Advanced Macroeconomics Lecture 2. Introduction Two basic questions in classical macroeconomics: 1.Is the market economy self-equilibrating, esp. can.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
27 CHAPTER Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand.
Advertisements

Aggregate Supply Quantity Supplied and Supply The quantity of real GDP supplied is the total quantity that firms plan to produce during a given period.
Equilibrium in the goods and money markets Understanding public policy
Aggregate demand and aggregate supply model A model that explains short-run fluctuations in real GDP and the price level.
Chapter 12 Economic Fluctuations. Equilibrium Inventory changes.  Unintended changes in inventories cause price levels and real outputs to reach equilibrium.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 1.
Chapter 1 Introduction to Macroeconomics
Viewpoints & Models Classical Economics
Introduction to Macroeconomics
KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS J.A. SACCO.
22 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
Economic Instability: A Critique Of The Self Regulating Economy.
Aggregate Supply & Aggregate Demand
© 2010 Pearson Education Canada. Production grows and prices rise, but the pace is uneven. What forces bring persistent and rapid expansion of real.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Self-Correcting Economy.
Lecture 6 International Finance ECON 243 – Summer I, 2005 Prof. Steve Cunningham.
The Short – Run Macro Model
AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
Potential GDP and the Natural Unemployment Rate CHAPTER 24.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Spending, Income, and Interest Rates.
AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
Chapter 8 The Classical Long-Run Model Part 1 CHAPTER 1.
Classical & Keynesian Economics Samir K Mahajan. AGGREGATE SUPPLY Aggregate supply is the total volume goods and services the economy planned to be produced.
Chapter 13 We have seen how labor market equilibrium determines the quantity of labor employed, given a fixed amount of capital, other factors of production.
Aggregate Demand Chapter 9 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Principles of Economics: Macroeconomics.
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Aggregate Demand and Output in the Short Run.
 Circular Flow of Income is a simplified model of the economy that shows the flow of money through the economy.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 1.
Economic Instability: A Critique of the Self-Regulating Economy
Economic Issues: An introduction
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2002 Week 8 Introduction to macroeconomics.
Spending, Income, and Interest Rates Chapter 3 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Lecture 5 Business Cycles (1): Aggregate Expenditure and Multiplier 1.
Aggregate Demand and Supply. Aggregate Demand Curve shows the level of real GDP purchased by everyone at different price levels during a time period,
Aim: What can the government do to bring stability to the economy?
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER TEN Aggregate Demand I macro © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights.
Monetary Macroeconomic Modeling Setting the stage.
The Economy in the Short-run
In his classic "The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money" Keynes telling about two important things: If you find your income going up,
Aggregate Demand and Supply. Aggregate Demand Curve shows the level of real GDP purchased by everyone at different price levels during a time period,
Unit 3 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Fluctuations in Outputs and Prices.
National Income Determination For more, see any Macroeconomics text book.
CHAPTER 8 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
Principles of Macroeconomics: Ch. 19 Second Canadian Edition Chapter 19 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply © 2002 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 1.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada. Production grows and prices rise, but the pace is uneven. What forces bring persistent and rapid expansion.
124 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand. 125  What is the purpose of the aggregate supply-aggregate demand model?  What determines aggregate supply.
© 2011 Pearson Education Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand 13 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Define and.
Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 2 CONSUMPTION AND INVESTMENT BUSINESS CYCLES AND AGGREGATE DEMAND.
Chapter 10 Lecture - Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand.
Economic Environment Analysis
Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain what determines aggregate supply  Explain what determines aggregate demand  Explain.
What Macroeconomics is about Structure and performance of national economies Policies that governments formulate and use to affect economic performance.
Econ 202 Fall 2015 Introduction to Macroeconomics.
10 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND © 2014 Pearson Addison-Wesley After studying this chapter, you will be able to:  Explain what determines aggregate.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 1-1 Chapter Outline What Macroeconomics Is About What Macroeconomists Do Why Macroeconomists Disagree.
Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 4 BUSINESS CYCLES AND AGGREGATE DEMAND.
AGGREGATE DEMAND, AGGREGATE SUPPLY, AND INFLATION Chapter 25 1.
Topic 5 1 The Short – Run Macro Model. 2 The Short-Run Macro Model In short-run, spending depends on income, and income depends on spending. –The more.
LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMICS ECO306 FALL 2011 GHASSAN DIBEH.
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
Introduction to Fed Tools and Monetary Policy Money and Banking Econ 311 Instructor: Thomas L. Thomas.
1 Chapter 22 The Short – Run Macro Model. 2 The Short-Run Macro Model In short-run, spending depends on income, and income depends on spending –The more.
Unit 1: Introduction to Macroeconomics
Introduction to Macroeconomics
The Short – Run Macro Model
THE AGGREGATE DEMAND/ AGGREGATE SUPPLY MODEL
Business Economics (ECO 341) Fall: 2012 Semester
Presentation transcript:

Advanced Macroeconomics Lecture 2

Introduction Two basic questions in classical macroeconomics: 1.Is the market economy self-equilibrating, esp. can a sustained situation of unemployment exist? 2.If the economy is self-equilibriating, can the government do anything to improve it, in particular, can the government reduce and/or prevent sustained states of unemployment?

Classical macroeconomics Following Keynes’s definition, the Classical Macro refers to all macroeconomics before Keynes’s General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936). Classical macro answers the two basic questions as follows: A market economy is self-equilibrating, it adjusts so that the supply of and demand for labor are equated, and sustained states of involuntary unemployment – where people wish to work at the existing wage rate but cannot find a job – cannot occur. Essentially, macroeconomic relationships, and wages and prices are assumed to be flexible at macro as well at micro level. For example, –Say’s law (AD = AS, i.e. economic agents supply goods and services only if, and b/c, they demand other goods and services) :Supply(production) creates it own demand (income).

