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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #1 The Phillips Curve Understanding the Relationship Between Inflation and Unemployment
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #2 The Phillips Curve-Understanding the Relationship Between Inflation and Unemployment An inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment until the 1970s 1970s high inflation and unemployment Is there still a relationship between inflation and unemployment?
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #3 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment From our wage setting – price setting model: W t = P t e F(u t,z) and P t = (1+µ) W t Lets assume that F(u t,z) = 1- u t +z Then P t = P t e (1+µ)F(u t,z) P t = P t e (1+µ) (1- u t +z)
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #4 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment From P t = P t e (1+µ) (1- u t +z) We can derive t = t e + (µ+z)- u t where t = the inflation rate t e = the expected inflation rate
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #5 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Observations: t = t e + (µ+z) - u t Observations: t = t e + (µ+z) - u t Higher expected inflation leads to higher inflation Given expected inflation, the higher the µ or z, the higher inflation Given expected inflation, the higher unemployment, the lower inflation
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #6 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment The Early Incarnation, Circa 1960 Average inflation close to zero t e = O t = (µ+z) - u t Low unemployment leads to high wage increases leads to high price increases leads to high wage increases in a wage – price spiral.
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #7 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment The Early Incarnation, Circa 1960
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #8 1970s: Why did the Phillips curve vanish? higher oil prices increased µ and inflation became persistent and positive
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #9 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Inflation & Expectations
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #10 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Inflation & Expectations Assume: the effect of last year’s inflation rate on this year’s expected inflation rate the higher the value of , the higher the expected inflation rate
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #11 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Mutations & Expectations 1900-1960: Inflation low and not persistent = 0, t e = t-1 = 0 and t = (µ+z) – u t (the normal Phillips Curve)
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #12 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Mutations & Expectations 1970s: Inflation high and persistent started to increase to 1 t = t-1 + (µ+z) – u t ( t-1 = t e ) The inflation rate depends on: The unemployment rate (u t ) Last year’s inflation rate ( t-1 )
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #13 The Phillips Curve – Understanding Inflation, Expected Inflation, and Unemployment Inflation & Expectations When: t = t-1 + (µ+z) – u t and = 1 Aggregate supply = t – t-1 = (µ+z) – u t Therefore:The unemployment rate affects the change in the inflation rate High unemployment decreases inflation the inflation rate
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #14 Inflation & Expectations 1970-1998: t – t-1 = 6.5% – 1.0u t Inflation & Expectations 1970-1998: t – t-1 = 6.5% – 1.0u t
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #15 The Phillips Curve – Back to the Natural Rate of Unemployment At the natural rate of unemployment (u n ): The actual inflation rate = expected inflation rate t = t e At the natural rate of unemployment (u n ): The actual inflation rate = expected inflation rate t = t e Given: t – t e + (µ+z) – u n Then: 0 = (µ+z) – u n
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #16 Given: Then: u n = µ + z Given: t = t e + (µ+z) – u t Then: t = t e + u n – u t t – t e = - (u t – u n ) u t – u n t = t e The Nonaccelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU)
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #17 Summary: shows that: Inflation increases when u t > u n Inflation decreases when u t < u n However: the relation can shift The Phillips Curve – A Summary and Many Warnings The AS relation: t – t-1 = - (u t – u n )
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #18 The Phillips Curve – Differences in the Natural Rate Across Countries Changes in u and z The composition of the labor force The structure of wage bargaining Unemployment benefits Can you think of others? L t u n µ and z are assumed consistent
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Chapter 8: The Phillips Curve-The Medium RunBlanchard: Macroeconomics Slide #19 The Phillips Curve – Differences in the Natural Rate Across Countries Europe in the 1990s The Limits of Our Understanding
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