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Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Analysis: Non-Market-Clearing Macroeconomics

Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Analysis: Non-Market-Clearing Macroeconomics. Economics 282 University of Alberta. Keynesian Approach to Business Cycles. One of the central ideas of Keynesism is that wages and prices are “rigid” or “sticky”.

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Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Analysis: Non-Market-Clearing Macroeconomics

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  1. Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Analysis: Non-Market-Clearing Macroeconomics Economics 282 University of Alberta

  2. Keynesian Approach to Business Cycles • One of the central ideas of Keynesism is that wages and prices are “rigid” or “sticky”. • Wage and price rigidities imply the economy can be away from its general equilibrium for significant periods of time.

  3. Keynesian Approach to Business Cycles (continued) • Keynesians: the stabilization policy is necessary to minimize recessions. • New Keynesians: the stabilization policy is not necessary.

  4. Nominal-Wage Rigidity • In developing their approach Keynesians heavily rely on wage and price rigidities. • Nominal-wage rigidity is a situation when nominal wages are slow to adjust to changes in labour demand and supply.

  5. The SRAS Curve and Labour Contracts • Labour contracts: • specify the nominal, as opposed to the real wage; • specify employment conditions and nominal wages for an extended period; • commit both sides to a nominal wage one to three years into the future.

  6. The SRAS Curve and Labour Contracts (continued) • Employers and workers form rational price expectations. • The price and nominal wage are expected to be P0 and W0. The expected real wage is W0/P0.

  7. The SRAS Curve and Labour Contracts (continued) • If P rises, W/P will be below expected, more N will be demanded, and more Y produced. • Once the term of the contract expires, employees and firms renegotiate a new nominal wage.

  8. The SRAS Curve and Labour Contracts (continued) • A new expected real wage will be set so as to clear the labour market. • Y will differ from for the term of the labour contract.

  9. Price Expectations and the Keynesian SRAS Curve • The SRAS must intercept LRAS at the expected price level. • The rational price expectation is determined by the intersection of the LRAS and the expected position of ADe.

  10. Anticipated Monetary Policy in the Keynesian Model • Anticipated changes in money supply: • will have no effect on real variables; • they are taken into account during nominal wage negotiations.

  11. Unanticipated Monetary Policy • An unanticipated increase in the nominal money supply causes an unanticipated increase in aggregate demand. • Firms respond to the lower real wage by hiring additional employees and by expending output.

  12. Unanticipated Monetary Policy (continued) • In the new labour contract the price expectations are revised to the new price level. • Money is not neutral in the short run but is neutral in the long run. • Wage stickiness prevents the economy from reaching its general equilibrium in the short run.

  13. Anticipated Fiscal Policy in the Keynesian Model • For Keynesians anticipated fiscal policy has no impact on real variables. • In the classical model fiscal policy always affects employment and output due to effects on wealth.

  14. Unanticipated Fiscal Policy in the Keynesian Model • A temporary, unanticipated increase in government purchases increases the demand for goods and reduces desired national saving.

  15. Unanticipated Fiscal Policy (continued) • IS and AD curves shift up and to the right, P increases, W/P is lower than expected, employment and output increase. • As P rises LM curve shifts up and to the left.

  16. Unanticipated Fiscal Policy (continued) • The labour supply and FE line are unaffected. • In the long run, contracts are renegotiated. After the adjustment the output is unaffected, the price level and the interest rate rise.

  17. Comparing Monetary and Fiscal Policy • Both fiscal and monetary policies are aggregate demand policies. • Both policies, if unanticipated, affect output and employment in the short run but are neutral in the long run.

  18. Comparing Monetary and Fiscal Policy (continued) • Easy fiscal policy expands output through the multiplier effect and despite the effect of fiscal policy on the interest rate. • Easy fiscal policy increases interest rate and crowds out both consumption and investment spending.

  19. Comparing Monetary and Fiscal Policy (continued) • Monetary policy does not affect consumption and investment spending in the long run. • Unanticipated fiscal expansion, by causing real interest rates to increase, crowds out consumption and investment spending.

  20. Criticisms of the Nominal Wage Rigidity Assumption • Less than a third of the labour force in Canada is covered by contracts. • Many labour contracts contain cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs).

  21. Criticisms (continued) • According to the model prediction real wages should be countercyclical. • Keynesians respond by incorporating productivity shocks and by assuming price stickiness.

