Transcript Chapter 15
Chapter 15
A CENTURY OF ECONOMIC THEORY
Chapter 15
Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Learning Objectives
After this chapter, you should be able to:
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2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Discuss the equation of exchange.
Explain the quantity theory of money.
Analyze Classical economics.
Analyze Keynesian economics.
Apply the policy prescription of the Monetarist school.
Describe Supply-Side economics.
Judge the Rational Expectations theory.
Apply behavioral economics.
Assess the use of conventional macropolicy to fight recessions
and inflation.
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Why Do Economists Disagree?
Policy debates derive from different theories, either
consciously or implicitly.
John Maynard Keynes: “Practical men, who believe themselves to
be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually slaves
of some defunct economist.”
Why are there different economic theories?
Different assumptions about human behavior and motivations
(e.g., how rational are we?)
Different assumptions about the behavior of economic variables
(e.g., velocity of money)
Focus on short run versus long run (e.g., shape of Aggregate Supply
curve)
Different goals (e.g., fighting unemployment or inflation)
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Five Schools of Macroeconomic Theory
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2.
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5.
Classical economics (1776-1930)
Keynesian economics (1930s - present)
Monetarist school (1960s - present)
Supply-side economics (1970s – present)
Rational expectations theory 1990s – present)
Only Keynesian economics argues for active
macroeconomic policy.
All of the others are variations on “laissez-faire,” small
government approach.
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Keynesian-Monetarist Debate
Since the mid-20th century, the two major macroeconomic
policy schools have dominated policy debates:
Keynesianism and Monetarism.
Keynesian-Monetarist debate revolves around the
quantity theory of money which itself is based on the
equation of exchange.
The equation of exchange and the quantity theory of money are
easy to confuse.
The equation of exchange is used to explain the quantity theory of
money.
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The Equation of Exchange
The equation of exchange is MV = PQ.
M is the total dollars in the nation’s money
supply.
V is the number of times per year each dollar
is spent [i.e., velocity of money].
P is the average price of all the goods and
services sold during the year.
Q is the quantity of goods and services sold
during the year.
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Both Sides of the Equation are Ways of
Describing GDP
Left Side of Equation:
M multiplied by V (MV)
would be total spending
(dollars in circulation times
the number of times they
circulate).
Total spending by a nation
during a given year is GDP.
Right Side of
Equation:
P multiplied by Q (PQ) is
the total amount of money
received by sellers of all
final goods and services
produced by a nation
during a given year.
This also is GDP.
Therefore, MV = GDP
Therefore, PQ = GDP
Things equal to the same thing are equal to each other.
MV = PQ
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Example of the Equation of Exchange
The following example is in billions of dollars (without $ signs):
Suppose M = 900; V = 9; and P = 81.
MV = PQ
900 X 9 = 81 x Q
8,100 = 81 X Q
Q must = 100
8,100 = 81 X 100
8,100 = 8,100
The equation of exchange must always balance.
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The Quantity Theory of Money:
The Crude Version
This version, espoused by Classical economists, assumes that
V and Q are constant.
So if the money supply (M) changes by a certain percentage, the
price level (P) changes by that same percentage.
MV = PQ
900 X 9 = 81 X 100
1800 X 9 = 162 X
100
If M doubles, then P
will also double.
16,200 = 16,200
Conclusion: Increasing M leads to inflation.
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A Closer Look at V and Q
Keynesian economists looked empirically at V and Q and
found neither is constant in the short run.
Since 1950, V has risen fairly steadily from about 3 to over 10.
Classical economists assumed Q was constant in the long run. But
it isn’t in the short run.
• During recessions, production, and therefore Q will fall.
• Q fell at an annual rate of about 4 percent during the 1981-82
recession.
• During recoveries, production picks up, so we go from a
declining Q to a rising Q.
Therefore, the crude version of the quantity theory of
money is not valid.
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The Quantity Theory of Money:
The Sophisticated Version
Monetarists developed a sophisticated version of the
Quantity Theory of Money to respond to the Keynesians.
Like the Classicals, they emphasize long-run trends:
Short-term changes in V are either very small or predicable.
Q may fall below full-employment in the short run, but is stable in
the long run.
The effect of an increase in M depends on the initial level of
output (Q).
This can be modeled using aggregate supply and demand.
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Hypothetical Aggregate Supply Curve
If we are close to or at
full employment, an
increase in M will lead
mainly to an increase
in P.
