448 Lecture 2
448 Lecture 2
Through the…
Real
Inflation is Investment
interest rate
sticky ↓
↑
Raising the Interest Rate in the IS-MP Diagram
The End of a Housing Bubble
Housing
prices ↑ • Then, a shock occurs
Housing
prices ↓ • AD parameter ↓
• In response,
IS curve
the central
shifts left
bank
↓ • Since
Nominal inflation is
interest sticky
rate
↓ Real
interest
rate
Stabilizing the Economy after a Housing Bubble
B A B A
r MP r MP
C
R MP
IS IS
IS IS
2% 0 2% 0
(a) (b)
Case Study: The Term Structure of Interest Rates
Interest rates on investments of different lengths of
time should yield the same return.
Adaptive expectations
• Firms expect next year’s inflation rate to be the
same as this year’s inflation rate.
• Firms adjust their forecasts of inflation slowly.
• Embodies the sticky inflation assumption
The Phillips Curve—2
The Phillips curve
• Describes how inflation evolves over time as a
function of short-run output
Phillips curve
Rewrite:
B
MP’
A
MP
IS
A Recession and Falling Inflation
Phillips curve
B
The Volcker Disinflation—2
Lowering the inflation rate
• At the cost of a slumping economy
• High unemployment and lost output
Once inflation has declined sufficiently
• Real interest rate can be raised back to MPK,
allowing output to rise back to potential
The Disinflation over Time
The Great Inflation of the 1970s—1
Inflation rose in the 1970s for three reasons:
• OPEC coordinated oil price increases: Oil shock
• U.S. monetary policy was too loose.
• Policymakers thought that reducing inflation
required permanent increases in unemployment.
• In reality, disinflation requires only a temporary
recession.
The Great Inflation of the 1970s—2
Inflation rose in the 1970s for three reasons:
• The Federal Reserve did not have perfect
information.
• Thought the productivity slowdown was a
recession
• The Fed lowered interest, which increased output
above potential and generated more inflation.
• However, the slowdown was a change in potential
output.
Mistaking a Slowdown in Potential for a Recession
The Short-Run Model in a Nutshell
Case Study: The 2001 Recession
Microfoundations: Understanding Sticky Inflation
The short-run model
• Changes in the nominal interest rate affect the real
interest rate.
The classical dichotomy
• Changes in nominal variables have only nominal
effects.
• If monetary policy affects real variables, the classical
dichotomy fails in the short run.
The Classical Dichotomy in the Short Run—1
Can the classical dichotomy hold at all points in time?
• All prices, including wages and rental prices, must
adjust in the same proportion immediately.
The Classical Dichotomy in the Short Run—2
Reasons that the classical dichotomy fails in the short
run:
• Imperfect information
• Costs of setting prices
• Contracts set prices and wages in nominal terms
• Bargaining costs
• Social norms and money illusion
Case Study: The Lender of Last Resort
Central banks ensure a stable financial system by
• Making and enforcing rules, including reserve
requirements
• Acting as the lender of last resort
• Lending money when banks experience financial
distress
• Having deposit insurance, although this can increase
risky behavior
Microfoundations: How Central Banks Control Nominal Interest Rates
Ms
Md
Money Supply and Demand
The demand for money
• Decreasing function of the nominal interest rate
• Downward sloping
The supply of money
• The level of money the central bank provides
• Vertical line
Changing the Interest Rate
To raise the interest rate
New
equilibriu
↓ MS QMD>QMS ↑i ↓ QMD m
Higher i
Raising the Nominal Interest Rate
Why it instead of Mt?—1
The interest rate is crucial even when central banks
focus on the money supply.
The money demand curve is subject to many shocks,
which shift the curve.
• Changes in price level
• Changes in output
If the money supply is constant,
• the nominal interest rate fluctuates, resulting in
changes in output.
Why it instead of Mt?— 2
The money supply schedule is effectively horizontal at
a targeted interest rate.
An expansionary (loosening) monetary policy
• Increases the money supply
• Lowers the nominal interest rate
A contractionary (tightening) monetary policy
• Reduces the money supply
• Increases the nominal interest rate
Targeting the Nominal Interest Rate
Inside the Federal Reserve
Reserves
• Deposits held in accounts with the central bank
• Pay no interest
Reserve requirements
• Banks required to hold a certain fraction of their
deposits
Discount rate
• Interest rate charged by the Federal Reserve on
loans made to commercial banks
Open-Market Operations
Open-market operations
• The central bank trades interest-bearing
government bonds in exchange for currency or non-
interest-bearing reserves.
To increase the money supply, the Fed buys
government bonds in exchange for currency or
reserves.
• The price at which the bond sells determines the
nominal interest rate.
Conclusion
Policymakers exploit the stickiness of inflation.
• Changes in the nominal interest rate change the real
interest rate.
Through the Phillips curve, booms and recessions alter
the evolution of inflation.
Because inflation evolves gradually, the only way to
reduce it is to slow the economy.
Additional Figures for Worked Exercises: The Great Inflation—1
The Great Inflation—2
Clicker Question 1
Why does the classical dichotomy fail to hold in the
short run?
a. Firms have imperfect information.
b. Unions negotiate contracts that set wages for long
periods of time.
c. Sometimes people think it is unfair to lower
nominal wages.
d. All of these choices are correct.
Clicker Question 1 – Answer
Why does the classical dichotomy fail to hold in the
short run?
a. Firms have imperfect information.
b. Unions negotiate contracts that set wages for long
periods of time.
c. Sometimes people think it is unfair to lower
nominal wages.
d. All of these choices are correct.
Clicker Question 2
The Federal Reserve will lower short-run output by
a. lowering the nominal interest rate.
b. lowering the real interest rate.
c. decreasing the money supply.
d. increasing the money supply.
