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Supplemental Slides From Class Aggregate Supply Chapter 13-7 th and 14-8 th edition
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The sticky-wage model – not in the 7 th and 8 th editions Assumes that firms and workers negotiate contracts and fix the nominal wage before they know what the price level will turn out to be. The nominal wage they set is based on a target real wage and the expected price level:
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The sticky-wage model If it turns out thatthen Unemployment and output are at their natural rates. Actual real wage is less than the target, firms hire more workers and output rises above its natural rate. Actual real wage exceeds its target, so firms hire fewer workers and output falls below its natural rate.
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The sticky-wage model Implies that the real wage should be counter-cyclical, should move in the opposite direction as output during business cycles: In booms, when P typically rises, real wage should fall. In recessions, when P typically falls, real wage should rise. This prediction does not come true in the real world.
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The imperfect-information model Assumptions: All wages and prices are perfectly flexible, all markets are clear. (drops the assumption of imperfect competition) Each supplier produces one good and consumes a lot of others. Each supplier knows the nominal price of their own good, but not all of the other goods - does not know the overall price level.
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The imperfect-information model, also called the Misperceptions Theory Q: What is the best time for an individual producer to increase production? A: When there has been an increase in demand for her specific product In that case, price of the good she produces rises relative to the goods that she consumes Producer will want to take advantage of relative increase in demand Q: What will be the effect of an increase in aggregate demand (say, from higher M)? A: All prices will rise But individual producers will not be able to distinguish this increase from a shift in specific demand So individual producers will increase production somewhat, at least temporarily
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The price of bread is the baker's nominal wage; the price of bread relative to the general price level is the baker's real wage. If the relative price of bread rises, the baker may work more and produce more bread. If the baker can't observe the general price level as easily as the price of bread, he or she must estimate the relative price of bread If the price of bread rises 5% and the baker thinks inflation is 5%, there's no change in the relative price of bread, so there's no change in the baker's labor supply But suppose the baker expects the general price level to rise by 5%, but sees the price of bread rising by 8%; then the baker will work more in response to the wage increase Example: A bakery that makes bread
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With many producers thinking this way, if everyone expects prices to increase 5% but they actually increase 8%, they'll work more So an increase in the price level that is higher than expected induces people to work more and thus increases the economy's output Similarly, an increase in the price level that is lower than expected reduces output Generalizing this example
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Summary & implications Y P LRAS Producers often fooled Producers rarely fooled
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What shifts the curves? Change in P e When P > Pe, expectations adjust and Pe rises over time This increase in Pe shifts the SRAS curve up When P < Pe, expectations adjust and Pe falls over time This decrease in Pe shifts the SRAS curve down Eventually, Y always returns to full employment
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Imperfect Information - Misperceptions Theory and the Non-neutrality of Money Monetary policy and the misperceptions theory Because of misperceptions, unanticipated monetary policy has real effects; but anticipated monetary policy has no real effects because there are no misperceptions
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An unanticipated increase in the money supply (same as Mankiw’s slide in the book)
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Monetary policy and the misperceptions theory Initial equilibrium where AD 1 intersects SRAS 1 and LRAS (point E) Unanticipated increase in money supply shifts AD curve to AD 2 The price level rises to P 2 and output rises above its full-employment level, so money isn't neutral As people get information about the true price level, their expectations change, and the SRAS curve shifts left to SRAS 2, with output returning to its full-employment level So, unanticipated monetary policy isn't neutral in the short run, but it is neutral in the long run
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The Misperceptions Theory and the Nonneutrality of Money Anticipated changes in the money supply If people anticipate the change in the money supply and thus in the price level, they aren't fooled, there are no misperception, and the SRAS curve shifts immediately to its higher level So anticipated monetary is neutral in both the short run and the long run
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An anticipated increase in the money supply. Go directly from P1 to P3 - directly from point E to H. There is no SR equilibrium at point F as in the earlier slide.
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