  22. Price Stickiness • Models of nominal price rigidity: • explain evidence of a procyclical movement of real wages; • while also explaining how aggregate demand shocks can play an important role in explaining business cycles.

  23. Price Stickiness (continued) • Prices are sticky because firms, after establishing a price for their output, find it is in their best interest not to adjust that price even though there has been a change in demand for their output.

  24. Price Stickiness (continued) • Flexible-price firms respond to increase in aggregate demand by increasing price. • Fixed-price firms respond to increase in aggregate demand by increasing output.

  25. Monopolistic Competition • A price taker considers the market price as given. • A price setter has some power to set price. • Perfect competition is a situation in which all buyers and sellers are price takers.

  26. Monopolistic Competition • Monopolistic competition is a situation in which individual producers can act as price setters: • there is some competition; • but a number of sellers is smaller; • and standardization of the product is imperfect.

  27. Monopolistic Competition (continued) • Keynesians point out that a relatively small part of the economy is perfectly competitive.

  28. Monopolistic Competition (continued) • A price-setter: • sets a price in nominal terms for some period of time; • meets the demand that is forthcoming at the fixed nominal price • readjusts its price from time to time.

  29. Menu Cost and Price Setting • A menu cost is a cost of changing prices. • If the loss in profits is less than the cost of changing prices – menu cost – the firm will not change its price.

  30. Empirical Evidence of Price Stickiness • Major reasons of price stickiness are menu costs and a reluctance of managers to lead price changes. • A pass-through from the exchange rate to domestic prices is slow or incomplete.

  31. Meeting the Demand at the Fixed Nominal Price • A monopolistically competitive firm charges a price higher than its marginal cost (at a markup). • When prices are sticky, firms react to changes in demand by changing the amount of production, rather than changing prices.

  32. Meeting the Demand (continued) • The economy can produce an amount of output that is not on the full-employment line.

  33. Keynesian Business Cycle Theory • Keynesians believe that a primary source of business cycle fluctuations is unanticipated shifts in the aggregate demand curve – aggregate demand shocks. • Keynesians attribute recessions to “not enough demand” for goods.

  34. Keynesian Business Cycle Theory (continued) • The Keynesian theory accounts for several business cycle facts: • recurrent fluctuations of Y in response to AD shocks; • employment fluctuates in the same direction as Y; • shocks to M are non-neutral, money is procyclical and leading.

  35. Keynesian Business Cycle Theory (continued) • Cyclical behaviour of durable and investment goods can be explained if shocks to them are themselves a main source of cycles.

  36. Keynesian Business Cycle Theory (continued) • Inflation tends to slow during or just after recessions because demand pressure is low during recessions.

  37. Procyclical Labour Productivity • This approach has a problem to explain the fact that labour productivity is procyclical. • If the production function is stable, increases in employment during booms should reduce average labour productivity, so it should be countercyclical.

  38. Procyclical Labour Productivity (continued) • Firms may hoard labour during recessions and use it less intensively. So, labour productivity falls during a recession. • Labour hoarding is found to be reduced in the last two recessions in Canada.

  39. Macroeconomic Stabilization • According to Keynesians recessions are undesirable, employment can be below the amount of labour that workers want to supply.

  40. Macroeconomic Stabilization (continued) • Average economic well-being would be increased if governments tried to reduce cyclical fluctuations.

  41. Macroeconomic Stabilization (continued) • Under no AD policy wages and prices will be eventually cut in the long run. • While the adjustment process takes place economic well-being is reduced.

  42. Macroeconomic Stabilization (continued) • If prices adjust slowly and the fiscal or monetary policies can be implemented quickly, the AD policy could move the economy back to full-employment output more quickly than doing nothing.

  43. Difficulties of the Policy of Macroeconomic Stabilization • Actual macroeconomic stabilization is less successful than Keynesian theory suggests: • monetary and fiscal policies should be coordinated; • depth of a recession is difficult to measure; • the size of effects of monetary and fiscal policies is not known.

  44. Difficulties of the Policy (continued) • Monetary and fiscal policies have lags. • Policymakers should concentrate of fighting major recessions. • Policymakers should be willing to take economic advice.

  45. Supply Shocks in the Keynesian Model • In 1970s Keynesian theory failed to account for the stagflation. • The theory predicts that inflation movements are procyclical.

  46. Supply Shocks (continued) • Keynesians admit that there can be occasional episodes when supply shocks play a primary role in economic downturns. • An adverse supply shock reduces MPN and demand for labor. The FE line and LRAS curve shift to the left.

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