MACROECONOMICS I March 28th, 2014 Class 7. The IS-LM model Announcements üNO class next week (April 4th) üMidterm exam: April 11th, at 12:00, S6 üHomework # 2. Deadline: April 11th (before exam) Midterm: All topics including today’s class + all handouts N!B! A written form exam (bring paper and calculator) Contacting me: email + skype for urgent matters Review: The Money Market Explain how the following developments would affect the supply of money, the demand for money, and the interest rate. a. The Fed’s bond traders buy bonds in open market operations. b. An increase in credit-card availability reduces the cash people hold. c. The Federal Reserve reduces banks’ reserve requirements. d. Households decide to hold more money to use for holiday shopping. e. A wave of optimism boosts business investment and expands aggregate demand. Review: Equilibrium Interest Rate The money demand is: Personal income is equal to $100 Money supply: $20 1.Find the equilibrium in the money market 2.If the central bank wants to increase i by 10 % (from 2 % to 12 %), to what level should it set the money supply? The Goods Market and the Role of Interest Rate § Linking goods market and money market Common element: Interest rate i • • The goods’ market: N!B! Monetary policy affects aggregate output (GDP) > The Equilibrium AE Y, output Interest rate, i Money, M MD MS i* M* Y* Y* Equilibrium: i* Equilibrium: Y* Expansionary Monetary Policy AE Y, output Interest rate, i Money, M MD MS i* M* Y* Y* Show the effect of increase in money supply in both markets N!B! Expansionary monetary policy lowers interest rate and increases output M`S i* M`* Y`* Expansionary Fiscal Policy AE Y, output Interest rate, i Money, M MD MS i* M* Y* Y* Show the effect of expansionary fiscal policy in both markets N!B! Expansionary fiscal policy increases both output and interest rate Y`* M`D i`* Feedback Effects of the Fiscal and Monetary Policies Expansionary fiscal policy: • Short-run gain as output growth • But, interest rate increases => Investment drops => Less growth in the future ÞA short-term gain at a long-term cost G multiplier < 1/(1-b) Expansionary monetary policy: • Short-run gain as output growth •Drop in interest rate => Rise of investment => More growth in the future ÞA win-win situation The Feedback Effect of Fiscal Policy AE Y, output Interest rate, i Money, M MD MS i* M* Y* Y* Y1* Y1* M1D i1* Y2* N!B! The initial effect of increased G is diminished through the interaction with the money market The Feedback Effect of Monetary Policy AE Y, output Interest rate, i Money, M MD MS i* M* Y* Y* Y1* Y1* i1* Y2* Y2* N!B! The initial effect of increased in money supply is diminished through the interaction with the goods’ market M1S M1* M1D i2* The Liquidity Trap: Zero Lower Bound • A situation when monetary policy is ineffective • Nominal interest rate is close to 0 % and cannot go below 0. But: Firms do not want to invest despite free capital Consumers do not want to save • Anticipation of a bad economic situation • Increase in money supply => More liquid wealth portfolios of the households • TE The US in 1930th and 2008 had the interest rate between 0-0.25 % Japan in the second half of 1990s The Liquidity Trap (Cont.) • Demand for money becomes horizontal • Further increase in money supply has no effect on interest rate Interest rate, i Money, M MS M1S M2S i Zero interest rate Further increase in money supply through quantitative easing The Theory of Short-Run Fluctuations Goods Market Equilibrium Money Market Equilibrium IS Curve LM Curve IS – LM Model Aggregate Demand Curve Aggregate Supply Curve Explaining the Short-Run Fluctuations The IS-LM Model: Introduction Equilibrium (short-run): a combination of interest rate (i*) and output (Y*) that simultaneously satisfy the equilibrium conditions in goods and money markets • A model of general equilibrium Equilibrium in goods’ market: Equilibrium in money market: > > IS Curve: Goods’ Market AE Y, output > > Y1* Y2* • For any value of i, we have a different Y* IS Curve: Relationship between Y* and i AE Y, output i, interest rate Y*, equilibrium output > > Y1* Y2* i2 i1 Y1* Y2* A2 A1 IS Curve: Relationship between Y* and i IS