The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment (Chapter 22, N. Gregory Mankiw, "Principles of Macroeconomics")
The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment (Chapter 22, N. Gregory Mankiw, "Principles of Macroeconomics")
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The Phillips Curve
B
6%
A
2%
Phillips curve
4% 7% Unemployment
Rate (percent)
The Phillips curve illustrates a negative association between the inflation rate and the
unemployment rate.
At point A, inflation is low and unemployment is high.
At point B, inflation is high and unemployment is low.
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The Phillips Curve
Phillips curve:
Combinations of inflation and unemployment
That arise in the short run
Move the economy along the short-run
aggregate-supply curve
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Figure 2 How the Phillips Curve Is Related to the
Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
Price
level (a) The Model of AD and AS Inflation Rate
(b) The Phillips Curve
Short-run (percent
aggregate per year)
supply
B B
6%
106
A High aggregate
102 demand
A
Low aggregate 2%
demand
Phillips curve
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Figure 3 The Long-Run Phillips Curve
Inflation
Rate Long-run
Phillips curve
High B
1. When the
Fed increases inflation
2. . . . but unemployment
the growth rate
remains at its natural rate
of the money
in the long run.
supply, the rate
of inflation Low A
increases . . . inflation
© 2018 Cengage Learning®. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use
as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning 11
management system for classroom use.
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Figure 4 How the LR Phillips Curve Is Related to
the Model of AD & AS
(a) The Model of AD and AS (b) The Phillips Curve
Price Inflation
level Long-run Rate Long-run
aggregate supply Phillips curve
1. An increase in
B the money supply
P2 increases aggregate B
demand . . . 3. . . . and
A increases the
P1 inflation rate . . .
A
2. . . . raises AD2
the price
level . . . Aggregate demand, AD1
0 Natural level Quantity of output 0 Natural level Unemployment
of output of output Rate
4. . . . but leaves output at its natural level and unemployment at its natural rate.
Panel (a) shows the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply with a vertical aggregate-
supply curve. When expansionary monetary policy shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the right
from AD1 to AD2, the equilibrium moves from point A to point B. The price level rises from P1 to P2,
while output remains the same. Panel (b) shows the long-run Phillips curve, which is vertical at the
natural rate of unemployment. In the long run, expansionary monetary policy moves the economy
from lower inflation (point A) to higher inflation (point B) without changing the rate of unemployment.
© 2018 Cengage Learning®. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part, except for use
as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website or school-approved learning 13
management system for classroom use.
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