If we are well below full
employment, an increase in M will
lead mainly to an increase in Q.
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Classical Economics
The classical school had the following tenets:
Say’s law implies supply generates its own demand.
Flexible prices mean there are no shortages or surpluses.
Flexible wages mean all unemployment is voluntary.
Interest rates balance Savings and Investment because savings will
be invested.
“Laissez-faire” and wait for recessions to cure themselves.
Classical school relied upon the crude version of the
Quantity theory of money.
They assumed Q was constant in the long run, as economy reached
full employment equilibrium.
For the equation of exchange to balance, V must also be constant.
Conclusion: Expansionary monetary policy is inflationary.
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The Interest Rate Mechanism
(that leads to S = I)
An interest rate of
10% is found at
the intersection.
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Keynesian Economics
The Keynesian school has the following tenets:
The problem with recessions is inadequate demand.
No one will invest in new plant and equipment when much of their
capacity is idle.
Wages and prices are not flexible downward due to institutional barriers.
Government must spend enough money to raise aggregate demand to get
people back to work.
Keynesians disagree with using the equation of exchange to
conclude that monetary policy is inflationary:
Neither Q nor V are constant in the short run.
If M rises, people may not spend the additional money, but just hold it
until interest rates rise.
Keynesian economics enjoyed a revival beginning in 2009
with the Great Recession and the Obama stimulus package.
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The Monetarist School
Monetarism’s name comes from the theory’s emphasis on managing the
rate of growth in the money supply to control inflation.
Key theorist was Milton Friedman.
Friedman did exhaustive studies of the relationship between the rate of
growth of the money supply and the rate of increase in prices.
He concluded that the U.S. never had a serious inflation that was not
accompanied by rapid monetary growth.
When the money supply has grown slowly, the country has had no
inflation.
From these correlations, he concluded increases in the money supply
cause inflation.
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Monetarism and the Sophisticated Quantity
Theory of Money
Monetarists use the sophisticated version of the Quantity
Theory of Money.
When the money supply grows, the price level rises, albeit not at
exactly the same rate.
Recessions are caused when the Federal Reserve increases the
money supply at less than the rate needed by business.
Minimal policy intervention: Fed should target a constant
rate of growth in the money supply to accommodate
economic growth.
Since real GDP growth has a long-term trend of 3 percent per year,
that’s how much to increase M.
This steady policy is called The Monetary Rule.
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The Basic Tenets of Monetarism
The key to stable economic growth is constant rate of
increase in the money supply.
Fed is to blame for economic instability, including the Great
Depression.
Expansionary monetary policy will only temporarily depress
interest rates.
Eventually, banks will raise them, anticipating inflation.
Expansionary monetary policy will only temporarily reduce
the unemployment rate.
Labor unions will bargain up wages, leading to job losses.
Expansionary fiscal policy will only temporarily raise output
and employment.
Borrowing leads to crowding out of private investment.
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The Decline of Monetarism
Monetarism’s popularity started to decline in the late 1970s
and early 1980s.
Both Keynesianism and Monetarism had difficulty
prescribing a policy to deal with stagflation (combination
of recession and inflation) caused by high oil prices.
First serious experiment with the Monetary Rule coincided
with economic instability:
Paul Volker, the first Monetarist Fed Chair, adhered to the
Monetary Rule starting in 1979.
This was followed by double-digit inflation and interest rates, two
recessions, and major unemployment.
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Supply-Side Economics
In response to stagflation and perceived limits of
Keynesianism and Monetarism, Supply-side economics
came into vogue in the early 1980s.
Supply-side economics endorsed by President Ronald Reagan.
Theme was “get government off the backs of the American people.”
The object of supply-siders is to raise aggregate supply (not
AD).
If shift AS, can increase real GDP without increasing price level.
Supply-siders mantra was to cut tax rates, reduce government
spending, and eliminate government regulations to stimulate AS.
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Undesirable Effects of High Marginal Tax Rates
Key theorist, Arthur Laffer, focused on undesirable effects
of high marginal tax rates.
The Work Effect: People may not work overtime or second jobs
if pushes them into higher tax bracket.
The Savings and Investment Effect: High tax rates on interest
and profits are disincentives.
The Elimination of Productive Market Exchanges: People
may engage in “do it yourself” projects rather than paying someone
to do the work, if they have to pay taxes on the services.
Output is lower because of these disincentives.
