0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views24 pages

Phillipscurve

The document summarizes the development of the Phillips curve, beginning with A.W. Phillips' original empirical analysis showing an inverse relationship between unemployment and wage inflation in the UK from 1861-1957. Later economists like Lipsey and Samuelson-Solow developed theoretical frameworks to explain the Phillips curve relationship. Friedman and Phelps challenged the long-run stability of the Phillips curve, arguing that inflation expectations shift the short-run trade-off curve. Friedman proposed an "accelerationist" hypothesis showing that unemployment will revert to the "natural rate" once inflation is anticipated. The Phillips curve became an important framework for macroeconomic policymakers.

Uploaded by

Sheri Gps
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views24 pages

Phillipscurve

The document summarizes the development of the Phillips curve, beginning with A.W. Phillips' original empirical analysis showing an inverse relationship between unemployment and wage inflation in the UK from 1861-1957. Later economists like Lipsey and Samuelson-Solow developed theoretical frameworks to explain the Phillips curve relationship. Friedman and Phelps challenged the long-run stability of the Phillips curve, arguing that inflation expectations shift the short-run trade-off curve. Friedman proposed an "accelerationist" hypothesis showing that unemployment will revert to the "natural rate" once inflation is anticipated. The Phillips curve became an important framework for macroeconomic policymakers.

Uploaded by

Sheri Gps
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

Phillips Curve

Macroeconomics
Cunningham
Original Phillips Curve
 A. W. Phillips (1958), “The Relation
Between Unemployment and the Rate of
Change of Money Wage Rates in the
United Kingdom, 1861-1957”, Economica.
 Wage inflation vs. Unemployment
 New Zealander at London School of
Economics
 Missing Equation of Keynesian
economics?
2
5½ % = zero inflation

3
5½ %

4
Phillips’ Conclusions
 There exists a stable relationship
between the variables. The
relationship has not substantially
changed for over 100 years.
 Negative, nonlinear correlation.
 Wages remain stable/stationary
dw
( w =0) when unemployment is 5½%.

5
Conclusions, Continued
 From the dispersion of the dw
data points, Phillips w
concluded that there was a
countercyclical “loop”:
– Money wages rise faster
as du/dt decreases, faster
– Money wages fall slower
as du/dt increases
– Implies an inflationary slower
bias, and is consistent
with sticky wage theory. u

6
Problems with Phillips’ Study
 Empirical method suspect.
 Is this an empirical result in search of a theory?
 To tie to theory, need a way to relate this to real
wages in order to connect this to labor market
conditions.
 R.G. Lipsey (1960) attempts to address these
points in “The Relationship Between
Unemployment and the Rate of Change of Money
Wage Rates in the UK, 1862-1957: A Further
Analysis”.

7
Lipsey’s Phillips Curve
Derives the Phillips curve from supply-demand analysis of the labor
market.
Ns = N + U
Nd = N + V
Where U refers to the number unemployed,
V refers to the number of job vacancies.

Excess demand Nd – Ns = X = V – U.
So
X V U
s
 s  s  x  v u
N N N
Where v is the vacancy rate and u is the unemployment rate.
8
Lipsey, Continued
Step One. Wage Adjustment Function

dw N d  N s 
w k s 
dN  N 
This amounts to saying that the change in the money wage rate
is proportional to the excess demand for labor.

Step Two. Establish a theoretical negative correlation between


the excess demand for labor and the rate of unemployment.

9
Lipsey, Continued
Individual Labor Market Conditions

wage inflation
d s
N N Asymptotic dw
x
Ns (u=0 not possible) w

uf u unemployment
dw
w
uf u
Individual
labor market

N d N s
x 10
Ns
Lipsey, Continued
 The result is a Phillips curve for an
individual market.
 Next, aggregate across markets for
the aggregate Phillips curve.

11
Samuelson-Solow (1960)
P. Samuelson and R. Solow. “The Problem of Achieving and Maintaining a
Stable Price Level: Analytical Aspects of Anti-Inflation Policy,” American
Economic Review (May 1960), 177-94.

