andextrememonetarist)aggregatesupply curve . The Classical Schoolaswell as the extrernel\y'onetarists viewedthe economyas producingwhateverits resources and technology would permit. . Aggregatesupplywouldthusbe vertical. as in Fig.3.6, at the full employment levelof outputand anychangein aggregate demandwouldonlyaffectthe priceleveland no realvariable. Thelong-runaggregatesupplycurve . In the longrun,definedasthe periodwhen ail adlustments arepossible and moneywagesarefiexible, the aggregate supplycurveis verticalat the full (capacily) employment levelof outputasshownin Fig. 3.7. lt canbe thoughtof as roughlythe equivalent of the production possibilities f rontier Figure3.7Thelong-runaggregate supplycurve Figure3.6 The aggregatesupplycurve:the classical and extreme monetarist case d 3 g g RealOutput/ Income(Yr) Real Output / Income (Yr) WhichAS do I use? Theansweris 'it depends'lTypically one shouldemploy an upwardslopingAS as in Fig.3.3or in sectionHFof Fig.3.5. lt showsthat an increase in aggregate demand will leadto an increase in the averagepricelevel (inflation) aswell asto an increase in realoutputandthus employment.lt alsoshowsthat the effect on the average pricelevelof a risein AD is more pronouncedthe steeper the AS becomesor, in other words,the closerto capacity (to full employment) an economyis operating. On the otherhand,if onewishesto illustrate an economy In long-runequilibrium when all adjustments aremade, then a verticalASat the fu/l employment levelof outputis in order(Fig.3.7). Lastly, the extremeKeynesian (Fi9.3.4; horizontalup untilYfe)andthe extremelvonetarist (Fig.3.6; aswell as Classical and New Classical) casescouldbe employedonly if one wishesto show the differencesin theseschoolsof economicthought. Injectionsand withdrawalsin representation Thecircularflow model is a simplified unitsof an economy of how the basicdecision-making (households, and,in an 'open' firms,the government economy,the foreignsector)interact.lt describesthe flows betweentheseunits. At the most basicversion,wherethereare only households and firms, it is understoodthat householdsown the factors of productionwhich they offer to firms.In exchange,firms offer paymentsfor thesefacrorsin the form of wages, rents,interestand profits,the sum of which is definedas income.Firmscombinethesefactorsto producegoods and services whlch they offer to householdsin returnfor paymentsthat constituteconsumptionexpenditures on producedgoods. domestically Also,part of incomemay be saved(a 'withdrawal'from thissystem) whilefirmswill alsospendon capitalgoods (= investment is an Thislatterexpenditure spending). 'injection'to the system. (investment spending) Forequilibrium to exist,injections must equalwithdrawals(savings). lf ihe governmentand a foreignsectorare added then injections alsoincludegovernment spendingon producedgoodsandservices domestically aswell as expenditures makeon our goods that {oreigners (= exports), whilewithdrawals alsoincludeexpenditures that domesticentitiesmakeon foreign goods(= imports) aswell astaxesthe governmentcollects. Thetradeor business cycle . Lastly, the ideaof potentialGDP(whenall resources are Theupsand downs(phases) throughtime of the levelof (in fully of real GDP) are employed) canbe illustrated eitherasa peak-to-peak overalleconomicactivity otherwords lineor asa separate linelocatedslightlyaboveall peaksin referredto as the trade cycle (or businesscycle).l\,4ore the trade(business) cyclediagram. formally,the business cycleis definedasthe short-run fluctuations of realGDParoundits long-runtrend. Figure3.8 Thetrade(orbusiness) cycle Periodsof expansion('booms')are followed by periods of contraction(recession,busts).The downturn3 major lf on is increasing levelsof unemployment. characteristic the other hand expansionis 'too rapid' it rnaygive riseto pressures. inflationary ldeally, steady, sustainable, non-inflationary long-termgroMh would be desirable. average Theeconomydepictedin Fig.3.8 is a growingeconomy. annual long run GroMh existswhen totaloutputrisesthroughtime; growm a sustained increase in realcDP lt followsthat this I boom economyis growingbetweentime periodt2 and t3 l rough but alsooverthe long run asthe 'trendline'is upward sloping.The trendlinereflects the averageannual long-rungrowthof the economy. Real Betweentime t1 and t2 the economyis in recession. for at leasttwo consecutive GDPis decreasing(technically, Tip quarters) negative andthusthe economyis registering groMh rates.At t1 it was at a peak(aswell as at t3). At Makesurethatafteryoufinishdrawing thetradecycle t2 it is at a trough and it is about to enter recovery there is only one level of real GDP corresponding to each (from, Notethal if the groMh rate is decreasing say, period time a t. A comrnon error is to draw it in such 2.1% to 0.aok)realGDPcontinues to increase but at a way point 't' that horizontal axis there at each on the slowerand slowerrate.Variousexpressions are usedto aremorethanonecorresoondino levels of realGDP describe thisphase,e.g.'the economyis losingsteam'or 'it is peakingout' 'approaching An economy recession'. justto aboutto enterrecession is,in Fig.3.8,somewhere the riohtof a oeak. Thecomponents of aggregate demand . Consumptionexpenditures(C)are madeby househoids on goodsand services. In manyadvanced economies consumption expenditures arethe largestcomponent (about60% or more)of aggregate demand.In other economies this proportionis significantly lower !, ratesmeanthat borrowingto financethesepurchases is now cheaperfor households. Thesinglelargestexpenditure of a typicalhousehold is the purchaseof its house.Householdsborrowfrom banksto financethis purchase and thesespecialized verylong-termloansare knownas mortgageloans. The interestrate chargedon suchloansis often 'adjustable', meaningthat if marketinterestrates decrease,mortgagerateswill alsodecreaseand so will the monthlypayments. Households with suchhousing loanswill thus havemoremoneyavailable everymonth to spendon goodsand services. A drop in interestrateswill makesaving(definedas incomenot spenton goodsand services) lessattractive so households will tendto savelessand spendmore. The levelof consumerindebtedness lf private(household) debt(fromtakingout loans, mortgagesfor housepurchase,and/orcreditcard spending) hasaccumulated, household spendingis bound to declineas they will needto pay more and more to servicetheir debt. Severalfactorsmay affect spendingby householdsand lead to a shiftin AD. Themostimportantfactorsinclude: . Consumerconfidence Households feelingsecureand confidentabouttheir futurewill tendto spendmore.A stableand growing economywith low inflationand unemployment will boost consumerconfidenceand thus favorablyaffect household spending, shiftingAD to the right.On the otherhand, uncertaintyoverfuture job prospectsand insecurityabout one'sfuture incomeadverselyaffect presentconsumption. Spending on durablegoods,suchas carsand appliances, aswell as on housing,aregreatlyaffectedby consumer moods. . Interest rates (the priceof borrowingmoneyover a periodof time) Lowerinterestrates(i.e.easymonetary policy)willtend . Wealth to increase consumption expenditures, and consequently The total valueof a household'sassetsmay affect the the overalllevelof aggregate demand,shiftingthe AD levelof its spending.lf, for example,wealth increases curveto the right. Thismay happenbecause: then consumptionwill be positivelyaffected.A stock . Consumer goods(cars, durable appliances, furniture, marketboom or risingpropertyvaluestendsto increase etc.)areusuallvpurchased on credit.Lowerinterest spendingand lowersavings. Investmentspending Investmentspending(l) is definedasspendingby firms on capitalgoodsand is thusequalto the changein the stockof capitalof an economyover a period.When firms spendto acquirecapital (K)we saythat they invest. Investmentis important both becauseof its short-run Factorsaffectinginvestmentspending . Interest rates Investment spendingrequires funds,whichareeither borrowedfrom the banksor are part of past-retained firm profits.lf firms borrow,they will be chargedinterest on the loan,whileif they usetheirown funds,they will sacrificethe return(interest)that they would have earnedfrom investing the funds.Consequently, a fall in the marketinterestrate will tend to rncre.tseInvesrmenr spendingin the economyas at lower interestratesmore investmentprojectswill be consideredprofitable. influence on aggregate demandand because in the long run it affectsaggregatesupplyand thus the rate of (actualand potential)groMh of an economy.Investment spendingis the mostvolatilecomponentof aggregate oemand. Figure3.9 Investmentspendingand intered rates c f one plotsinvestment spendingagainstthe marketinterest rateas in Fig.3.9,the functionwill be negatively sloped. How responsive investment spendingof firmsisto a change in lnterestrates(i.e.how elastic) is an empirical issue. InvestmentSpending(l) per perio. lnvestment Business confidence The greaterthe degreeof businessconfidencein an the morewillingfirmswill be to investand economy, expand.Economic and politicalstabilityare necessary for investmentsto take place.J. M. Keynesconsidered with respectto private the behaviourof entrepreneurs similarto that of a herd('imitation') investment decisions of investments instability and,in hisopinion,the observed canbe spirits'.Expectations wasdue to these'animal factors by a hostof unpredictable changedradically business climate leadingto wild swingsin the prevailing spendin9. and thusto changesin the levelof investment Publicpolicytoward investment . Governmentsoften attempt to influenceinvestmenlby preferential loan firms, subsidies, incentives to offeringtax terms,protectionfrom foreigncompetition,etc. Note rhat the sizeitselfof the publicsectorin an economy may influencethe growth of privaleinvestment.Also bear in mind that'institutions'affect privateinvestments (of'red tape')and complicated A largebureaucracy of firmsin a country theoperation regulations burden Investment of investment. andnegatively affectthe rate paribus, withlow higherin countries levels are,ceteris economic levels oi bureaucracy andwilhtransparent adversely corruption Lastly, andbusiness environments. foreigndirectinvestment affectsinvestment, especially (investments in foreign corporations bymultinational counlrresJ. The overallmacroeconomicenvironment where environment A 'sound'macroeconomic policymakers ensurelow inflation,low budgetdeficits, publicdebtandflexiblelabourmarketsusually sustainable spending. leadsto higherratesof investment Incomeand its groMh andthus flisingincomeleadsto risingconsumption may inducemore investmentsasfirms may be forcedto increasetheir capacityto meetthis increaseddemandfor goodsand services. Thisis the ideaof the 'accelerator' DrinciDle discussed below principle Theaccelerator a shoemaker needsone new machinefor Forexample, the level Theaccelerator is a theoryaimingat explaining pairs produced. lf salesriseby 20,000 10,000 extra every of investmentin an economy. his stock of capitalby two then he will need to change on depends Thistheoryclaimsthat the levelof investment to outputratio. the fixed capital extra machines to maintain (more generally, in changes changesin nationalincome period two machines. thus equal Investment in that would or in sales). output,in demand, instability It provides an additionalreasonfor the observed that for annual it follows Generalizing for an economy, of investmenl spendingand,togetherwith the multiplier investmentto remainstabletotal sales(total output or of (explained the existence later),it is a theoryexplaining natronalincome)haveto be rsing at a constantrate.lf the business(trade)cycle. they meantne samething output(or income;remernoer theory eventhough to rise It is consideredpart of Keynesian asthe one is the flip sideof the other)continues Keyneshimselfconsideredexpectatlons(animalspirits) but at a slower rate (thus,if groMh just slowsdown) muchmoreimportant. investment will decrease. that firmswishto restson the assumption Theaccelerator Investment is thusa veryvolatilecomponentof AD. maintaina fixedcapitalto outputratio. Governmentspending a large Governmentspending(G)is in manyeconomies partof totalspendingon goodsand services. into current Government spendingis distinguished capital (public spendingon goodsand services. investment) spendingwhichrefersto spendingon schoolsand other roads,ports,telecommunications, infrastructureand alsoon transfer payments which benefits. and unemployment basically referto pensions arenot includedin national Notethat transferpayments incomesincethey do not representrewardsfor current productiveeffort. Governmentsspendto ensurethat adequateamounts areconsumed of publicand meritgoodsand services and health services suchas nationaldefence,educational services. Theyspendto regulatemarketsin their attempt to guaranteeproductsafety,environmentalstandards, compeiitiveconditions,etc. Theymay alsospendto minimum acceptable redistribute incomeso that a socially statepensions, is guaranteed. suchspendingincludes benefits,etc. disability unemployment benefits.subsidies. . Lastly,they spendto affect aggregatedemand.By government aggregate spendjng, increasing or decreasing shiftingto the rightor demandwill increase or decrease, to the left.Thisis partof what is knownasfiscalpolicy. G.'"'; ;;;;;p""ai"t .."