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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University LECTURE 5: AGGREGATE SUPPLY, MONEY GROWTH, & INFLATION In lectures 2-4 we saw the effects of expansion in spending or the money supply level, M, on income, Y. Question 1: How do these results change when taking into account changes in P? Question 2: What are the effects of an increase in the rate of growth of money? Key parameter(s) in goods market: SR elasticity of supply, , and speed of adjustment of P over time.
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AGGREGATE DEMAND Everything we have learned so far, about the effects of demand expansion, including monetary and fiscal policy, now goes into the AD relationship, but holds only for a give price level P. The Aggregate Demand curve allows the price level to vary. Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Slope of AD: Shift of AD downward
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University OVERVIEW OF AGGREGATE SUPPLY Ultra-Keynesian case: AS flat, at => AD expansion goes entirely into Y. Y P Y P AD' AS Classical case AS vertical at => AD expansion goes entirely into P. Realistic in Very Short Run. Realistic in Long Run.
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University OVERVIEW OF AGGREGATE SUPPLY (continued) Milton Friedman Robert Lucas ●
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Monetary expansion raises AD in the SR An increase in the current level of M shifts LM curve out (because M/P in the SR). An increase in the expected future rate of growth of M shifts IS out, because e => r => A . (See next page). Either way, IS-LM shifts right => AD shifts right: => Y↑ for given P => AD shifts right.
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University The real interest rate & the cost of capital Business investment, & other components of spending A, depend not just on the nominal interest rate i, but on the real interest rate r ≡ i - e. (To compute corporate cost of capital, it should also be long-term i, and adjusted for taxes.) This becomes important when we allow for steady-state rate of change in M & P, i.e., inflation. Generally, e is not fully reflected in i in SR. So => r => A => IS shifts right.
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Over time, P rises in response to high AD & Y. In LR, P rises in same proportion as M. ≡ “Neutrality of money.” STANLEY FISCHER (MIT PRESS, 2004)
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SUMMARY OF EFFECTS OF 2 EXPERIMENTS Increase in level of M: SR: => M/P => i (liquidity effect) => r => A => Y . LR: M/P, i, r, A & Y back to original levels (neutrality of money). P in proportion to M. <= Increase in growth rate of M (g M in Romer book): SR: => π e => r (Mundell effect) => A => Y . LR: r, A & Y back to original levels (super-neutrality). i by same as π e (Fisher effect) => M/P .
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University INTELLECTUAL HISTORY OF THE INCREASING INEFFECTIVENESS OF MONETARY POLICY Monetary expansion can raise Y: A.S. -- at the cost of higher P. Phillips curve (1958) -- at the cost of higher inflation, . Friedman & Phelps (1968) at the cost of ever-accelerating Natural Rate Hypothesis. -- (because π e adjusts over time to π). Lucas, Sargent, Barro (1972-78) only randomly Rational Expectations -- (because π-π e must be random). Kydland-Prescott (1977) & Barro- and, worse yet: monetary discretion Gordon (1983). Time-inconsistency -- => inflationary bias. E.g., Bruno-Easterly (1998) & High (>40%) hurts growth Dornbusch-Fischer (1993) -- in the LR. (Table 2) (Chart 1)
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The Mexican sexenio From 1976 through 1994, inflation would shoot up every 6 th year (presidential election years). and/or the peso would devalue,
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Source: Inflation above a threshold ≈ 40% tends to have a negative effect on growth.
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Copyright 2007 Jeffrey Frankel, unless otherwise noted API-120 - Macroeconomic Policy Analysis I Professor Jeffrey Frankel, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University What lesson will monetary theory take from the 2007-11 global financial crises? Perhaps that excessive monetary ease can show up in the form of asset price “bubbles” –which can lead to crashes & recessions, and not necessarily always in the form of inflation – which can lead to crashes & recessions.
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