curve: for any given level of interest rate what is the level of income that brings the goods market into equilibrium • All possible combinations of the interest rate and equilibrium output. Y1* Y2* A2 A1 • Changes in i result in the movement along the IS curve. • At any given i, the fiscal policy leads to the shifts of the IS curve IS Curve Shifts ü Show graphically the effect of tax increase on the equilibrium output. If the interest rate is constant, what would happen to the IS curve after such increase? ü ü Show graphically the effect of increase in autonomous consumption. What would happen to the IS curve in this case? The IS curve: Relationship between Y* and i 1. Changes in interest rate 2. Expansionary fiscal policy with any given interest rate 3. Contractionary fiscal policy with any given interest rate Y1* Y2* 1 3 2 LM Curve: Money Market Money, M M* Interest rate, i i* i`* Ms MD M`D > • For any value of Y, we have a different i* LM Curve: Relationship Between i* and Y i1 i2 Y1 Y2 i*2 i*1 B2 B1 LM Curve: Relationship Between i* and Y (Cont.) i*2 i*1 Y1 Y2 Equilibrium interest rate, i* Output, Y B2 B1 LM curve: all values of the equilibrium interest rate associated with any value of income for a given stock of money LM Curve Shifts • Increase in money demand results in movements along the LM curve • Monetary policy leads to the shifts of the LM curve: Expansionary monetary policy: LM curve shifts down Contractionary monetary policy: LM curve shifts up i*2 i*1 Equilibrium interest rate, i* Output, Y Y1 Y2 Short-Run Equilibrium • Every point of IS curve stands for the equilibrium in the goods’ market • Every point of LM curve stands for the equilibrium in money market N!B! Only one point stands for the general equilibrium E Policy Analysis with IS-LM TE Fiscal contraction: Increase in taxes Three-step procedure Step 1: Effect on the goods’ market equilibrium and shifts in IS-LM curves T => AE => Y* => For given i, Y* => IS curve shifts General rule: a curve shifts in response to policy, only if this policy variable directly appears in the equation represented by this curve. • Taxes enter only IS curve • LM curve remains unchanged Policy Analysis with IS-LM (Cont.) Three-step procedure Step 2: Effect on general equilibrium IS curve shifts to the left, LM remains the same => Y* & i* Step 3: Provide intuition for the obtained result Increase in taxes => lower disposable income => smaller consumption => Decrease in demand => decrease in output and income Decrease in income => reduction of the demand for money = > decrease in the interest rate => decline in the interest rate reduces but does not completely offset the effect of higher taxes on the demand for goods Policy Analysis with IS-LM (Cont.) TE Expansionary monetary policy: Increase in money supply Step 1: Ms => i* => LM curve shifts down Step 2: IS curve remains unchanged, LM curve shifts down => Y* & i* Step 3: An increase in money supply leads to a lower interest rate. The lower interest rate leads to an increase in investment and, in turn, to an increase in demand and output. IS-LM Model: Policy Mix Policy mix: a combination of fiscal and monetary policies • Using both policies in the same direction (recession of 2007-2010 in Europe and the U.S.) • Using both policies in the opposite directions (early 1990s in the U.S.) • TE Increase in G => Possible response of the central bank? Response 1: Hold the money supply constant Response 2: Hold the interest rate constant Response 3: Hold the output constant IS-LM Model: Policy Mix Scenario 1: Increase in G and constant money supply IS` Y`* i`* Larger Y* and larger i* => Y* will drop in the future => Short-term gain with long-term loss IS-LM Model: Policy Mix (Cont.) Scenario 2: Increase in G and constant interest rate IS` Y`* i`* Larger Y* and same i* Y``* IS-LM Model: Policy Mix (Cont.) Scenario 3: Increase in G and constant output IS` Y`* i`* Larger Y* and same i* Y``* i``* IS-LM Model: Policy Mix (Cont.) § The U.S. fiscal policy multipliers Next class: Midterm exam Reading Assignment: Make sure you read all handouts! N!B! No class next week (April 4th) Midterm exam: April 11th Homework #2 is due April 11th (before the midterm)