*."J (Net)exportdemand(NX,ot X-M) Foreigners spendto buy domesticallyproducedgoodsand services but sincepartof domesticspendingis on imports it followsthat aggregatedemandis affectedand shifts when net exportschange,the differencebetweenexport revenues and importspending. Manyfactorscan changethe levelof net exportsand thus shift AD, suchasthe exchangerate and the extent of proteclonrsm. supply of aggregate A closerexamination Adversesupply shocks Figure3.10 An adversesupplyshockasa resultof higher that negatively affecta country's Thesearechanges oil Drices productive Theyresultin a shiftto the left capacity. sustained supplycurve.A sharpand of the aggregate suchexample. increase in thepriceof oil isa typical andisusedasan oil istheprincipal formof energy -9 thoughhas inputbyvirtually allfirms.ltssignificance 'i in recentyearsasa decreased in advanced economies fromthe tertiary biggerproportion of GDPoriginates sector(services). A bankneedslessoil to operatethan of an adverse Anotherexample a carmanufacturer. in wagecostsfor firms supplyshockisgeneralincrease asa resultof powerfullabour(trade)unions.A broad (raw or highercommodity increase taxation in indirect pricesarealsopossible sources of suchadverse material) (suchasthose supplyshocks. Lastly, naturalcatastrophes a fewyears agoor froman resulting fromthetsunami attacks wars,majorterrorist earthquake or a hurricane), mayshrink theprodudive andinstitutional setbacks (Yr) RealoutPut/ In(ome andshiftASto the left. capacity of an economy eitherby An adverse supplyshockcanbe illustrated Figure3.11 An adversesupplyshockasa resultof a corrupt leftwardshiftof an upwardslopingshort-runaggregate governmenttaking power supplycurveor by leftwardshiftof a verticallong-run aggregate supplycurveasit doesnot makemuch9f a difference. Asa broadrule,inputor factorprice-related 3 witha illustrated supply shocks shouldbepreferably .;9l curveshifting supply sloping aggregate short-run upward of a sharpand left.Thus,the effecton an economy I sustained increase of the priceof oil canbe bettershown through Fig.3.10. of a shockis because on the otherhand,if the adverse (e.9.a new setback naturalcatastrophe or an institutional prone government or proves mostindustries nationalizes byshifting isperhaps bestillustrated to corruption)this levelof output letMarda verticalat the full employment in Fig. 3.'11. long-run supply curve. as aggregate Yfe2 Yfel RealOutpul/ Income(Yr) How could Figure3.12 A rightwardshift in aggregatesupply supplyisa positive A rightwardshiftin a99regate in an increase asit implies development for aneconomy equivalent Sinceit isconceptually itsproductive capacity. possibilities frontier to an outwardshiftof the production I for shifting anyfactorresponsible of an economy, .g possibilities frontierof an outwardthe productlon economy willalsoshiftitsAScurveto theright. may of aneconomy capacity Firstof all,the productive increase supplyshiftto the rightif anditsaggregate aswellas Investment humanandphysical capitalincrease. increases andhealthservices moreandbettereducation (outputperworker)andthusaggregate labourproductivity (e.9.the assembly line advancements supply. Technological framework institutional or the internet) andan improved (including business simplified a betterlegalsystem, credible betterbankingpractices, rulesandregulations, governance') policymaking Yfel Yfe2 andmoregenerally'good RealOutput/ Income(Yr) supply. shiftof the aggregate bothleadto a rightward asin the caseof oil Lastly, more'land'(throughdiscovery, reserves or annexation) wouldalsodo thejob. A rightwardshift of a verticallong-runAS curveshouldbe to usean upwardsloping employedbut it is acceptable aggregatesupplycurveaswell. obviouslygovernmentsattemptto and can influencethe supplysideof an economy.Fewwould disagreethat a governmentcan increaseaggregatesupplyby improving and education.Or,for that matter,that healthcareservices publicinvestmentin infrastructure would havethe same effectas it createssignificantexternalbenefitsto firms in the form of lower produdion costs.But beyondthese which disagreement, obviouschoicesthere is considerable laterin the sectionon supply-sidepolicies. will be discussed Note that rarelya shift to the right of As can be a source of significantproblemsif this increasein the productive in capacityof an economyis not matchedby increases spendingon domesticoutputi.e.on AD as it may leadto deflation(examinedlater).Also,the discoveryof a natural as many resource suchasoil canbe a mixedblessing countrieshavefound out. 3 RealOutput/ Income(Yr) Theeffectsof AD/ASshifts The AD-AS The aggregatedemand-aggregatesupplyf ramework is very simplebut alsovery useful.Movementsof the averagepriceleveland of realoutput provideinformation on threemajorpolicygoals.Inflation (anddeflation)as well as groMh can be directlyillustratedon the diagram canbe and unemployment whilechangesin employment indirectly inferred. lt follows that lfgovernment is in a position to affed aggregatedemandthen it may be in a positionto achievethe macroeconomic Aoalsmentionedin the very beoinninq. Effectsof a rightward shift in .g E o o l, (u (E ,rl Aggregatesupplyin thiscaseis horizontalup untilthe full employment levelof outputYfewhereit becomes vertical. LetYfe be the full employment levelof output.lf aggregate demandis at AD1 then equilibrium outputis at Y1 which is way belowthe full employment level.In the Keynesian framework,equilibrium outputis'demand-driven', meaning that it is aggregate demandwhichdetermines how much the economywill be producing and thusthe levelof national Income.As a result: . Equilibrium income(output)doesnot needto correspond Figure3.13 TheextremeKeynesian case:perfedly elastic aggregate supply I .g to full employment (seeFig.3.13). of resources . A deflationary(or recessionary) gap equalto distance fh in Fig.3.13 results. (or recessionary) A deflationary exists when equilibrium output is lessthanfull 9ap employment output. . lf aggregate demandsomehowincreased to AD* then the economywill havereachedfull employment. . Expansionary policies demand-side canlift an economy out of a recession withoutanyinflationresulting. Ontheotherhand,if aggregate pastAD* demand increases to AD2,theninflation results withoutanyfurtherincrease n outputandemployment. Distance hj isknownasan inflationary 9ap. Effectsof a rightward shift in aggregate Aggregatesupplyin thiscaseis perfectlyinelastic (vertical) at the full employment levelof output,reflecting the belief that an economywill alwaysbe in equilibrium at the full employment levelof output. . Aggregatedemandin thiscasedoesnot determine 'real'variables, suchas how muchoutputthe economy will produce,or what the levelof employment will be. Realoutputis determined by the quantityand qualityof available resources and by technology. . Aggregatedemandonlydetermjnes the averageprice level.ln Fig.3.14,if aggregate demandincreases from AD1 to AD2,then realoutputwill remainat Yfe and only inflationwill resultasthe averagepricelevelwill risefrom P1to P2. . lt followsthat expansionary policies demand-side are totally ineffectivein increasingrealoutput and employment and canonlyproveinflationary. In the long run,the equilibrium levelof realoutputcanbe increased onlythroughpolicies aimingat the supplysideof the economy. Figure3.14 Theextrememonetaristcase:verticalAScurve at Yfe q 9l RealOutput/ Income(Yr) Effects Figure3.15 The intermediatecase:upward-sloping aggregate sloping, Aggregate supply in Fig.3.15isdrawnupward supprycurve equilibrium is assumed reflecting thetypicalcase.Originally, at the intersection of AD1andASwith Y1 beingthe price equilibrium levelor realoutputandP'lthe average tevet. q in aggregate demandfromADl to AD2can An increase E in increasing realoutputfromYl to Y2 andthus succeed pricelevelis but at a cost.Theaverage employment, isthepricepaid. higherat P2soinflation in aggregate demandwill Theextentto whichan increase on be expressed asgroMhof outputor inflationdepends in other howcloseto capacity the economyisoperating, wordson how steepit is. policies can thatdemand-side Thisdiagramthusreveals but at the cost be usedto raiseoutputandemployment of higherinflation,or to lowerinflationbut at the costof slowergrowthor recession. Effe€ts aggregate Figure3.16 The possiblerole of rupply-sidepolicies Thepossible effectof policyattemptsto increase supply areillustrated in Fig.3.16. . lt is assumed demandis risingthrough thataggregate 3 are timefromAD1to AD2.lf somehowpolicymakers !u aggregate supplyof the economy successful in increasing a risein outputwithouta thentheywill haveachieved groMh. pricelevel,i.e.non-inflationary risein the average i rip I i I i i AScurves(A51 one canemploytypicalupward-sloping to use to A52)to arriveat thisresultbut it is preferable long-runverticalaggregate supplycurves(LRASIto level LRA52) asthisshowsthatthefutl employment of outputwillhaveincreased. i : i i Yfel Yfu2 RealOutput/ In@me(Yr) policies Demand-side . policiesattemotto increaseor decrease (or, Demand-side in aggregate moreprecisely, to slow down the increase) demandin orderto affectoutput (groMh),employment and the averagepricelevel(laterit will be shownthat these samepoliciesare alsousedto correcta trade imbalance policies), and are referredto asexpenditure-changing Theyaredistinguished intofiscalpolicyandmonetary policy.Fiscal policyrefersto the manipulation of the levelof government and/orof taxeswhile expenditures policyrefersto changes monetary in interestrates. E Fiscalpolicy (reflationary)fiscalpolicy Expansionary . . . . . Keynesintroducedthe ideathat the (equilibrium) level of outputwas demand-driven. The levelof aggregate demanddetermines the levelof overalleconomicactivity. Thereisthusno guarantee thatequilibrium outputandfull employmentoutputwill coincide.Therecouldverywell gap(seeFigs3.13and3.33).Aggregate be a deflationary demandcouldbe insufficent if, for whateverreason,the privatesector(households and firms)decidesto hold back on theirspending.A recession couldthus result.Hethus introducedthe ideaof expansionary fiscalpoliry(seebelow). (reflationary) Expansionary fiscalpolicyaimsat increasing aggregate demandto increase nationalincomeand employment andthus closea def ationarygap. lt requires an increase in government spendng and a decrease in taxation. Sincegovernment spendingis a componentof AD, a rise in G will directlyincrease AD, shiftingit to the right. In otherwords,if privatespending(C + l) is not sufficient to generatefull employment thenthe government should increase its spending(G)by bonowingfrom the private sector(deficitspending,G > T). . A decrease in taxation (T)will indirectlyalsoincreaseAD asit will increase disposable income(definedasincome minusdirecttaxes)that peoplehaveand inducemore spendlng. Contlactionary(deflationary)fiscalpolicy . On the otherhand,an overheating economy, defined asan economywhereaggregate demandis rapidly increasing p.essLres, creatinginflationary requires contractionaryfiscalpolicy. . Thegovernment government mustdecrease expenditures and increasetaxesso that AD decreases. In summary . E xpansi onary fi scalpol i cy:rai