 Popularized the curve.


 Made relevant to policymakers.
 Relation is general price level
inflation vs. unemployment.
 Recommended to policymakers as a
trade-off.
12
Samuelson-Solow, Continued
 Key transformation from Phillips-Lipsey to
S-S is through mark-up pricing.
pricing
– Firms set prices by adding a fixed mark-up to
labor costs.
– The mark-up = the industry-wide profit margin
+ depreciation of fixed K
Wt Nt
Pt  (1  a ) unit labor
yt costs
mark-up

13
Samuelson-Solow, Continued
Pt y t  (1  a )Wt Nt

nominal nominal
output (GDP) wage bill
yt
Let  t  (labor productivity)
Nt
Substituting: Wt
Pt  (1  a )
t
In logs:
log Pt  log(1  a )  logWt  log  t
14
Samuelson-Solow, Continued
This implies:
Pt Wt  t
 
Pt Wt t
or w 
inflation rate = wage inflation rate
– growth rate of labor productivity
 Increases in wages matched by
productivity increases are not inflationary.
 There is a relationship between wage
inflation and goods price level inflation.
15
Samuelson-Solow, Continued
Generalize further in the form of a Phillips curve relation:
e 1
w    bu   , b  0, 0    1

offsetting productivity gains


demand
pressure
inflation expectations
(assumed “stable”, i.e., equal to zero)
Substitute:   w  

16
Samuelson-Solow, Continued
  e  bu 1  (1  )
 This is the modern Phillips curve.
 Technical relation between inflation
and unemployment.
 Each point is an equilibrium state of
the economy.

17
Friedman-Phelps Phillips Curve
Milton Friedman. “The Role of Monetary Policy,” American Economic
Review (March 1968), 1-17.
Edmund Phillips. “Phillips Curves, Expectations of Inflation and Optimal
Employment Over Time,” Economica (August 1967), 254-81)

 They question the stability of the


relationship. They conclude:
– The trade-off is short-run.
– Different Phillips curves exist for different
inflation rates
– Changes in inflation expectations shift the
short-run Phillips curve.
18
Friedman-Phelps Phillips Curve
  f (u )  e

LRPC

Short run
Phillips
curves
e= 1
U
U1 U*  e
=
0
Natural Rate of Unemployment
or NAIRU
19
Friedman’s
Accelerationist Hypothesis
  f (u )   e

Accelerationist Hypothesis:
let f (u )   b(ut  u *)
Use adaptive expectations:
 et   t 1  (1  ) et1
So that
 t   t 1  (1  ) et1  b(ut  u *)
Problem:  et1 is not observable.
20
Friedman’s
Accelerationist Hypothesis
Lag one period, multiply by (1  )
(1  )t 1  (1  ) et1  b(1  )(ut 1  u *)
Subtract from the original equation:
 t   t 1  b(1  )(ut 1  u *)  b(ut 1  u *)

Replaces the expected


inflation term

When inflation is fully anticipated,


 t   et ,  t   t 1 , and ut  ut 1.

21
Friedman’s
Accelerationist Hypothesis
Substituting,
 t   t 1  b(ut  u *)  b(1  )(ut  ut 1 )
But  t   t 1   t   t 1  0
and ut  ut 1  ut  ut 1  0.
So 0   b(ut  u *)
and ut  u * .

Which implies that unemployment reverts to the


natural rate at the long run Phillips curve once
inflation is fully anticipated.
22
Another view:
Keynesian Perspective
AS2
AS1
3

AD2
AD1

23
More Friedman
 In his Nobel lecture, Friedman offered the
possibility of a positively-sloped Phillips curve:
– “Stabilization” policy increases the inflation rate and
variability.
– This requires nominal contracts to be renegotiated to
shorter lengths.
– Efficiency is lowered.
– Inventories grow.
– Unemployment rises.
 “The broadcast about relative prices is, at it were,
being jammed by the noise coming from the
inflation broadcast.”
24

You might also like