CH 12 Notes
CH 12 Notes
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1. The “Phillips curve” is the relation derived by A.W. Phillips
in 1958 that shows the negative (inverse) relationship between
unemployment and inflation
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4. The original relationship fell apart in the next three decades
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this implies that the relationship between inflation and the
unemployment rate is not stable; it can fluctuate
π = π e
− h (u − u )
(1) when π = π e
→u= u
this means we are at a point on the curve
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3. Supply Shocks (SRAS) and the Phillips curve
there were the oil crises of 1973/74 and 1979/80, and the
Phillips curve will always be unstable in periods with many
supply shocks
(1) classicals say “no” because if people are rational, they will
change their expectations in response to political actions
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as the public’s expectations adjust, the unemployment rate
returns to its natural level quickly
why? because people will catch on to policy games and they will
anticipate policy changes; they cannot be systematically fooled
if prices, wages, and expected future prices are sticky, then the
actual unemployment rate may differ from the natural rate for
some time
II. Unemployment
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workers lose income
( Y − Y) / Y = 2 (u − u )
for example: the labor force falls, hours of work per worker
decline, and the average productivity of labor declines
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a possible numerical example might be if full-employment
output is $ 7.5 trillion, then each percentage point of
unemployment sustained for one year would cost the economy $
150 billion
these costs affect not just workers, but also their families
4. Offsetting Benefits
from the 1950s – 1960s, and from the 1990s – 2008: around 5 –
5½%
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in the 1970s and 1980s: over 6 %
but since we don’t know what the natural rate is, that implies
policy decisions are probably wrong
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or, at the very least, U.S. policy is based on the wrong
information
III. Inflation
1. Perfectly-Anticipated Inflation
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technology may mitigate this somewhat
2. Unanticipated Inflation (π − π e)
the main cost here is that actual realized real returns on assets
differ from their expected real returns
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3. Hyperinflation
but then, between August 1945 and July 1946, in Hungary the
purchasing power of a unit of money fell by a factor of 4
octillion!
(that’s 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)
tax collections fall, as people pay taxes with money whose value
has declined sharply
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B. Fighting Inflation: The role of Inflationary Expectations
if the public does not expect (or believe) that tight monetary and
fiscal policies will actually be used to reduce inflation, then
there will be a reduction in output and employment
(2) make the central bank follow a rule that is enforced by some
outside agency
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