seGandl ow erT (deficitspending) to increase AD andthus incomeand employment. . Contradionaryfiscalpolicy:lowerG and increase T to decrease AD andthus inflationary pressures. The multipliereffect Expansionary fiscalpolicyaccording to the Keynesian school tigure 3.17 The multipliereffect is very powerfultool to lift an economyout of a recession as a resultof the operationof the multipliereffect. . Assumethat a government wishingto closea deflationary gap decides to increase itsexpenditures by someamount, say,AG (the differencebetweenihe new levelof spendingandthe originallevelof spending). . Aggregatedemandwill automatically increase by AG and shiftfrom AD1 to AD2 as in Fig.3.17.Butaccording to the multipliereffectthe process will not end there. Aggregatedemandwill continueto increase and shiftto the rightall the way to AD3. . The multiplier effectstatesthat an jncrease in government (or,moregenerally, expenditures in anyinjection) will leadto a greaterchangein income:AY = KAG,whereAY is the resulting changein income,AG is the changein government spendingandK is the multiplier. Why wil nationalincomeincrease by morethanthe increase in government expenditures? Theexplanation restson two ideas: . Oneperson's spendingis automatically someoneelse's . income. Economic adivitytakesplacein successive rounds. RealOutput/ Income(Yr) The multipliereffectcontinued ExamDle Assumethat the government decides to increase expenditures by 10,000,000poundsand hiressome unemployed workersto dig holesand burybottlesand otherunemployed workersto di9 them up. National pounds,the income incomehasincreased by 10,000,000 they produced. that theseworkersearnedfor the 'servlce' Spending by the government is incomefor the workers. But,economicactivitywill not stopthere.Thereis a secondand a thirdand an nth roundthat follow Why? Because theseworkerswill spendpart of thisextra incomeon domesticAoodsand services that others produceand the process will continue is lf extraspendingon domesticgoodsand services constantand equalto 0.8 (80%)of anyextraincome then nationalincomewill riseby 50,000,000pounds. Howdoesonearriveat thisfigure? Definethe extraspendingon domesticAoodsinduced to by extraincomeearnedasthe marginalpropensity consume(MPCd) domesticAoods.ThemultiplierK is equalto: 1/(1 - MPCd) In the examplethe MPCdis assumed to be 0.8 (as 8 millionpoundsarespentout of 10 millionpoundsof extraincome)it followsthat the multiplier K is equal10 5. Giventhat the initialincrease in government spendingis 10,000,000 in income and that AY = rAG, the increase is equalto 5 times10 millionpounds,i.e.50 million pounds. Sinceonly8 out of the 10 millionwerespenton domestic goodsit followsthat 2 millionwerenot spent.This incomenot spenton domesticgoodsmusthavebeen spenton foreigngoods(imports) or paidin taxesor simplysaved. lmportexpenditures, areall tax payments and savings withdrawals in the circular flow model. It followsthat (1 - MPCJis the marginalpropensity to withdraw(MPW)so if r = 1(1 - MPCd) it is alsoequal to 1(MPW)or 'l(MPM + N,4RT + MPS)whereN/PN/is the marglnalpropensity to spendon imporls,MRTis the marginalrateof taxationand MPSis the marginal propensityto save. Themultipllereffectis greatetthe greaterthe proportion of anyincrease in ncomethat is spenton domesticaoods and services or the smalerthe proportionof anyincrease jn incomethat is saved,spenton lmportsor taxedby the 9OVernmenl. Tips Notethat one mechanism throughwhichtradecycles aretransmitted internationally isthe exponmultiplier A recessionin the USeconomywill leadto lower US importsandthuslowerEuropean and,say,Japanese exports.Dependingon the sizeof this decreaseaswell as on the opennessof theseeconomies,economicactivity in EuropeandJapanwill be adversely affected(theirAD will shrink)andthiseffectwill be magnified throughthe exportmultiplier wh;ch;sthe changein nationalincome from a changein exportrevenues. resulting Also,notethat the effectis not instantaneous asthere is a time lagbetweenreceiptof incomeandsubsequent spendrn9. Evaluatingfiscalpolicy in the Fiscalpolirycan be usefuland hasbeenusedsuccessfully pastand evenrecentlyin the U5.lt suffersthough from several disadvantages that were exposedmostlyby the monetarists and whichweakenits effectiveness or mayeventransformit to a sourceof macroeconomic instability. Morespecifically; . Fiscal policyis characterized by longand potentially destabilizing time lags.Thesereferto the time between when an economy'gets and sick'(enters a recession) (theexpansionary fiscalpolicy the time the 'medicine' administered) is restored). hasan impact(fullemployment It maythus be the casethat by the time the impactof a policyswitchis felt,the economyhasalreadymovedon to a new cyclephasedestabilizing ratherthan stabilizing economicactivity. . Fiscal policyhasan expansionarybias.Thecyclical natureof economicactivitywould requirethat governments and alternatebetweencontractronary in powerwho expansionary fiscalpolicy.But politicians areresponsible for economicpolicymay in generalbe and raisetaxes reluctant to cut government expenditures theirpopularity. asthischoicecoud drastically decrease Contractionaryfiscal policy is difficultto employnot only becauseof reluctantpoliticiansbut alsobecausecertain publicexpenditures areconsideredinelasticby society. governmenlexpenditures Decreasing on health,education or socialsecuritymay be consideredsociallyunacceptable; defenceexpenditures are alsooften difficultto cut. On the otherhand,increasing taxationbeyonda pointwill (seeLaffercurve,page92). adversely affectincentives Expansionary fiscalpolicymay leadto a widening trade deficit; if a higherlevelof incomeresultsthen moreimports will be absorbed,while if the averagepricelevelincreases then exportswil shrinkasthey becomelesscompetitiveand importswill riseasthey becomerelatively moreattractive. (HLOnly):Expansionary fiscalpolicyand deficitspending may end up crola/dngout privateinvestmentand thus be lesseffective.The resultingbudget deficit must somehowbe financed.Governmentborrowinqfrom financlalmarketsmay driveinterestratesup and asa result privateinvestmentwill decrease (andso will consumption expenditures). lf this decreasein privatespendingmatches government the increased spending, the crowding-outs saidto be completeand fiscalpolicyis totallyineffective. 77 The crowding-outeffect Crowding-out is a monetarist criticism of Keynesian inspired expansionary f iscalpolicy. lf the government government increases spendingby AG then,asa resultof the multipliereffect,AD will rise from AD1 all the way to AD2.Fiscal policythusseems, accordjng the Keynesian School,likea verypowerful tool to reflatean economyin recession. Not so,claimthe monetarists. government The increased spendingand resultinqgreaterbudget deficitneedsto be financed(e.g. how cana government spend€850mwhen it earnsfrom taxesonly€700m?lt mustsomehowborrowthe missing €150m).lf the government borrows(bysellingbonds to the non-bankprivatesector)then interestratesmay rjse(asthereis goingto be greaterdemandfor loanable f unds )ass howni n F i g .3 .1 9 . lf interestratesincreasefrom 11to 12then private (seel-ig.3.9). sector;nvestment spendingmaydecrease Consumption expenditures mayalsodecrease. Since AD includes not onlyG but alsoC and I it maynot after all increase to AD2 but only(if,at ail)to AD3 asshown in Fig.3.18.Expansionary fiscalpolicyis thus not as oowerfulaswasthouoht. Figure 3.18 The crowding-out effect 3 q asa resultof crowding out ' g the mul ti pl i er effect Realoutput / Income(Yr) Figure3.19 The loanablefunds market and the effect of government borrowing on interest rates Tip The effectsof crowding out alsodependon the typeof government expenditures financed.lf capital (investment) expenditures arefinancedthen.given that infrastructureinvestmentsmay createsubstantial positiveexternalitiesto privatefirms, economicgrowth mayevenaccelerate. Thisis an especially validargument for developing countries whereimprovedinfrastructure is muchneededand is considered complementary to marketforces.AIso,if the budgetdeficitisfinancedby foreignersthen domesticinterestratesmay not increase (but otherproblemsmayresult). Loanable Funds (per period) Monetary policy (easyor loose)monetary Expansionary policy lf an economyis aboutto enterrecession or if it already is sufferingnegativegroMh ratesthen policymakers (the centralbank or the government)may decrease Interestrates(0 in an attemptto increaseaggregate demandand thusoutputand employment. How doesit work? How are lower interestratesexpectedto reflate a failingeconomy?lt is hopedthat aggregate demand will increase asconsumption expenditures, investment expendituresaswell as net exportswill tend to rise. Consumption expenditures of households will tend to ncrease, a5 (cars, borrowingto financethe purchase of durables appiances, etc.)becomescheaperso spendingon such gOOdS mayInCrease; . reducedinterestratesmean lower monthlypayments on variableratemortgageloansso households will havemoreavailable to spendin general; . the lower rate of returnwill makesavinglessattractive so households willtend to spendmore. Investment spendingby firmswill tendto increase as borrowingcoststo financepurchasesof capitalgoods (equipment) (newfactories) and expansions are lower Also,lowerinterestratesimplythat the opportunitycost to firmsof usingtheirown pastretainedprofitsto finance inveslments is alsolower Lastly,as a resultof lower interestratesthe exchange ratewill tend to depreciate so exportswill become more competitiveabroadand importslessattractive domestically, increasing AD. Monetary (tight)monetary policy Contractionary . Assume economy in whichinflationis an overheating (thecentralbankor becoming a problem.Polirymakers interestratesin an attempt the government) mayincrease to to decrease AD.Aggregate demandisexpected decrease ashigherinterestrateswill work in the opposite direction above.Saving will become asthe onedescribed moreattractive, bonowingcostswill risefor households andfirmsandthe exchange ratewilltendto appreciate, to rendering exportspricierandthuslessattractive foreiqners. Evaluationof . Central thetiming banking isbothanartanda science: issuedbythe of an interestratechange,the statements centralbank.thesizeof the interestratechangeareall crucialfor the success of anypolicychange.Thereare the extentto whicha verymanyfactorsthat determine poljcyresponse ln general, will or will not be successful. policyisextensively monetary usedthroughoutthe world on domestic to regulate thestrengthof totalspending goodsandservices. ratherflexibleas lt is considered centralbankscanalterinterestratesoften,theycanalter anydecision. andtheycanalsoreverse themgradually byseveral on theotherhand,it isalsocharacterized problems. . lvlostimportantly, andfirms spending by bothhouseholds doesnot dependonlyon interestrates.Consumption dependon a hostof other expenditures andinvestment confidence andbusiness factors.Thedegreeof consumer of the response importantin determining isextremely is the as well as in interest rates spending to a change Forexample, andfirm indebtedness. degreeof household letthe centralbanklowerinterestratesin an attemptto preventa recession. and/or lf businesses arepessimistic if households burdened by heavydebtsthere arealready is no guarantee thattheywill betemptedby lower interestratesto borrowandspendmore,andsothe policymayfail. Also,if the borrowingrateisalready too low (closeto zero)thenit cannotbe loweredanyfurtherasnegative interestratesdo not makeanysense. by potentially Monetarypolicyis alsocharacterized destabilizing timelags.justlikefiscalpolicy.Thesetime lagsmaybeshorterbuttheyarevariable, creating uncertainty of anypolicychange. asto the success policyis Undera fixedexchange ratesystemmonetary haveto be usedonlyto ineffective. Interestratechanges fixedat the ensure rateremains thatthe exchange chosenlevel. Today, financialmarkets arelargelyglobalsomost firmsandevenhouseholds cananddo borrowfrom weakenthe anyvvhere in theworld.Thesedevelopments policy. effectiveness of monetary policies Supply-side the policies thataimat increasing arepolicies Supply-side shiftingthe As curveto aggregate supplyof an economy, in Fig.3.16.page75 therightasillustrated . one maygroupsupply-side