Introduction To Fluctuations Keynesian Economics: Master Epp - Macro 2 2010 Yann Algan
Introduction To Fluctuations Keynesian Economics: Master Epp - Macro 2 2010 Yann Algan
1.INTRODUCTION
How does the economy react to economic shocks in the short-run ? Recurrent fluctuations in the short run around the long-run trend
Percentage change
Okun Law
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Financial assets
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Basic framework: keynesian economics Short-run analysis with price and wage rigidities Shortage of demand on the product market Output is driven by aggregate demand Shortage of demand on the labor market Involuntary Unemployment Animal Spirits and State intervention
Basic framework: IS/LM Hicks (1937), based on the General Theory Keynes (1936) Static model with rigid prices and shortage of demand
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Wage contracts
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2. Product Market
2.1 Components of aggregate demand
Components of GDP Consumption (C): largest component (2/3 of GDP) Private investment (I) : Public investment (G) Net exports (X M) Simplification ISLM: closed economy Y=C+I+G
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2.2 Behaviors
Consumption Disposable income: (+) YD = Y-T = Income - Tax Interest rate i : (-) - Trade-off consumption-saving - Debt of households (ex. Subprime crisis)
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Simplification Role of income and marginal propensity to consume C = C (YD) o YD = Y-T Ex.: C = c0 + c1. YD
Empirically: marginal propensity to cosume on average between .3 and .5, but close to 1 for borrowing constrained people 20
Investment Definition Flows of spending to increase capital stock: component of aggregate demand in the short run. Highly volatile French case
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Determinants
I= I(Y,i) + -
- Aggregate demand : role of anticipations and animal spirits - Interest rate: cost of borrowing or trade-off with financial assets:
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Causal relationship for Keynes: In case of price rigidity and demand shortage : Z
Alternative representation of the equilibrium IS Total savings : S(Y-T) = Y T C(Y-T) Equality savings and investment
S(Y-T) = I(Y,i) + G - T
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Example
One gets
(where
)
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Illustration 45 diagram
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IS curve
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Mechanism If G increases by 1 $, Z increases by 1 $, so does output and income This yields extra demand, output, and income of , leading to an increase in demand by ..
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Illustration
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4. Macroeconomic Equilibrium
IS-LM equilibrium
Simulatenous equilibrium on the product and money market
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Monetary integration Equilibrium on the product market depends on the money market - Money demand for transaction - Interest rate influences Investment (and consumption in a more general framework)
Interaction between the product maket and the money markets is at the core of the non-neutrality of money
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Involuntary unemployment
Labor market activity driven by aggregate demand Situation of unemployment: Equilibrium employment is determined by labor demand side Aggregate demand drives production and thus labor demand N (ex. production Y=N) Y Z Unvoluntary unemployment: Unemployment due to the lack of aggregate demand on the product market and not from too high wages ! Equilibrium: no spontaneous adjustment of the markets through prices, adjustment by shortage of quantities Room for State intervention
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5. Economic policies
Assessment of the impact of demand policies in the IS-LM framework Basic framework : static, no anticipations, price stickiness But good starting point for the short run
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Positive effect in the short run but vanishes over time . Why ? Next chapter : AD/AS model
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Robert Barro: Government spending is not free lunch How can we identify the causal effect of fiscal shock ? Potential instrument: military spendings (WWI, WWII, Vietnam war) Barro estimates 0,8: crowding out effet Paul Krugman : War and Non-Remembrance The problem with war is war
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Decrease in Y
Decrease in N
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