Classical macro... Classical macroeconomics was thus hardly a separate branch of the subject. It had no theory of the demand for (or supply of) output as a whole. It had a theory of the determination of the price determination, the quantity theory of money, and a theory of the determination of real wages in the labor market. But, it had very little to say about aggregate demand, it perceived no problem of unemployment and it envisaged no role for any form of macro policy other than control of money supply to prevent inflation. The essential reason for all this was that classical economics concentrated, at least in its more formal and rigorous analysis, on the long-term development of the economy, and it produced no clear-cut agreed explanation of short-run fluctuations in economic activity.

John Maynard Keynes ( )  He was the Cambridge (UK) economist, whose work has produced a revolution in macroeconomics.  His work can be regarded as the sine quo non of modern macroeconomics.  Keynes’s answers to the two basic questions of macroeconomics were: 1.The economy is not self-equilibrating, and sustained states of involuntary unemployment may occur, 2.The government can do something to reduce and/or prevent unemployment, by making appropriate use of monetary and fiscal policy. He thus provided a justification for a policy of macroeconomic intervention, in contrast to the laissez-faire of the classical economists who proceded him.

Keynes... ”Keynesian” thus refers to the work of those economists who saw themselves as following in Keynes’s footsteps. In contrast to the classical economics, Keynes was very concerned to develop a theory of the demand for output as a whole and hence a model of the (short-run) determination of national income. The simplest of such models is the Keynesian cross model (Equilibrium occurs where aggregate supply is equal to aggregate demand for goods and services).

Keynesian Cross Model (KCM): an overview  The key characteristics of the KCM is that aggregate supply responds passively to aggregate demand and national income is therefore determined by aggregate demand.  On the other hand, aggregate demand is partly autonomous and partly positively related to income, with a marginal propensity to spend (on all forms of demand) less than unity.  This means that aggregate demand depends on income: at low levels of income aggregate demand is greater than income, and at high levels of income it is less.  Aggregate supply or output is simply equal to national income, as a result of the way both aggregates are defined and measured in terms of the value added in production (which corresponds to the factor incomes wages, profit, interest and rent) generated.

Three defects of the Keynesian Cross model 1.It includes no money and no interest rate, or more technically no ”monetary sector”. 2.It implicitly assumes an exogenously fixed price level, which does not vary when output and income vary. 3.It incorporates no analysis of the labor market and implicitly assumes an exogenously fixed wage level.

Key results of the Keynesian Cross model Income can in principle be at any level, depending on aggregate demand, and there is nothing that makes it tend towards the full employment level of income. In principle the government can do something to bring this level of income closer to full employment level, by varying its own expenditure G or by varying tax revenue T. G directly affects aggregate demand, and T affects aggregate demand indirectly via its influence on disposable income and hence consumption.

New Classical Macroeconomics Developed in the 1970s and remained influential in the 1980s, led by Robert Lucas, Thomas Sargent, Robert Barro, Edward Prescott and Neil Wallace. It sees the world as one in which individuals act rationally in their self-interest in markets that adjust rapidly to changing conditions. It argues that the government is only likely to make things worse by intervening. This approach is a challenge to the traditional macroeconomics which sees a useful role for government action in an economy that is viewed as adjusting sluggishly, with slowly responding prices, poor information and social customs impeding the rapid clearing of markets.

New Keynesian Macroeconomics The New Keynesians emerged in the 1980s through the works of George Akerlof, Janet Yellen, David Romer, Oliver Blancard, Greg Mankiw, Larry Summers and Ben Bernanke (current US Fed Reserve chairman) These figures do not believe that markets clear all the time but seek to understand and explain exactly why markets can fail. They argue that markets sometimes do not clear even when individuals are looking out for their own interests. –Both information problems and costs of changing prices lead to some price rigidities, which help cause macroeconomic fluctuations in output and employment.

Simple theory of income and employment  The theory of income and employment is an aggregative theory which groups all markets for goods and services into a single product market, all financial markets into a money market, and all markets for factor services into labor market. Let’s focus on the product market for the moment  The sum total of the production of final goods and services (defined as output that is not resold in any form during the accounting period) when valued at market prices is the Gross National Product (GNP).  The deduction of a capital consumption allowance for the replacement of capital equipment that was used up during the course of producing current output reduces this total to the Net National Product (NNP).

 When NNP is deflated by an index of prices in order to obtain constant dollar values, we get real NNP (often referred to as just income)  The level of income may be broken down into several components. Typically, we divide the economy into sectors and examine the determinants of spending and the income receipts of each sector.  A complete analysis would include a household sector (C), a business sector (I), a government sector (G), and a foreign sector (X-M).  Hence, Y = C + I + G + X-M  Where Y = Income, C = consumption, I = Investment, G = Government Expenditure, X = Export, M = Import.

Keynesians Vs Neoclassicals Keynes’s General Theory led to a lively debate in the 1940s and 1950s between those economists who saw themselves as his followers and Neoclassical economists (or neoclassicals). Neoclassicals felt closer to pre-Keynesian classical economics but were prepared to use Keynes’s analytical framework with its emphasis on aggregate demand in arguing against Keynes and his followers.

Responses of Neoclassicals to the basic questions 1.A market economy is self-equilibrating and it will automatically tend to full employment, provided wages and prices are flexible; 2.In theory, there is no need for the government to intervene in the economy, but in practice the automatic mechanisms may take so long to work that some limited intervention may be justified.  Much of the Keynesian-Neoclassical debates were conducted in terms of IS- LM model.