policies intoa setwhich in includes measures thatallwillagreearecrucial capacity of an economy enhancing the productive morecontroversial andintoanothersetthat includes measures. Commonlyaccepted (especially primary lmproving education andsecondary . Lastly, improvingthe institutional frameworkwould alsoserveto improveproductivity wheretherateof returnisthehighest) or making and the supplyside of an economy. education universalwill improve labourproductivity and thereis no uniquesetof Unfortunately, increase laws,rulesand regulations AS. that canbe transplanted to Betterhealthservices anyeconomyand proveoptimal.Russia's madeavailable to thegeneral lostdecade population followingthe attemptin the early1990sto createa wouldalsohavethesameeffed. providing A government marketeconomycontrastedwith the recentChinese betterinfrastructure willalso booslthesupply experienceillustratethe ooint. side.'Buildyourself a roadto getrich' isanoldsaying andit expresses a universal truth.Roads, harbours, airports, to lower telecommunications, allserve production costsof allfirmsin a country More controversial Overall, thebenefits expected byimplementing supply-side policies area result of increased levels of competition and Thesecondand morecontroversial set includes the measures the expected enhanced efficiency, fewer distortions to the 'supply-siders' that the so-called espouse. Supply-siders are pricemechanism, fewer built-in disincentives and increased a group of economistswho are known for their extreme flexibility in labourmarkets. pro-market ideas.Thesemeasures include: policies Ontheotherhand,pro-market supply-side canbe . Labourmarket-related policies: theseincludepolicies grounds: criticized on thefollowing that try to makethe labourmarketmoreflexible.They . Benefits Theyare usually takea longtimeto materialize. includeloweringor evenabolishing the minimumwage; policies thus long-run with incapable of dealing short-run decreasing the powerof labourunionsand reducing proorems. (suchas national non-wagelabourcoststo employers . Taxcutsmayinstead inducemoreleisure andlesslabour insurance cheaper contributions) so that labourbecomes proving gift and investment, more of a the better-off to to firmsand morelabouris hired;makinghiringand firing population. segments of the of workerseasierso that managersdo not hesitaleto hire . Privatization oftenhasled,at leastin the shortrun,to morelabourwhen demandrises;makingpensionplans increased unemployment. (sothat labourmobility transferable acrossoccupalions . Deregulation mayproveunsuccessful in raising increases); reducingunemploymentbenefitsso that those prices. competition and lowering The 1990senergy crisis out of work are more motivatedto find jobs, etc. perhaps good in California is a example of the dangers . Productmarket-related policies: theseincludepolicies that thatderegulation of utilitycompanies maybrin9,as aim to increasethe extentof competitionin marketsso the market may become dominated by a singleprivate that the economyreapsthe resultingefficiencybenefits. prices monopoly which has no incentive to keep down. (reducing Deregulation the amountof rulesand 'redtape' . Thesmaller safetynetthat results from,say,lowerand for firms)and privatization aswell astradeliberalization stricterunemployment benefitsmayleadto increased aretypicalcandidates. income inequality maybe and segments of thepopulation . Decreasing tax ratesto improvethe incentiveto work, to marqinalized. saveand to invest(seeLaffercurve,page92). Pro-marketsupply-sidepolicies Industrialpolicy . Withinthissecond,rathercontroversial, groupone may policies'.'lndustrial policies' alsoinclude'industrial are government championed by polirymakers who considered interventionand guidancenecessary for the productive lhis groupconsiders capacity of an economyto increase. marketforcesinadequate 10guidefinancialcapitaland investmentsto their most productiveusesand thus government was necessary to do the job and 'pick 80 winners',i.e,industries and firmsto supportasthey werethoughtto be the mostpromising for groMh. Subsidizedlow interestloans.lower ratesof taxationor tax allowances,and protectionfrom foreign competition aresomeof the measures employed. Somesuccessful as well as unsuccessful developingcountrieshaveadopted suchmeasures. Many,if not all,advanced economies have alsoemployedsuchpoliciesin varyingdegrees. lnflation Theinflation rate increase of the averagelevelof prices. lnflationis definedasa sustained as a price index,hasrisen is the percentageby which the averageprice level,expressed betweentwo periods. throughtime makescomparisons A priceindex(a numberwithout unitsof measurement) (or 'base' reference)year the year to be is chosen much easier.Usingstatisticalcriteriasome price for the baseyearwill index it. The percentage of years as a are expressed and all other be equalto 100. Measuringinflation The averagelevelof pricesis measuredthrough a price indexwhich is a weightedaverageof the pricesthat lhe as an indexnumber. typicalconsumerlacesexpressed determinethrough surveysthe basketof Statisticians goodsand services that the typlcalhouseholdbuys The averageis a weightedaverageas goodsand services to the typicalconsumerThe are not of equalsignificance weight tor eachgood are the expenditureson it expressed as a proportionof total expendituresmade . The cost of purchasingthe basketis recordedand then as an lndexnurnber. expressed of measurement Problems The typicalconsumeris a fictitiousperson Thisperson is bothyoungand old, livesboth in a cityand on a farm and is both well off and relativelypoor.As a resultit is problematicaltousethe inflationrate figure to determine, for example,by how much a governmentshouldincrease morehealthcare pensions, asan olderpersonconsumes younger individual. than a and lessentertainment The weightsusedto constructthe averagepricelevelare fixed. As a resultthe effect on the inflationrate of an increasein the priceof somegood is overestimatedEven though consumerswill switchawayfrom it and purchase other cheapersubstitutes,its significance(itsweight) in will be ihe same The of the average the construction true inflation. thus overestimate officialinflationrate may bias'. as the 'substitution Thisis referredto New productsare not immediatelytaken into account of the averagepricelevel.lt took a in the construction to enter the few yearsfor the prlceof cell phoneservices typicalbasketof goodsand servicesin manycountries This is referredto as the 'new productbias'. Pricesfrom new retailoutletssuchasonline stores (Amazon)or megaand discountstoresmay not be sufficientlysampled.5incetheseretailoutletsusuallyhave lower pricesthe officialinflationrate may overestimate true inflation.Thisis referredto asthe 'new retail outletbias'. lmprovedqualityof goodsand servicesmay not be propedyaccountedfor in the constructionof the average pricelevel.A betterversionof a productmaybe 10% but may last50% longerthan the older moreexpensive Again,the official cheaper. it effectively version.rendering true inflation.Thisis inflationrate may overestimate referredto asthe 'oualitv bias'. Costsof inflation national redistributes decision-making Inflation,in generaland on average, in business uncertainty Inflationincreases former the poor well-off since to the incomefrom the so it makesit more difficull for firms to judge whether to hedgeagainstinflationand,in havefewerchoices prospect will orwill not be profitableAs an investment addition,they cannotborrow.The wealthycan borrow and thus, in the a resultinvestmentspendingdecreases from the bankingsystemand proceedto investin assets long run, growth and employmentratesmay decrease. whose valueis expectedto risefasterthan inflation As markets Exportsbecomelesscompetitivein foreign lf actual inflationproveshigherthan expectedinflatjon, imbalances and trade a result,the exportsectorshrinks gain at the expenseof lenders.The money then borrowers may result. theywill be payingbackwill be worth lessthan expected on fixedmoneyincomes(suchaswage Households suffera declinein their earnersand pensioners) But mild inflation reducesthe realwage costsof firms and mayworsen power lncomedistribution purchasing mayihus helptheircompetitiveness. The efficiencyof the pricemechanismis lost because inflationdistortsthe signallingpower of relativeprice i Tip the priceof or a firm witnessing A consumer changes. i good X risingcannot be surethat it is now relativelymore asshecannotknowwhetherthe pricesof other expensive by the samepercentage similargoodshaveincreased and of firms. of consumers the decisions Thisconfuses r--------------- ---------------i i Deflation : t u ts D E D B D 1, F Deflationrefersto a process of continuous decreases in the averagepricelevel.lf the lnflationrateis negativethen the economyis sufferingfrom deflation.In January 2006 priceschangedby -0.8% in Japan.Thismeans consumer that the averageconsumer pricelevelhad decreased by 0.8% compared to January 2005.Japanwassufferingfrom deflation. Tip Disinflation refersto a decrease of inflation.Prices continueto risebut at a slowerrate.lf, for example, inflationhasdecreased from 8.7% to 5.5% annually then pricescontinueto increase but at a slowerrate. E l. I Costsof deflation Consumers delaypurchases sincetheycometo expect furtherpricedecreases. Aggregatedemanddecreases evenmore.pushingeveniowerthe averagepricelevel. F rms are forcedto cut pricesto win overcustorners, squeezing theirprofitmarglnsand forcingthem to cut down on costs.Wagesfall and layoffsfollowso AD shifts furtherto the left. The rea va ue of outstanding debt increases. Indebted consumers becomehesitantto makepurchases and indebtedfirms hesitateto make investmentsso AD decreases evenmoreand so doesthe averagepricelevel. Sincethe realvalueof outstanding debt increases, some households and somefirmscannotservice theirloans. Banksaccumulate'bad' loans(loansthat are not repaid) and thusthe riskof a bankingcrisiswith repercussions on the realeconomyincreases. . Sincenominalinterestratescannotdecrease belowzero the centralbankcannotuseeasymonetarypolicyto reflatethe economy.Expansionary fiscalpolicymayalso proveineffective as households maypreferto saveand postponespending. Butexportsbecomemorecompetitive abroadand AD may increaseas a resultof a risein net exports. Causes of inflationand deflation -^'ough the AD/Asdiagram it is clearthat anyfactorthat - -'eases price aggregare denandw ll leadro an increasing =.e, i.e.inflation,aswell asanyfactorcausingan adverse :- 'i of aggregate supply.Theformeris knownas ,:-and-pull inflationand the latlerascost-push inflation, :.:^ thoughoncean inflationary process beginsit is difficult - :'actlceto distinguish betweenthe two. Figure3.20 Demand-pullinflation T g- lernand-pullinflation - :-: caseof demand-pull inflationthe extentof the --:: f,naryeffectresulting from the increase in aggregate -- -:-rd dependson how steepthe AS curveis,ln other how closeto full employment the economyis ::--:: og.Thecloserto the ful/ employment levelof output '- = ::aeperAS is),the greaterthe effecton the average : := :.'el of an increase in aggregate demand. : : :.20 illustrates demand-pull inflation asthe average -'= : :: : . al s s hownt o i n c re a sfro e m P1to P2 fo l l o w i nga ' :, :he r ght of aggregate demandfrom AD1 to AD2. RealOutput / Income (Yr) Causesof inflation causesof demand-pullintlation Cost-pushinflation . Rapidlncrease Figure3.21 illustrates and investment cost-push inflationasthe averaqeprice in consumption level is P1 causedby excessively optimisticand shownto increase from to P2followinga shiftto expenditures the left of aggregate supplyshock)from confidentconsumers andfirms. supply(an adverse . A surgein exports.Exportsmay increaseas a result A51to AS2. or depreciating currency especially of an undervalued Figure3.21 Cost-pu5h inflation if the priceelasticity of supplyof exportsis low (i.e.if bottlenecksexistin the productionof exports).Faster groMh abroadmayalsosuddenlyincrease foreign demandfor our products. t government Profligate spendingis a typicalcauseof .9 pressures. Also,poorlydesigned demand-pull inflationary .c pressures tax cutsmayfeeddemandand inflationary qpt insteadof increasing the incentive to work or to invest. Inflationary