Clicker Question 2 – Answer
The Federal Reserve will lower short-run output by
a. lowering the nominal interest rate.
b. lowering the real interest rate.
c. decreasing the money supply.
d. increasing the money supply.
Clicker Question 3
Misperceiving a long-lasting slowdown in labor
productivity as a recession will result in
a. an increase in inflation.
b. a decrease in inflation.
c. actual output equaling potential output.
d. actual output being below potential output.
Clicker Question 3 – Answer
Misperceiving a long-lasting slowdown in labor
productivity as a recession will result in
a. an increase in inflation.
b. a decrease in inflation.
c. actual output equaling potential output.
d. actual output being below potential output.
Clicker Question 4
If the aggregate demand parameter increases and the
central bank wishes to stabilize output at potential, it
should
a. raise the nominal interest rate.
b. lower the nominal interest rate.
c. buy government bonds.
d. expand the money supply.
Clicker Question 4 – Answer
If the aggregate demand parameter increases and the
central bank wishes to stabilize output at potential, it
should
a. raise the nominal interest rate.
b. lower the nominal interest rate.
c. buy government bonds.
d. expand the money supply.
Clicker Question 5
a. The mission of the Federal Reserve is to
a. preserve price stability.
b. foster maximum sustainable growth in output and
employment.
c. promote a stable and efficient financial system.
d. All of these choices are correct.
Clicker Question 5 – Answer
The mission of the Federal Reserve is to
a. preserve price stability.
b. foster maximum sustainable growth in output and
employment.
c. promote a stable and efficient financial system.
d. All of these choices are correct.
Clicker Question 6
Price-setting behaviors become more sensitive to
demand conditions. This results in
a. a larger recession occurring to change the
inflation rate by a given amount.
b. a smaller recession occurring to change the
inflation rate by a given amount.
c. the IS curve becoming steeper.
d. the IS curve becoming flatter.
Clicker Question 6 – Answer
Price-setting behaviors become more sensitive to
demand conditions. This results in
a. a larger recession occurring to change the
inflation rate by a given amount.
b. a smaller recession occurring to change the
inflation rate by a given amount.
c. the IS curve becoming steeper.
d. the IS curve becoming flatter.
Clicker Question 7
Suppose prices adjust immediately because there is no
sticky inflation. Then, monetary policy will
a. have only real effects.
b. have only nominal effects.
c. have both real and nominal effects.
d. have no effect.
Clicker Question 7 – Answer
Suppose prices adjust immediately because there is no
sticky inflation. Then, monetary policy will
a. have only real effects.
b. have only nominal effects.
c. have both real and nominal effects.
d. have no effect.
Clicker Question 8
An economy starts at its long-run values. A recession
will then cause
a. the inflation rate to increase, because firms seek
to sell more.
b. the inflation rate to increase, because firms seek
to sell less.
c. the inflation rate to decrease, because firms seek
to sell more.
d. the inflation rate to decrease, because firms seek
to sell less.
Clicker Question 8 – Answer
An economy starts at its long-run values. A recession
will then cause
a. the inflation rate to increase, because firms seek
to sell more.
b. the inflation rate to increase, because firms seek
to sell less.
c. the inflation rate to decrease, because firms
seek to sell more.
d. the inflation rate to decrease, because firms seek
to sell less.
Clicker Question 9
To create disinflation, the Federal Reserve must lower
the nominal interest rate.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 9 – Answer
To create disinflation, the Federal Reserve must lower
the nominal interest rate.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 10
An implication of adaptive expectations and sticky
inflation is that the Federal Reserve must push output
below potential to lower inflation.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 10 – Answer
An implication of adaptive expectations and sticky
inflation is that the Federal Reserve must push output
below potential to lower inflation.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 11
At the interest rate targeted by the central bank, the
money supply is horizontal.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 11 – Answer
At the interest rate targeted by the central bank, the
money supply is horizontal.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 12
Suppose that a shock to the economy increases the
bargaining power of labor unions. The Phillips curve
will shift upward.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 12 – Answer
Suppose that a shock to the economy increases the
bargaining power of labor unions. The Phillips curve
will shift upward.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 13
A tight monetary policy by the European Central Bank
will result in an increase in the nominal interest rate.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 13 – Answer
A tight monetary policy by the European Central Bank
will result in an increase in the nominal interest rate.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 14
Unlike fiscal policy, which often takes months to have
substantial effects on the economy, the effect on
economic activity of monetary policy is instantaneous.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 14 – Answer
Unlike fiscal policy, which often takes months to have
substantial effects on the economy, the effect on
economic activity of monetary policy is instantaneous.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 15
Economists today believe that the Phillips curve
demonstrates that the level of inflation is related to
economic activity and that there is a permanent trade-
off between inflation and economic performance.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 15 – Answer
Economists today believe that the Phillips curve
demonstrates that the level of inflation is related to
economic activity and that there is a permanent trade-
off between inflation and economic performance.
a. true
b. false
Clicker Question 16
Last year you invested $100 in a savings account
earning interest of 9 percent per year. If over the past
year the overall price level in the economy decreased
by 2 percent, what was the real interest rate during
this period?
a. 2 percent
b. 7 percent
c. 9 percent
d. 11 percent
Clicker Question 16 – Answer
Last year you invested $100 in a savings account
earning interest of 9 percent per year. If over the past
year the overall price level in the economy decreased
by 2 percent, what was the real interest rate during
this period?
a. 2 percent
b. 7 percent
c. 9 percent
d. 11 percent
Clicker Question 17
a. 4
b. 0.25
c. 1.5
d. 0.66
Clicker Question 18 – Answer
a. 4
b. 0.25
c. 1.5
d. 0.66
Clicker Question 19