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THE KEYNESIAN MODEL Lecture 4: Introduction to Keynesian Model:
Derivation; National Saving Identity. Lecture 5: Multipliers for spending & exports; the transfer problem. Lecture 6: Large-country model; International transmission under fixed vs. floating exchange rates Lecture 7: Adjustment of a CA deficit via expenditure-reducing vs. expenditure-switching policies Lecture 8: Monetary factors
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- Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Imports & exports depend on income: M = Md(E, Y) X = Xd(E, Y*) = π + m Y = π assuming E & Y* fixed, for now. => TB = π β( π + mY) Y TB + - β¦and rises in contractions where slope = -m β‘ - marginal propensity to import TB falls in expansionsβ¦ as does consumption: Keynesian consumption function C = πΆ + c Y - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
E.g., the US trade & current account balances improved sharply in the recession of PER QUARTER PER QUARTER Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Determination of equilibrium income in open-economy Keynesian model Y β‘ A + TB β‘ (C + I + G) + (X β M) = ( πΆ +cY + πΌ + πΊ ) + ( π - π - mY). Now solve: Y - cY + mY = πΆ + πΌ + πΊ + ( π - π ) π= πΆ + πΌ + πΊ + π β π 1βπ+π π= π΄ + π β π π + π where π΄ β‘ πΆ + πΌ + πΊ and s β‘ 1 β c. Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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- Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Derivation of National Saving Identity Income β‘ Output (assuming no transfers) Y β‘ GDP / / C + S + T β‘ C + I + G + X -M S + (T-G) β‘ I + X β M National Saving Identity NS β‘ S + BS β‘ I + TB - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Trend: Gap widened, as NS fell relative to I
When national saving falls relative to investment, the trade balance falls. Trend: Gap widened, as NS fell relative to I CFR, Oct. 12, 2016
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ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Keynesian Consumption Function: C = πΆ + cYd , where Yd β‘ disposable income . or, expressed as a saving function: S = Yd - C = Yd - πΆ - cYd . = - πΆ + sYd where s β‘ 1 β c. } ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Closed economy: NS β I = 0 Fiscal Expansion . 1 < Closed-economy multiplier 1/s < β Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Open economy: NS β I = TB = X β M Imports: M = π +mY. Exports: X = π . (keeping exchange rate fixed for now) => TB = π β( π +mY ) Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Open economy Fiscal Expansion slope = s β ΞY = 1 π +π Ξ πΊ < 1 π Ξ πΊ Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
End of Lecture 4: Introduction to the Keynesian Model ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
Appendix Puzzle: Why did global trade collapse in the global recession? (more than usual) 2009 Bussière, Callegari, Ghironi, Sestieri & Yamano, 2013, "Estimating Trade Elasticities: Demand Composition and the Trade Collapse of " ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
One answer: There is a marginal propensity to import out of investment, greater than the marginal propensity to import by consumers. And investment fell much more than consumption in Bussière, Callegari, Ghironi, Sestieri & Yamano, 2013, "Estimating Trade Elasticities: Demand Composition and the Trade Collapse of " ITF220 - Prof. J. Frankel, Harvard University
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