expectations themselves area commoncause to continue of continuinginflation.lf pricesareexpected climblngthen all firmsandworkerswith pricingpower will increase theirpricesand wagesto keepup. Perhaps the singlemostimportantcauseof inflation is'excessive monetarygrowth'. The easiestway to this is by quotingl\y'ilton Friedman s famous understand sayingthat inflationexistswhen 'too muchmoneyis chasingaftertoo few goods'and thusthat inflationis a RealOutput/ Income(Yr) purelymonetaryphenomenon. Tip Bearin mindthat increases in AD will affectnot only the averagepricelevelbut alsorealoutput.Mild inflationmaythusaccompany a risein realoutputand employment. Causesof cost-pushinllation . A risein the priceof oil (energycosts)is perhapsthe mosicommoncauseof cost-push inflation.Oil is stillthe predominant and form of energyfor firmsso a sustained production sharpincrease in the priceof oil will increase costsacross the boardandthus prices. . Powerfullabourunions,asthey maybe in a positionto for theirmembers wage increases higherthan any achieve productivity 9ains. (or a sharpdepreciation) of the currency A devaluation sinceit makesimportpriceshigher.Not onlywill the averagepricelevelimmediatelyriseand leadworkersto demandhigherwagesbut domesticproductioncostswill and alsoincrease if firmsimporta lot of raw materials i n ta rma r{i :ta nr ^.1,,.t( Risingcommodityprices(astheseare produclsusedas inputsin manufacturing) because of risingworlddemand. growth in china hasincreasedmanufacturing The explosive and constructioncostsin manyother countries. An increase in indirecttaxation.Thiswould be a 6neoff lncreasein the averagepricelevelso it would hardly qualifyas a causeof inflation(a sustamedincreasein prices) unlessit leadsto demandsfor higherwagesand an inflationary spiralbegins. A productivityslow-down.Productioncostswould rise but sucha development wouldtypicallyrequiresome unfavorable institutional change. Causesof inflation Causesof deflation Figure3,22 Deflation Figure3.22 illustratesa caseof deflationsincethe average price levelis shown to decreasefrom P'l to P2as a resultof decreasing aggregate demandfrom ADl to AD2. Deflationcan be causedby: A decreasein aggregatedemand,often the resultof a domesticcrisis,likea bankingcrisisor the collapse of a majorindustrybut possibly a resultof an externalcrisis that led to a suddencontractionof the exportsector. Aggregatedemandrisingmoreslowlythan expected. Extremelyoptimisticfirms may haveoverinvested in new capacity leadingto a largeshiftto the rightof aggregate supply.lf aggregate demandfailsto riseasfastas originally anticipated, a decreasing averagepricelevel may result. RealOutpui/ Income(Yr) Policies to dealwith inflationat Policiesto dealwith demand-oullinflation , Policiesto dealwith cost-pushinflation . . Thepolicyresponse In the caseof demand-pull inflation,typically, tight is lessobviousin the caseof cost-push policy (increasing monetary is adopted the interestrate) inflation.lt mayseemthat supply-side policiesare in order oftenaccompanied (meaninglowering by fiscal'restraint' but supply-side policiesaredifficultto adoptand implement government spendingand raisingtaxes;loweringbudget andtakea longtime to haveanyeffects.Of course, deficits).Toshow how tighter monetarypolicy(andfiscal appropriatesupply-side policiesare alwayshelpfulto contain restraint) will hopefullyhelplowerinflationuseFig.3.23. inflationsinceby shiftingASto the rightanyincrease in AD . GivenAD1 and A5. the averagepricelevelisatPl.Asa will be absorbedwithout the averagepricelevelrising, resultof demand-pull inflationaggregate demandwould Non-inflationary qroMh will be achieved(referto Fig.3.16). . Thus,evenif inflationis'cost-push', increase to AD2 and the pricelevelto p2. lf the central it is contractionary bank increases interestrates(tight moneiarypolicy)some demandmanagement policies that areemployedby households maycut down theirspendingon durables policymakers. The typicalimmediateresponseto any and somefirmsmaylowertheirinvestment spendingso inflationary pressures emergingin an economyis for aggregate demandwill not increase policymakers asfastall the way to to tighten monetarypolicy,i.e.to increase AD2 but will increase onlyup to AD*. Prices will risebut interestratesand makeborrowingmore coslly. . Figure not as much.Inflationwill be lower. 3.24illustrates thesituation. Initially realoutputisat . Notethoughthat whereasrealoutputwould risetoY2 ii Y1andtheaverage pricelevelat pl. Assume anadverse will now as a resultof the contractionarypolicyemployed supplyshockshiftingASfromA51to AS2(arrowa)and nseonly up to Y*. Output increasedbut not as fast so leading to a higherpricelevelP2.Cost-push inflationis economicarowth sloweddown. evenmorecostlythandemand-pull inflationasrealoutput Figure3.23 Dealing with demand-pull inflation hasalsodecreased fromYl to Y2 andunemployment rises. Figure 3,24 Dealing with cost-push inflation .E FP2 aP * PI 84 g gD' 4 '' Policies to deal, . Letpolicymakers policyby increasing tightenmonetary price the average interestratesin an attemptto maintain andthe increased levelat P1.lf the poliryissuccessful and byhouseholds spending borrowing costsdecrease (arrow b) maintaining firms,thenADwillshiftto AD* effect pricesstableat P*. Notethoughthatthe negative on economic activity(onrealoutput)will be moresevere will to Y* andunemployment asit willfurtherdecrease a short-runcost thisis considered increase more.Usually groMh worthsufferingaspricestabilityhelpsaccelerate generation in thelongrun. andemployment Dealingwith deflation . Deflationhasprovento be a most difficult problemto suffered economy, dealwith..Japan, a majoradvanced the consequences of deflationfor manyyears.Deflation createsa viciouscircleof decreasingpricesleadingto aggregate demandleadingto decreasing decreasing pricesthat is extremely difficultto break.Monetarypolicy Tip lncreasedexposureto internationalcompetitionalso exertsa dampeningeffed on inflation.Not onlyare domesticfirms forcedto becomemore efficientand lower their pricesbut alsothey may benefitfrom cheapersourcesof supply. u, 3 o at o |D o f o 3 at is ineffectiveand fiscalpolicyis weakened.Somehow policymakers the publicthat inflation haveto convince shouldbe expected.Governmentshaveresortedto printing datedvouchersto force recipientsto spendthem and not savethem. Deflationis often correctedthrough the increasein aggregatedemandthat resultsfrom cheaDerexDorts. Unemployment Who are the to asthe workforceor the of the labourforce(alsoreferred An individualis consideredunemployedif sheis actively the population) forceincludes job 100. The labour times searching for a and cannotfind one.The unemployment working employed and the unemployed. rate is the ratio of the numberof unemplovedoverthe size Problemsin distinction to be a clearcut Eventhoughthereseems beconsidered andwhoshouldn't of whoshould rate measuring theunemployment unemployed, rate Theunemployment isfraughtwith problems. thetrue levelof mayunderestimate or overestimate unemployment in a countryHowdo governments . iseither rate?Theanswer arriveat theunemployment (survey method)or bycountingthe throughsurveys andreceiving asunemployed number of thoseregistered (claimant method). unemployment benefits rate andtheunemployment Thenumbers of unemployed surveys. in thattheyarebasedon household areestimates unemployed individual to beconsidered Fora surveyed to startworkand shemustbewithoutwork,available at soughtgainfulemployment shemusthaveactively fourweek. sometime,usually duringtheprevious Surveyed theirtruestatus. individuals maymisrepresent the truelevel Survey-based statistics oftenoverestimate of unemployment. ln additiontheymaysufferfrompoor of sample design andlimitedcoverage andquestionnaire theoooulation. datacount Ontheotherhandregistered unemployment and thenumber registered asunemployed of individuals Thesenationalstatistics receiving benefits. unemployment conditions aredependent theeligibility on whether often statistics aresatisfied. Claimantunemployment have asgovernments underestimatdtrue unemployment to eligibility requirements beenaccused of manipulating statistics. underreport the unemployment 85 Costsof Privatecosts(coststhat the individualsuffers) Taxrevenuescollectedare lower becauseof the lower incomesandthe resulting privatespending. decreased . Thesinglemostimportantcostan unemployed individual Government spending increases because of the incursis hislostincome. unemployment benefitspaidand the increased number . Anothercostis the possible lossof up-to-dateskills. of trainingand retraining programmes that government . Beingunemployedincreases the chancesof remaining often finances. preferto hirean individualcurrently unemployed.Employers . lf unemployment is highand prolonged, societymay employedelsewhere to hiringan unemployed worker. experience higherlevelsof drug and alcoholabuseand Notonlywill herskilisbe up to datebut alsothe employer hencehigherincidences of crimeandviolenceand other avoidsthe risk5createdby asymmetric information(not negativeexternalities. knowingwhy the unemployedlost herjob in the first place). . lf unemploymenlis concentrated in regionsand/orin age . The lossof self esteemthat often resultsand the groupssuchproblemsmaybecomeevenmorepronounced. probability increased that the personwill resortto alcohol However, theremaybe somebenefitsarisingfrom privatecosts. or drugsareotherpossible 'Freemarketeers' unemployment. believethat unionpower weakensand thusthereis reducedcostinflationpressure Socialcosts(coststhal societysuffers) in the economyand greaterlabourmarketflexibility. Increased . Giventhat the so-called'economicproblem'is scarcity,it geographical and occupational mobilityis alsomentionedas becomesevidentthat the greatestcost of unemployment a possiblepositivesideeffect of unemploymentasworkers is the lostoutputthat couldhavebeenproducedand areforcedto moveor changeoccupation. neverwill.Theeconomyoperatesinsideits production possibilities f rontier. Typesof u Seasonal unemployment Frictional unemployment . Construction . workersarelaidoff in the winterThistype Frictional unemployment refers to people whoare jobs.Thisisunemploymenl of unemployment isexpected andthereisnothing the between of a short-term government cando aboutit. Unemployment natu'eandislargely statistics unavoidable in aneconomy since ('seasonally thoughareoftencorrected people jobssearching adjusted') willalways voluntarily switch for sothatpolicymakers candelermine truechanges in betteronesor relocating. unemployment, notthosedueto thechanging seasons. . Faster andbetterlabourmarket-related information will decrease butnoteliminate frictional unemployment. Governments canthusminimize frictional unemployment by ensuring thatjobvacancies aswellastheprofiles of those available for workbecome knownfasterandmorewidely. . In Fig.3.25aaggregatedemanddecreases (Keynesian Cyclical or demand-deficient) unemployment for somereason from ADI to AD2 resultingin a decrease in economic . Thistypeof unemployment isdirectly related to the adivityand a decrease in realoutputfrom Y1 to Y2. The business cycle. Higher unemployment willnecessarily economyhasentereda recession illustratedin the trade accompany a recession because of the lowerlevelof cyclein Fig.3.25b.Thelowerlevelof economicactiviv economlc activity. A decrease in aggregate demand will forcesfirmsto decrease their demandfor labour.Somefirms forcesomebusinesses to shrinkandothers to closedown. Figure3.25 Cyclicalunemployment (a) (b) E (c) of the mayshrink,othersmayevenshutdown because with recession. In Fig.3.25cthe labourmarketis illustrated from DLl to DL2.