Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClaire Cain Modified over 9 years ago
1
Macroeconomic fluctuations, and the traditional Keynesian theory Nikolina Kosteletou 1 Keynesian theories: open economy National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Department of Economics Master Program in Applied Economics UADPhilEcon
2
outline Open economy Fleming- Mundell model Overshooting Imperfect capital mobility
3
Open economy
4
Nominal ε ε: price of a unit of foreign currency in terms of domestic currency – [1$ → 0,81€] – (in euro area: 1 € → 0,24 $) ε ↑ : devaluation – depreciation (foreign currency is more expensive…(exports cheaper, imports more expensive) ε ↓ : overvaluation - appreciation
5
Real devaluation: ε ↑ P* ↑ P↓ Domestically produced goods cheaper (exports ↑, imports ↓) NE ↑ = X-M P*: exogenous
7
Exchange rates Regime: – fixed – floating Expectations: – static – rational Flows of capital: – Perfect capital mobility – Imperfect capital mobility
8
Perfect capital mobility
10
The keynesian model
11
The Fleming – Mundell model Assumptions: short run: prices constant Static expectations Free trade (perfect commodity arbitrage (perfect information, no transportation and other transaction costs) Perfect capital mobility, i=i* Freely floating exchange rates
12
The Fleming – Mundell model
13
The money market: LM* (ε,Y) (M/P)=L(i,Y) The Fleming – Mundell model
14
ε Y LM*
15
The Fleming – Mundell model
16
ε Y IS* 16
17
ε Y IS* 17 LM* Output – employment determined in the money market
18
Fiscal policy: ineffective Suppose G increases: E ↑, → Y ↑, → demand for money increases, i tends to increase, inflow of foreign capital, supply of foreign money increases in the country: Appreciation of the domestic currency The appreciation absorbs the initial increase in output.
19
ε Y IS* 19 LM* Fiscal expansion IS*’
20
Monetary policy Increase in Ms,→ Y increases Demand for goods increases Demand for foreign goods increases Demand for foreign currency increases Depreciation of domestic currency This allows an increase in output
21
ε Y IS* 21 LM* Monetary expansion LM*’
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.