ECON 122 Intermediate Macroeconomics Spring 2018 Lecture 14: The Short-Run Model and The IS Curve Michael Peters

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 17

ECON 122 Intermediate Macroeconomics

Spring 2018

Lecture 14: The Short-Run Model and the IS Curve

Michael Peters

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 1


The Short Run Model

Consumption

Real interest
Shocks Y=C+I+G
rate r

Investment

Monetary policy Fiscal policy

possible or beneficial or
Is r at the not? not?
“right” level?
Do prices
adjust?
122a - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Fall 15 - Lecture 14 2
Consumption

• Optimal consumption behavior: Euler equation


u0 (c1 ) = (1 + r) u0 (c2 ) c2 = (1 + r) c1
u(c) = ln(c)

• Consumption function:
✓ ◆
1 1 1
c1 = LT W = y1 + y2
1+ 1+ 1+r
✓ ◆
(1 + r) (1 + r) 1
c2 = LT W = y1 + y2
r 1+ 1+ 1+r

r ⇤ A demand shock
reduces the
Demand shock
equilibrium level of

consumption if
interest rates do not
adjust!
y1
c1
122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 3
Investment
• Investors gain from investing in capital if
K K
Rt+1 pt r+ ⇡t >0

• Investment demand function ⇡tK = 0

I = I Rt+1 pK
t (r + ) with I 0 (.) > 0

• From firm’s capital demand


I = I M P Kt+1 pK
t (r + )

r A shock to investment demand,


e.g. an increase in future MPK

Investment

122a - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Fall 15 - Lecture 12 4


Short-run Fluctuations

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 5


Long-Run versus Short-Run
Long-Run = Prices are flexible (Chapters 1 - 8)
- Output is in steady-state

Yt = Y ⇤ = F (K ⇤ , L)

- Economy at full employment and unemployment at natural rate

⇤ Labor force (constant)


L = N ⇥ (1 u )
Natural rate of
- Evolution of output governed by unemployment

1. Capital accumulation (Solow)

2. Technological progress (Romer)

Long-run model determines potential output and long-run inflation

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 6


Long-Run versus Short-Run
Short-Run = Prices are sticky
• Unemployment fluctuates around u*

• Output fluctuates around its potential (long-run) level

• Fluctuations are driven by shocks

- Technology, labor supply, oil (“supply shocks”)

- Expectation shocks, optimism, financial (“demand


shocks”)

- Gov. spending shocks, monetary shocks (“policy shocks”)

Short-run model determines current output and current inflation

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 7


Business Cycles

• Fluctuations in economic activity around long-run


trend growth

• Decompose output

actual output = long-run trend + |short-run {z


fluctuations}
| {z } | {z }
Yt Ȳt Ỹt

“Solow” - we will take that as


Focus for the rest of the class
exogenous for remainder of
class

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 8


The output gap

Actual output Long-run output


• Output gap
Yt Ȳt Percentage deviation
ŷt ⌘ from long-run output
Ȳt
• Note: ✓ ◆
Yt Yt
ln ⇡ 1 = ŷt
Ȳt Ȳt Note: Jones uses
x-1 Yt Ȳt
Ỹt =
ln(x) Ȳt

“Around x=1, f(x)=ln(x) and


x
1 f(x)=x-1 are very close”
-1
(“Taylor approximation”)

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 9


Business-Cycle

• A Business cycle is a cycle

• Expansion phase: “through to peak”

• Contraction phase “peak to through”

• Empirical regularities

• recurrent, but not periodic

• last from 2 to 10 years

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 10


A schematic business cycle

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 11


Business Cycles in the US

output
gap

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 12


Neo-Classical versus Keynesian Macroeconomics

Neo-Classical View

• Assumption: Prices and wages adjust quickly

• Implications:

‣ Monetary policy has no real effects - it only affects inflation

‣ Business cycles are driven by supply shocks and hence


efficient

‣ Optimal policy: laissez faire

‣ Low money growth to minimize inflation

‣ No fiscal stimulus

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 13


Neo-Classical versus Keynesian Macroeconomics

(New)-Keynesian View

• Assumption: Prices and wages adjust sluggishly

• Implications:

‣ Monetary policy can affect output

‣ Business cycles partly inefficient

‣ Government should try to eliminate inefficient


fluctuations

‣ Optimal policy:

‣ Counter-cyclical monetary and fiscal policy

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 14


Unemployment

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 15


Recessions, Booms and Unemployment

• Empirically: Tight relationship between


unemployment and the state of the economy

Okun’s Law
Stable relationship
between
unemployment and
the output gap

n 1
ut u = ŷt
2

Actual
unemployment Natural rate of Output
rate unemployment gap

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 16


Roadmap

Three pillars of short-run model:

1. Aggregate Demand: IS-Curve

‣ Relationship between output (Y) and real interest rates (r)

2. Aggregate Supply: Phillips curve

‣ Relationship between output (Y) and inflation (𝜋)

3. Monetary policy

‣ How does the central bank determine real interest rates (r)

122 - Intermediate Macroeconomics - Spring 18 - Lecture 14 17

You might also like