[,4oney demandfor labourdecreasing (nominal)wagesareassumedto remainat wl asa result of labourunionsand/orcontracts('stickywages') Excess supplyof labourresults,equalto ab, reflectingthe resulting cyclicalunemployment. . Unemployment isdealtwith reasons due to cyclical policies. the Effectively demand-side by expansionary governmentwill attempt to closethe deflationary gap.Interestratesarecut in the hopethat households to spendmoreandthe andfirmswill be convinced governmentmay evenlower taxesand Increase on the stateof theirfinances depending expenditures Structuralunemployment . Structural is perhaps the mostserlous unemployment type of unemploymentsinceit is of a long-termnature those remainingunemployedlong after It represents recoveryis underway in an economy.An economymay be will not decrease unemployment boomingbut structural . lt is the resultof the evolvingstructureof an economy or shiftinq advancement because of rapidtechnological of structure The changing advantage. comparative an economyresultsin a mismatchbetweenthe skills and the skillsrequiredby by the unemployed available rendercertaln the labourmarket.Newtechnologies professions obsoletebut at the sametime createnew job opportunities. Theinternetmayhave,for example, decreased the demandfor shop workersand postmen but creatednew jobs for web designersand softn/are But if the laid-offshopworkeror the employee engrneers. postal serviceis not trainedin computersthen he of the or shemayfind it difficultto get a job. . It is alsothe resultof labourmarketrigidities. Minimum bargaining wage lawsandwagessetthroughcollective of labour and labourareexamples betweenindustries Theyboth resultin higher rigidities. market-related aswageratesaresetabovetheir unemployment level.lf pensionplansin one market-clearing equilibrium, to anotherinduslry not easily transferred industryare a Consider mobilityis hampered. then occupational from workerlosinghisjob in industryA but prevented he cannotlransfer takrnga job offer in industryB because hispensionrightsso he will be unemployed. . Lastly, ascauses areconsidered institutional disincentives aswellas LawsprevenLrng firms+romfiringemployees areexamples benefils highunemployment Policies to lower butthe is notpossible unemployment structural Eliminating i1: help decrease to followingareconsidered . Training permitslructurally seminars andretraining workers to findnewjobs. unemployed . Ensuring to prepare arecapable curricula thatschool to andwilling learn. whoarecreative individuals . Reducing power of tradeunions the bargaining. minimumwagelawsand collectlve Eliminating non-wagelabourcosts(suchasnational Reducing contributions). insurance . Reducing benefitsand the the levelof unemployment length of time that benefitscan be collected HOWEVET: . Thereduction thatsomeof unemployment in structural maybringaboutmaycomeat a significant thesemeasures mayleadto workerprotection Decreasing costto society. may earlier, labourandsocialunrestwhich,asdiscussed become population may of the hampergrowth.Segments Realwage unemployment(or classicalunemployment) . a resultof labour is considered Realwage unemployment the realwage rate(thepurchasing unionsmaintaining power of the moneywage rate)too high (abovethe level)for the labourmarketto 'clear'. eouilibrium agaln moreunequal, marginalized and incomedistribution with adverseeffectson groMh and development Finally: . Expansionary demand-sidepoliciesare ineffectiveto In asanydecrease unemployment dealwith structural will be temporaryand at the costof unemployment hioherinflation.Thisoointwill becomeclearlater Policies that attemptto dealwith structural naturebelonging areof a microeconomic unemployment policies discussed supply-side to the broaderclassof a growing Also,eventhoughiI soundscounterintuitive, mayoverthelongrunsufferfromhigher economy thedifferent Thisisbecause structural unemployment. industries of thedifferent income elasticities of demand unemployment Equilibrium anddisequilibrium . Unemployment whenthelabourmarketisin thatexists unemployment as'equilibrium' equilibrium isconsidered rateol andismorewidelyknownaslhe'natural' (NRU, seebelow). unemployment . on theotherhand,cyclical andrealwage unemployment of 'disequilibrium' unemployment arebothexamples isnotthe wageraTe unemployment astheprevaihng eouilibrium waoerate. 87 The naturalrate of unemployment (NRU)is a term The naturalrateof unemployment introduced by NobellaureateMillon Friedman, the best knownadvocateof monetarism. Thebasicideaconveyed isthat theremaystillbe unemployment in the labourmarketevenif participants on both sidesof the marketsatisfytheirobjectives and prevails. equilibrium ln Fig.3.26the curveLDillustrates the labourdemand that firmsexpress in the market.lt showshow many workersfirmsarewillingto hireat eachrealwage rate.lt is downwardslopingasat higherrealwage ratestheywi I be willingto h re fewerworkers.ThecurveLFillustrates the labourforceavailable at eachwage rate.lt shows the numberof individuals workingor lookingfor a job at eachwage rate.lt is slightlyupwardsiopingasat a higher realwageratemorepeoplewi I be convinced to enterthe labourmarketand searchfor a lob. It is the curveAJthat makesth s modelof the labour marketdlfferent.lt isthe 'acceptjobs'curveand shows at eachwageratethe numberof lndividuals willingto accepta job offerand work. lf you arelookingfor a job you will not necessarily acceptThefirstjob offeryou get.Youmayhopeto obtaina betterjob and giventhe levelof benefitscollected it maybe worth continuing the search. AJ is alsoupwardslopingasthe LFis upward slopingbut the horizontal distance at eachwagerate betweenAJ and LFdecreases because the probability of accepting a job offerwill be higherat a higherwage rate. Thelabourmarkeiis in equilibrium at Wr'. At W|" the numberof peope firmsarewillingto hire]sequalto the numberof peoplewillingto accepta job offer Note thoughthat thereis stillunemployment eventhoughthe labourmarketis in equilibriurn as'ef'workersarein the Figure3.26 The natural rate of unemployment E 3 t tabour (L) labourforcebut withouta job. Theunemployment that existswhenthe labourmarketis in equilibriums known asthe natural rate of unemployment. Sincethese'ef individuals wou d not be willingto accept a job offer evenif therewas one, the NRUis of a vo untary nature.lf the wage ratesay,becauseof labourunionswas higheraboveWr' thenpartof the resulting unemployment would be of an involuntarynatureand part of a vo untary nature.Notethough that the voluntaryportionat that higherthanequilibrium wagerateis not the NRU. TheNRUis alsoconsidered to be of a structural nature as if the AJ curveshiftsto the rightbecause of lower unernployment benefitsit would decrease. ThePhillips curve TheoriginalPhillipscurve Sincethe early1960sand untiithe mid 1970seconomists re iedon an empirical resultthat AlbanW Phillips. a New Zeaand economist at the LondonSchoolof Economics, madein 1958.Hiswork,the Phillips curve,becameone of the mostfamousrelationships in macroeconomics. lt showed that there was a stabletrade-off betweenthe inflat on rate andthe unemployment rateof an economy. ,r., Hisoriginalempirical (statistical) work examinedUK data on the annualpercentage changein moneywagesand the annualunemployment rateovera periodof 96 years (1861 1957).Figure3.27ashowswhat he found:that the percentage chan9eIn moneywagesand unemployment were inversely related.lf unemployment was low ('tight' abourmarket)then moneywagesrosea lot asemployers Figu.e3.27 TheoriginalPhillips curve (a) :e qs t5 88 (b) TheoriginalPhillipscurve Thisstableinverse seemedto su99e5t['at re aLronship governments couldexploitthistrade-offbetweeninflation curvepresented and unemployment. lt wasas if the Phillips policymakers Theycouldachievea with a menuof choices. ratebut at the costof higherinflation lowerunemployment but at the costof higher or they could lower inflation lVovingfrom wage inflationto priceinflationwasthe nextstep. unemployment. Sincewagestypicallyform a big proportionof productioncosts with wascompatible Thisstatistically determined relationship and sincefirms in practiceoftensettheir priceas percentage Keynesian that the the ruling Keynesian theory Remember (a to explore of their unit costs mark-up)it seemedsensible perspective rate stressedthe importanceof aggregatedemand how the annualinflationrateand the unemployment income.lf AD rose of equilibrium what wasfound: inflation in the delermination were related.Figure3.27billustrales then realoutputwould increase and thus unemployment related.lf unemployrnent were inversely and unemployment However, thisrisein AD would alsoleadto while if inflationdecreased would decrease. then inflationincreased decreased pressures. inflationary Thus,asshownin Fig.3.27b,if using slopedcurvein The negatively unemployment would increase. policies unemployment decreased expansionary demand-side Fig.3.27bisthe originalPhillips curve. from n1 to n2. from U1 to U2 then inflatlonwould increase while if wereforcedto bid up wagesto find employees, unemployment was high('sack' labourmarket)then money (asfirmscould wagesincreased by a littleor evendecreased less even by offering to offer more or hirewithout having moneywage). than lastyearl prevailing -' ' j' . , -f l. -. The long-runPhillipscurve expectations Phillips aboutinflationadaptlvet(meaningthat Thisis alsoknownasthe expectations-augmented theyform theirexpectations aboutnextyear'sinflationby critique. curveor the Phelps-Fredman past looking at inflation rates) so they ares/ow to realize curverelationship sincethe late1960sthe originalPhillips result of the expansionary that inflation accelerates as a setbacks. Inflation and theoretical sufferedboth empirical oolicles oursued. in the 1970s. wereboth increasing and unempioyment . Fig.3.28blllustrates with a labourmarketin equilibrium coined,implyingrecession Theterm 'stagnation'was (distance 'ef is unemployment its natural level being at togetherwlth risinginflation.Theoriginalinverse the NRU).Saythat this is at 5.2% and that the economy hadcollapsed and traditionalKeynesian relationship hasbeenexperiencing infiationequalto 1.0%for some round it haroto explainwhat was9oin9on. analysis time now workers againexpect1.0% inflation so that Phlllips of the original this empirical refutatlon But beyond (point g. year next A1 in F 3.28a).Assumenow that the curvethere camea theoreticalattack.Ed Phelpsand governmenl policies to try to lower expansionary adopts (bothNobellaureates) independently lvliltonFriedman ('natural') equilibrium unemployment to 4.5o/o below the curvewasvertical claimedthat in the long run the Phillips /eve/. 2.0%. As a result the lnflation accelerates now to (the naturalrate) rateof unemployment at the equilibrium real hire more workers. wage rate decreases and firms and anytrade-offbetweeninflationand unemployment Unernployment decreases to 4.5yoand the economy couldexistonlyin the shortrun.Thisbecameknown point has are slow to realizethat moved to 42. Workers theory as the critiqueand the asthe Phelps-Friedman nflation is actuallyhigf,etal2.0o/oand thusthat the real Phillips curve. expeclat'ons-augmented wage is lower. But when their expectationsadjustthey . lf a government belowthis triedto lowerunemployment the real will demand higher moneywages,increasing policies ('natural') rateusingexpansionary equilibrium levelWr'. wage to its original equilibrium for firms back it would succeedonly temporarilyandat the cost of returns to its Firms so unemploymenl will fire workers permanently higherinflation.Theshort-runtrade-off (point43). equilibrium rate at 5.2% wasonly because betweeninflalionand unemployment theyform their workerssufferfrom 'moneyillusion': critique) Phillipscurveor the Phelps-Friedman Figure3.28 The long-runPhillipscurve(the expectations-augmented (a) a .t 3 (b) 6.s% = E 89 Thelong-runPhillipscurvecontinued .v E o o l-l o m . lf the governmentinsistson tryingto decrease unemployrnent belowits naturalrate usingexpansionary policies demand-side lt wouldneedto 'engineer' higherand higherinflationratesso that workerswould be temporarily fooledandacceptjoboffers.In Fig.3.28a,infationwould haveto accelerate to 4.0% whileworkersexpectit to be dt 2.0olo for Jremploymeltto dropdgal and for tl'e economyto moveto point44 beforeadjustingbackto A5. . Thepolicylmplication s clear:governments shouldnoftry (natural) to lowerunemployment belowitsequilibrium rate policres usng expans onarydemand-side asit isfutile.Any Thef ifth macroeconomic goal Thefifth macroeconomic Aoalisto ensurethat income distributlon is equitable. Equitable doesnot meanequal. decreasein unemploymentwill be temporaryand at the costof higherinflation. In the longrun,whenexpectations haveadjusted andthereis no moneyil usion,thereis no trade-offbetweeninflationand unemployment. There s onlyone rateof