Government regulation of businesses also is another
disincentive for investment.
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The Laffer Curve
If you lower the marginal tax rate from
point A to point B, you would actually
increase tax revenue.
Point C is the tax rate that
maximizes tax revenue.
The rationale of the Laffer curve is that when marginal tax rates are too high,
we can raise tax revenues by lowering the tax rate.
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Does Supply-Side Economics Work?
Keynesians use tax cuts to stimulate AD; Supply-siders use
tax cuts to stimulate AS. What’s the difference?
Keynesians expect households to spend their tax cuts. They prefer tax
cuts aimed at working class and middle class.
Supply-siders expect households to save their tax cuts. They prefer tax
cuts aimed at high earners (“trickle-down” economics).
Supply side only works if tax cuts are saved and then invested by
businesses.
During the Reagan administration, tax rates were cut, but
tax revenues did not increase enough to avert huge budget
deficits.
In 2003, President George W. Bush’s tax cuts were passed
in Congress, but barely.
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Questions for Thought and Discussion
If you received a tax cut or tax rebate, would
you be more likely to spend it or save it?
If income tax rates were reduced, would you
increase your hours of work?
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Rational Expectations Theory
Key theorist is Robert Lucas.
Rational expectations theory is based on three
assumptions:
Individuals and businesses learn through experience to anticipate
the consequences of changes in monetary and fiscal policy.
They act instantaneously to protect their economic interest thus
nullifying the intended effects.
All resource and product markets are purely competitive.
Rational expectations theorists, like classical economists,
say the government should do as little as possible.
Follow the monetary rule (3% annual growth in M).
Balance the budget.
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Criticisms of Rational Expectations School
Is it reasonable to expect individuals and business firms to
accurately predict the consequences of macroeconomic
policy?
Our economic markets are not purely competitive, some are
not competitive at all.
The rigidities imposed by contracts restrict adjustments to
changing economic conditions.
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Macroeconomic Policy in the Real World:
Summary
Three of our schools of economics (Classical, Monetarist,
and Rational Expectations) believe government should do
nothing during recession and little during inflation.
Supply-siders believe in reducing the impact of government
to stimulate the economy.
Only Keynesians believe in active government intervention.
The large majority of economists favor some intervention in
the short run, even if the economy could self-regulate.
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Behavioral Economics
Relatively new school of thought.
Their goal is to apply a wider range of psychological
concepts to economic theory.
Humans can be short-sighted, emotional, and irrational.
But …
The main contention is that while people often do not act in
their own self-interested, they can be nudged to do so.
Behavioral economists are not challenging mainstream
beliefs that rational behavior and economic self-interest
motivate behavior.
They are challenging the belief that these are the only
motivating factors.
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Conventional Macropolicy to Fight Recessions
Fiscal Policy: Run a budget deficit by cutting taxes or
increasing G or both.
Gradually reduce the deficit as economy recovers to avoid driving
up interest rates.
Monetary Policy: Speed up growth of money supply.
Gradually reduce growth of M as economy recovers to avoid
inflation.
Policy dilemma: Budget deficits require massive borrowing
by the U.S. Treasury, but this drives up interest rates.
Higher interest rates can choke an economic recovery.
Is there a way out of this dilemma? Think of the economic
conditions of 2009 – 2010.
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Conventional Macropolicy to Fight Inflation
To Fight Inflation:
Fiscal Policy: Reduce budget deficits and create
surpluses to pay off federal debt.
Monetary Policy: Slow the rate of growth in M or even
contract it.
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Fighting Inflationary Recessions (Stagflation)
and the Limits of Macropolicy
What if we have a combination of recession and inflation?
Two options:
Combine an expansionary fiscal policy and a contractionary
monetary policy (Example: 1981-82).
Fight them in sequence (Example: fighting inflation in 1950s, then
expanding economy in 1960s)
Conventional policies are not ideal for fighting inflationary
recessions.
This was a concern in 2008-2010.
Macropolicy is also less effective as economy globalizes.
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Economics in Action: True Believers
Great Recession of 2008 - ?
Financial crisis, worst since the 1930s.
Keynesian fiscal policy + expansionary monetary policy.
Financial meltdown was prevented.
Politicians and policymakers want to adhere to and
believe at least one school of economic thought.
In the Great Recession, Keynesianism has made a
comeback.
Question for thought and discussion: Has there been
any push-back against Keynesianism during the Great
recession.
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