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Ch22 - The Short Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment.
Ch22 - The Short Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment.
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The Short-Run Trade-off Between
Inflation and Unemployment
Economics
PRINCIPLES OF
N. Gregory Mankiw
2
Introduction
In the long run, inflation & unemployment are
unrelated:
The inflation rate depends mainly on growth in
the money supply.
Unemployment (the “natural rate”) depends on
the minimum wage, the market power of unions,
efficiency wages, and the process of job search.
One of the Ten Principles:
In the short run, society faces a trade-off
between inflation and unemployment.
SRAS
B B
5%
105
A
103 3% A
AD2
PC
AD1
Y1 Y2 Y 4% 6% u-rate
high
P2 infla-
tion
P1 AD2 low
infla-
AD1 tion
Y u-rate
Natural rate Natural rate of
unemployment
10
of output
Reconciling Theory and Evidence
Evidence (from ’60s):
PC slopes downward.
Theory (Friedman and Phelps):
PC is vertical in the long run.
To bridge the gap between theory and evidence,
Friedman and Phelps introduced a new variable:
expected inflation – a measure of how much
people expect the price level to change.
Short run
Fed can reduce u-rate below the natural u-rate
by making inflation greater than expected.
Long run
Expectations catch up to reality,
u-rate goes back to natural u-rate whether inflation
is high or low.
Short run
Policymakers face only a temporary trade-off between
inflation and unemployment (ok)
Long run: expanding aggregate demand more rapidly will yield
higher inflation without any reduction in unemployment
(dangerous)
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 14
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
A numerical example
Natural rate of unemployment = 5%
Expected inflation = 2%
In PC equation, a = 0.5
A. Plot the long-run Phillips curve.
B. Find the u-rate for each of these values of actual
inflation: 0%, 6%. Sketch the short-run PC.
C. Suppose expected inflation rises to 4%.
Repeat part B.
D. Instead, suppose the natural rate falls to 4%.
Draw the new long-run Phillips curve,
then repeat part B.
15
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
LRPCD
Answers
PCB LRPCA
7
An
An increase
increase
in
in expected
expected 6
inflation
inflation 5
shifts
shifts PC
PC to
to inflation rate
the
the right.
right. 4
PCD
3
PCC
AA fall
fall in
in the
the 2
natural
natural raterate 1
shifts
shifts both
both
curves
curves 0
to
to the
the left.
left. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
unemployment rate 16
The Breakdown of the Phillips Curve
Inflation rate
Early
Early 1970s:
1970s:
(% per year) unemployment
unemployment increased,
increased,
10
despite
despite higher Friedman
Friedman &
higher inflation.
inflation. &
8 Phelps’
Phelps’
explanation:
explanation:
6 73 expectations
expectations
69 71
70 were
were catching
catching
4 68
66
72 up
up with
with reality.
reality.
67
2 62
65
1961
64 63
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 Unemployment
rate (%)
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 17
Another PC Shifter: Supply Shocks
Supply shock:
an event that directly alters firms’ costs and
prices, shifting the AS and PC curves
Example: large increase in oil prices
SRAS1
B B
P2
P1 A A
PC2
AD PC1
Y2 Y1 Y u-rate
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 Unemployment
rate (%)
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 22
The Cost of Reducing Inflation
Disinflation: a reduction in the inflation rate
To reduce inflation,
Fed must slow the rate of money growth,
which reduces agg demand.
Short run:
Output falls and unemployment rises.
Long run:
Output & unemployment return to their natural
rates.
4 84
83
87 85
2 86
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 Unemployment
rate (%)
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 29
The Greenspan Era
1986: Oil prices fell 50%.
1989-90:
Unemployment fell, inflation rose.
Fed raised interest rates, caused a
mild recession.
1990s: Alan Greenspan
Unemployment and inflation fell. Chair of FOMC,
Aug 1987 – Jan 2006
2001: Negative demand shocks
created the first recession in a decade.
Policymakers responded with expansionary monetary
and fiscal policy.
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 30
The Greenspan Era
Inflation rate
Inflation
Inflation and
and unemployment
unemployment
(% per year) were
10 were low
low during
during most
most of
of
Alan
Alan Greenspan’s
Greenspan’s years
years
8 as
as Fed
Fed Chairman.
Chairman.
6
90
05
4
06 1987
2 2000 92
98 96 02 94
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 Unemployment
rate (%)
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 31
Ben Bernanke’s challenges
Aggregate demand shocks:
Subprime mortgage crisis, falling housing prices,
widespread foreclosures, financial sector troubles.
Aggregate supply shocks:
Rising prices of food/agricultural commodities, e.g.,
Corn per bushel: $2.10 in 2005-06, $5.76 in 5/2008
Rising oil prices
Oil per barrel: $35 in 2/2004, $134 in 6/2008
From 6/2007 to 6/2008,
unemployment rose from 4.6% to 5.5%
CPI inflation rose from 2.6% to 4.9%
THE SHORT-RUN TRADE-OFF 32
CONCLUSION
The theories in this chapter come from some of
the greatest economists of the 20th century.
They teach us that inflation and unemployment
are
unrelated in the long run
negatively related in the short run
affected by expectations,
which play an important role in the economy’s
adjustment from the short-run to the long run.
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CHAPTER SUMMARY
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