unemployment and it is compatible with anyrateof inflationaslongasthisrateof inflation (andthustemporarily doesnot accelerate leadto 'money lllusion'). ln the longrunthe Phillips curveisvearlcal at the NRU,whichis alsoknownfor thisreasonasthe non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NATRU). ..:,, It meansfair.Butfairness is an elusiveconceptand it means differentthingsto differentpeople. The Lorenzcurveand the Ginicoefficient Incomedistributions illustrated througha Lorenzcurve Figure3.29 The Lorenzcurveand the Gini coefficient and the degreeof incomenequaity is measured through ^ 100% the Gini coefficient. In Fig.3.29populaton (incomerecipients) is plottedon E percentages, the l'orizonral r.e.Iror axisin cumulative poorestto r chesthouseholds. Thusat, say,the 20% po nt E we havethe poorest20% of the populationand at the 40% pointwe havethe poorest40% of the population. '6 On the verlicalaxiswe measure the percentage of income .E 40vo received by eachpercentage of the populatlon. z TheLorenzcurveshowsthe proportionof national 200/0 incomeearnedby eachincomegroup.Forexample, the poorest20% in Fig.3.29 receives only 5% of national 1Oo/o income.Notethat T00% of the populationwill of course 5o/o receive100% of nationalincome.Alsonotethat the Oa/o 20% 4oo/o aoo/o looo/o diagonals the lineof equality(perfectly equalincome Population(cumulatively ranked) distribution). Ii c he5t ^ Thefurtherawayfrom the diagonal, the moreunequal the sizedistfibution of incomewhilethe closerto the . TheG ni coefficient canvaryfrom 0 (denotingperfect diagonalthe moreequalthe distribution of incomeis. f in equality)to1 (denotingper{ectinequality). Typically highly a countryincomedistribution worsensit meansthat the unequalincomedistributions aredistrbutionswith a Gini Lorenzcurvemovesfurtherawayfrom the diagonal. coefficient between0.50and 0.70.Somerepresentative TheGini coefficientmeasures the degreeof income valuesof thiscoefficent are:Brazil0.60,Argentna 0.48, inequality in a population. Jtis the ratioof the area USA0.40,UK 0.36,Australia 0.35,Sweden0.25and betweenthe Lorenzcurveandthe diagonaloverthe area Austra 0.23. of the halfsquaren whichthe curvelies.Focusing on Fig. . Oftenwhat mattersis not the levelbut the directionof 3.29,the cini coefficient isfound by dividingarea(A)by change,i.e.whetherincomedistrbutionis becomng area(A + B). moreor tessunequat. - :- :_ I.i Possible A moreequitabledistributionmay helpaccelerategrowth and . A proportional tax systemis one in whichall individuals paythe sameproportionof theirincomeindependently promotehumanand economic of in manyways: development proportional the the level income. In a tax system of their . Thepropensity poor is higherthan to consumeof the averagetax rateremainsconstantas incomerisesso the that of the richso redistribution will increase aggregate marginaltax rateis equalto the averagetax rate.A flatdemandespecially for basicgoodsand services. rate (proportional)incometax existsin severalcountries . Socialtensionsare lower and thus governmentscan more such as Latvia,Russia and Estonia and is considered easilyundertakeimportanteconomicreformswhich presents by many others. lt many advantages overthe requirea highdegreeof consensus withinthe population. progressive have. income tax systems that most countries lf peoplefeel that they enjoythe fruits of economic Disincentives are lower,administrative costsarelowet it groMh then theywill be willingto work harderand is simpleandthus moretransparent and it is potentially sacrifice morenow in orderfor them or theirchildrento evenfaireras loopholes do not existwhichusuallyhigherenjoymoreat a laterdate.Theywill be willingand ableto incomehouseholds of. takeadvantage savemore,permittinghigherratesof investmentand thus . poorerindividuals A regressive is one in which tax system growth. Fewersocialtensionsdecreaseuncertalntyand pay greater proportion a of income. In a regressive their risksfor domesticand foreign investors. tax systemthe averagetax rate decreases as incomerises . The very poor will be ableto afford accessto crucial so the marginal rate is less than the average tax rate. tax quality of resources suchaseducationso the amountand Indirect proportional taxes are with respect to expenditure productive resources available to a countryincreases. but regressive with respectto income.Thisis why indirect . Trustincreases amongthe populationso the cost of taxationon food and basicAoodsis lower or zero. economictransactionsdecreases. IVloreeconomicactivity growth. ln Fig.3.30the horizontal will takeplacethusaccelerating axismeasures the tax base (say, income) and the vertical the amount of tax paid.A However,an excessively equalincomedistributioncould proportional tax system is illustrated by any straightline lower economicefficiency.lt could lower the incentivesfor progressive through the slope the origin. ln a tax system hardwork andfor risktaking.Growthmaybe undermined. of the ine is increasingwhile in a regressive tax systemthe slopeof the lineis decreasing. Dired and indirecttaxes Directtaxesare taxeson income,on profitsand on wealth.The burdenof a directtax cannotbe shiftedonto anotherentity.Indirecttaxesincludetaxeson goodsand on expendituresand they havebeendiscussedearlier.The burdenof an indirecttax can be shiftedonto a different entity. proportionaland regressive Figure3,30 Progressive, taxation proportionaland regressivetaxation Progressive, To explainthe differencebetweenthe abovetypesof taxes it is importantto definethe marginalandthe averagetax takenby rate.The marginaltax rate is the percentage the government on the lastkroneor dollarearned.lt is the extratax paid as a resultof an extra kroneor dollar earned. The average tax rate is the ratio of the tax collected overincomeearnedor moregenerally the ratioof the tax collectedoverthe tax base. Tax Base(lncome) Thus: . A progressive tax systemis one in which higher-income individualspayproportionatelymore so lhe averagetax incometax raterisesasincomerises.In a progressive systemthe marginaltax rateis greaterthan the average it follows tax rate (rememberthat if the averageincreases that the marginalis greaterthan the average). 91 How canincomebe rer Short-runsolutions Long-runsolutions governments Usually resortto a mixtureof progressive incometaxescoupledwith a systemof transferpayments. paymentsincludepensions, Transfer unemployment benefits, dlsability benefits, subsidies, etc.Bytaxinghigherincorne households moreheavily than lowerincomehouseholds and spendingmoreon trans{erpayments, nationalincome maybe redistrbutedin an attemptto satisfythe equitygoal. Socialhealthinsurance is usuallypaft of a packagethat aims at effectively increasing the incomeof the lowerincome strata. In the longrun,the mosteffectiverouteto a moreequitable incomedistribution is by improvingthe qualityand access to educationand healthservices for the mostdeprivedncome groups.Jobcreationpolicies arealsoof utmostsignifjcance. Lastly, lowercorruptionand a fairjudicialsystemarealso important. The Laffercurveand tax cuts . In the early1980san Americaneconomist, AathurLaffer, Figure 3.31 The Laffer curve becamepopularlyknown because of a diagramthat he supposedly sketchedon a napkinof a Washington DC restaurant whilehavingdinnerThisdiagramshowedthe obvious:that astax ratesrise,tax revenuesalso increase but onlyup to a point,beyondwhichtax revenues collected will startto deciine. . Focusing on Fig.3.31,with a 07otax ratethe government will collectzerotax revenuesso the Laffercurvestarts from the origin.As the tax rateincreases, tax revenues wili alsoincrease but onlyup to a certainpoint.There is a tax rate(say,t* in Fig.3.31)suchthat jf the tax rate rncreases evenmorethenlax revenues collected will start to decrease. Thisdecrease in tax revenues is because higherand highertax ratescreatedisincentives for people to work andto invest.At the limit,a l OO%tax ratewill leadto zerotax revenuesfor the governrnentasthere is no rewardto individualsfor any productiveeffort. policyimplication The Tip is that in countrjes with hightax ' ratesit mayverywell be the casethat by decreasingtax ratesthe government Tryto make surethat the maximurnof the Laffercurve wiJlcollectrnoretax revenues asa you draw is not right abovethe mid-point50olotax rate resultof the improvedincentive to work and for firmsto invest. asthiscouldbe misleading. We do not know the tax (optiona, Whethera decreasein tax rateswill or \&illnot rate after which the disincentives createdare so stronq inducemorelaboursupplydependson the substjtution that tax revenuesstart to decrease. and incomeeffects.lf the tax ratedecreases then leisure becomesmoreexpensive so individuals will tend to work more.On the otherhand,if the tax ratedecreases then disposable incomeincreases and sinceleisureis considered a normal'good' peoplewill tendto work less. It followsthat the effectof a tax cut on laboursupply dependson whichone of the two effectsdominates. gaps:analternative presentation lnflationary anddeflationary The inflationary9ap Figure 3.32 The inflationary gap: an alternative presentation Assume aneconomy in long-run lt is equilibrium. operating at thefullemployment levelo{ realoutput whichcorresponds to the naturalrateof unemployment. Remember thatthisimplies thatthelabourmarket is in 3 equilibrium, i.e.thattherealwagerateissuchthatit equates thenumber of workers firmsarewillingto hirewith the numberof workersthatarewillingto accepta job offer (astheeconomy It isalsoassumed isin long-run equilibrium) thatexpectations haveadjusted, i.e.thattheanticipated rate of inflationisequalto the actualrateof inflation. . An increase in ADfromAD1to AD2in Fig.3.32will foolworkerswhowill acceptjobsasinflationwill accelerate, exceeding the anticipated rate,andthusthere YfeY' will be a temporaryincrease in realoutputto Y this (Yr) RealOutput/ Income temporary difference betvveen Y' andYfeis knownasthe inflationarygap. Asmoneywagesareslowto respond, . When expectationsoi inflationadjustand moneywages the realwageratedecreases sofirmshiremoreworkers rise,the realwage increases backto its originallevel. to producemoreoutputandworkersacceptastheydo Productioncostsfor firms increaseand so the shortnot realize thatinflationhasaccelerated. Theincreased run aggregatesupplyshiftsleft from SRASlto SRA52. outputlevelY' corresponds to the temporary decrease of Outputwill returnto the full employment leveland unemployment belowtheNRUthatmoneyillusion creates. unemployment backto its naturallevel. Thedeflationarygap Assume aneconomy in long+unequilibrium operating at the Figure3.33 Thedeflationarygap:an alternativepresentation full employment levelof outputYfe. . lf nowAD in Fig.3.33dropsfromAD1to AD2then theequilibrium to Y'.The levelof outputwilldecrease (Yfe- Y') is knownasthe deflationary gap. difference . Thisdiagramcanalsobe usedto showthatthe equilibrium levelof outputandthefullemployment level g of outoutdo not necessarilv coincide. RealOutput/ lncome(Yr) 93 Schools of economic thought: a briefoutline It E o c o (, o an The Classical School . Giventhat scarcity is the fundamental economicproblem, an economywill surelyalwaysfullyutilzeits scarce resources. An economywlll thus producewhateverits permitlt to produce. scarceresources and its technology . 'Supplycreatesits own demand':thisis knownassay's law (a Frencheconomist) and t meansthat production createsincomeand this incomewill necessarily be usedto purchase whateverwas produced. . Overproduction was ruledout, asoverproduction implies excess supplywhichin competitive marketsJeads to lower pricesandthusrnarketclearing. . Prolonged unemployment alsowas ruledout as it implies excess supplyrn labourmarkets.Excess supplyleadsto lowerwagesforcingthe labourmarketto 'clear'(demand for labourto equalsupplyof labour). Flexibility of pricesand wagesguaranteed that the productand labourmarketswould 'cleaf (thatdemand wouldequalsupply). Theeconomywouldthustendto operateat or nearthe full employment equilibrium. Any deviation from full employment would be temporary. It followsthat therewould be no needfor the governmentto intervene.Thisls known as /arssez faire laissezpasser. The KeynesianSchool . Demandfor outputcreatesthe supplyof output.lt is ernployed. (or reflationary) Thisis knownasexpansionary 'effective'demandthat determines fiscalpolicy. equilibriumoutput and . Theinherentinstabilityof a market(capitalist) income.An economy's tota output dependson the levelof economy 'effective'demand,laterreferredto asaggregate demand. ledto the observed short-runfluctuations of output . Thereis thusno guarantee aroundits long-runtrend.This nstabiity was a resut of that an economywill find itself (willbe in equiibriurn)at the 'ful employment' consumption leveiof and investment be ng unstabe aswell as (a output.Equilibrium rnayoccurbelowfull employment the existence of the muhipliereffectand the interaction deflationary or recessionary of the multiplierandthe accelerator. 9ap mayexist). . lf the privatesector(whichlncludes (thebusiness households and firms) . Instability or tradecycle)required just psychological) government for whateverreason(perhaps is unable intervention. Counter-cyclical demand-side policies to express sufficent demandfor goodsand services stablllzation in an were ntroduced whichlncludeflscal econorny to leadto fu I employment and monetarypolicies. of resources thenthe . Fiscalpolicywas consideredmost effectivein timesof government couldraiseitsown spendingon goodsand (aswell as lowertaxation)to increase deeprecession. services the levelof totaldemandto the levelat whichall resources arefu ly The Monetarists Twomajordevelopments in the 1970swereresponsible for the changen directionin Economics: the greatlnflationof the 1970sand the deconstruction of the Keynesian interventionist approach by MiltonFriedman andthe ChicagoSchool(or, rnoregenerally,by the l\,4onetarists). pro-market Friedman's ideasbeganto dominateeconomic theoryandwith M. Thatcher in '1979in the UKand R.Reagan in 1980in the Us theyalsostartedto dominatepolirymaking. In 1973,the firstoil crisiserupted,leadingto the quadrupling of the priceof a barrelof oil in one day. Theeffectwas 'stagfiation', the coexistence of rising !nemployment and risinginflation.Thiswasa blow to Keynesran econornics asthe two werethoughtto be ''. erselyrelatedthroughthe Phillips curve. . t,lonetarists areconsidered the intelectualhe rs of the i asscalschoolof thought. Friedman and the Monetarist schooltriedto showthat a marketeconomyis inherently stableand thusthereis no needfor an activerolefor the government. Consumption expenditures were not thoughtto dependon the current levelof incomeandthe roleof expectatjons on the business investment spendingdecision was diminished. Thusprlvatespendingwas morestable. [,4onetarists firstpointedout the possibility of 'crowdngout', thusweakeningdeflcitspendingasa tool to reflate a flaggingeconomy. Inflationfor Friedman wasa 'purelymonetary phenomenon' with 'too muchmoneychasingaftertoo few goods'.Theyevenconsidered monetarypolicyas potentially destabilizing and preferred to relyon prornarketsupply-side policies. The Monetaristscontinued t.J whichpushedstablization,lberalization and structural adJustment onto developlng nationswith verydebatable ' esJL. Tr' etd) A ,i anC rs,,ol 1997-98n dy have markeda turnaroundin economicth nk ng. Rsing inequalties betweenandwlthincountrles suggestthat rrdndgng l"lrondl econor a: a( well astl^eg obal economymaybe necessary afterall.Thequeston of coursethat sti I remainsis:what kindof managng? Theyd scredited the Phillips curveinflatlon unemployment trade-off,tryingto showthat in the long run the Phlips curveis vefticalat the naturalrateof unemployment, a term that Fredmanhrmselfco ned. Extreme[,4onetarists cons]dered that anythng the government cando the marketcando better. Governrnent fai urewasevenmorelikey than market failur e. Several ideasrelatedto lvonetarisrfarethe basic ingredentsof the so-called WashingtonConsensus o, '-t o n o 3 lBQuestions: Section 3 SLLongEssays HLLongEssays 1a Explain Explain the followingtypesof unemployment why a government mightfind it difficult (a)frictional(b)structural (c)cyclical/demand-deficient to maintaina low rateof inflationasthe economy (d)realwage/classical. (10 marks) ('10marKs) approaches fuil employment. 1b Evaluatethe effectiveness of the differentrneasures 1b Evaluate the proposition that the pr orityin economic available to governments to dealwith the typesof management shouldbe the maintenance of low (15 marks) unem ploy m en int 1 a .(' 1 5ma rk s ) unemployment. 2a ldentifythe components o{ aggregate demandand brieflyexplaintwo factorsthat mightdetermineeachof (10 marks) thesecomponenls. 2b Evaluate the likeiyimpacton an economyof a substantial risein the levelof interestrates.(15 marks) 3a Explain the costsof inflationand deflation.('i0 marks) policies 3b Evaluate demand-side asa meansof reducing inflation.(15 marks) ?h Explain the relatonshipbetweenthe Lorenzcurveand (10 marks) the Cinlcoefficient. Evaluatethe effectiveness of the variousmethodsthat jncome.(15 marks) governments may useto redistribute Explain how interestratescanbe usedto bringaboutan (10 marks) Increase in economicactivity. 3b Discuss the strengths andweaknesses of demand-side pollcies. (15 rnarks) 4a Theworld economymaybe subjected (10 marks) to economic 4a What arethe possibe causesof unemployment? shocks, possible policies suchasa suddenincrease in oll prlcesand 4b Evaluate that maybe usedto lowerthe terroristattacks. With the helpof an aggregate demand/ naturalrateof unemployment(15 rnarks) aggregate supplydiagramexplainthe possible economic 5a Whatarethe macroeconomic ob]ectvesof governrnent? effectsof suchshocks.('10marks) (10 marks) 4b Evaluate the maineconomicpolicies that governments 5D Assume the government chooses to pursueone of these might useto minimizetheseeffects.(15 marks) objectives. possible Evaluate the consequences for the (10 marks) 5a Explain (15 marks) the variouscostsof unemployment. otherobjectives. policies 5b Evaluate the alternative almedat reducing 6a With the helpof d agramsdistinguish betweendemand' ('l5 marks) unemployment. pulland cost-push inflation.(10 marks) 6a Brleflyexplainthe mainpolicyobjectives of governments. 6b Explain whlch policeswouldbe appropriate to dealwith ( 10 m ar k s ) thesetwo typesof inflation.(15 marks) 6b Discuss the waysfiscalpolicymight be usedto achieve Explain the dlfference betweendemand-side and supply(15 marks) theseobjectives. (10 marks) sideeconomlcpollcies. 7a With tl"erelp ol examples explan the pJrposeo- the 7b 'Highereconomic throughthe Arowthcanonlybe achieved policies. (10 marks) varioussupply-side implementation (15marks) policies.' of supply-side Discuss. 7b Evaluate the success of thesemeasures in countries 8a Expa n the economicproblems that high unemployment (15 marks) wherethey havebeenimplemented. maycausefor a country(10 marks) 8a What macroeconomic policies shoulda government 8b Discuss the reasons why governments find the goalof (15 marks) adoptif it wishedto reduceaggregate full employment demandin an difflcultto achieve. (10 marks) economy? 8b Shoulda government attemptto managethe levelof aggregate demandto influence and unemployment inflationrates?(15 marks) -9::l Grossdomestic rn her moneywage but pricesof goodsand serviceshave alsoincreased by 5% then her realwage hasremained constantas shecan buy on averageexactlythe sameas before. Measurement of GDP F , I Thereare three conceptuallyequivalentwaysof arrivingat the GDPfigurefor a country: . the output method,wherewe add all domestically producedfinalgoodsand services; . the expendituremethod,wherewe add all expenditures madeon domestically producedfinalgoodsand services; . the incomemethod, wherewe add all incomes generated in the domesticproductionprocess. Conceptually the threemethodsareequivalent and,with someminoradjustments, the figuresarrivedat througheach methodareequal.Thevalueof all outputproduceddid not becomethin air but endedup in 'Dockets' in the form of wages,profits,interestor rent, i.e. as incometo the factors of produclioninvolved. Thisincomeis then spenton thjs output.Eachmethodis usefulbecause of the breakdownit permits.Theoutputmethod,for example, will giveusthe shareof total output accountedfor by eachof the three sectorsof an economyaswell asthe output of different industries. Theexpenditure methodpermitsusto monitor the levelof jnvestment spendingthroughtime or the proportionof governmentexpendituresin total economic activity.The incomemethod providesinformationabout the proportionof total incomeearnedby labourin contrastto ownersof capital. Problems in GDPmeasurement Twominoraccounting compliGations Domestic outputor incomevs.nationaloutputor income Grossdomesticproductrefersto output produced withinthe boundaries of a countryindependently of the nationalityof the factorsof productioninvolved. Grossnationalproductrefersto the valueof final output producedby domesticallyowned factorsof production independently of whereproducLion actuailytakesplace. Forexample,UK GNPfigureswill includethe income earnedby Britishmuliinational corporations abroad but will not includethe incomeearnedbv foreion multinalional corporations in the UK. To convertGDPto GNP; GNP= GDP+ Net FactorIncomefrom Abroad whereNet FactorIncomefrom Abroad= (incomeearned abroad- incomepaidabroad) Grossvs. net . Someportionof investment spendingis aimedat replacing obsoletecapitalequipment(knownas depreciation, or capitalconsumption). Thestockof capital of an economyactuallyincreases only by the difference between(gross)investmentspendingand depreciation. Net Investment= GrosslnvestmFnf- c:niiAI Consumption and N N P = GN P -D epreci ati on . Furthermore, 'do it yourself'activities arenot included. lf Joey repairs hiscarhimselfinsteadof takingit to the . GDPmeasurement is fraughtwith problems. mechanic the valueof the servicehe produces will not . OfficialGDPfiguresin manycountriesunderstate the show up in official statistics. true levelof economicactivitybecauseof the existenceof . Thisbecomesan importantissuein the caseof many (or black,shadow)economy. a largeparallel lndividuals developing countriesbecause subsistence farming ln manycountries underreport theirincomesto avoid (definedasfarmingto feedone'sfamily)is not included taxation.A heavytax burden,especially high marginal in GDPmeasurements, thustendingto underestimate per (r.e.top)taxratesmay be responsible for thistax-evading capita incomelevels. behaviour.Someproductiveactivitymay alsobe illegalper . Lastly, datacollection in manycountriesis poorand se (drugs,prostitution,etc.). unreliable. lB Questions: Section 3 continued HLShortEssays I I tt I I 'Macroeconomic equilibrium doesnot necessarily occur at full empioyment.' Explain thisstatementusingthe concepts of inflationary and defiationary gaps. !a 2 Explainhow a progressive tax systemmay be usedto redistribute income. : I 3 Explainhow an increasein governmentspendingcan Jeadto crowdingout. I 5€ctio 10 Usean AD/ASdiagrarnto analysethe likelyeffectsof an increase in incometax. 1'l Examine two reasons why a government mjghtwishto control increases in its expenditures. '12 Explain why the goalof full employment mightconflict with the goalof economjcArowth. '13 What is demand-pull jnflationand what can governmentsdo about jtZ 4 Explain the mulriplier effectof an increase in government 14 Usean AD/ASdiagramto explainhow cost-push spendtng. inflationmay occur and outlinetwo waysin which jt mightbe controlled. 5 Explain how the multiplierandthe accelerator might be linkedto eachother 15 Whatarethe likelyconsequences of deflation? 6 Explainhow doublecountingcanoccurin calculating nationalincomeand how measuring valueaddedcan overcomethis problem. 7 Keynesians and l,4onetarists havedifferentviewsof the likelyshapeof a countrySaggregatesupplycurve. Usingdiagrams showhow theseshapescanaffect macroeconomic policy. 8 Whatarethe mainproblemsinvolvedin measuring inflation? 9 Usean AD/ASdiagramto analysethe likelyeffectsof an increasein interestrates. 16 Usea Phillips curveto explainthe conceptof the natural rateof unemployment. Whymightknowledge of the shapeof a country,s Phillips curvebeuseful to policymakers? 18 Explain two policies thata government mightuseto dealwiththeproblem (cyclical) of demand-deficient unemployment, 19 Whatisstructural unemployment andwhatmeasures mr9ht9overnments taketo combatit? Ti Fr S iA ; i.