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“ The Economic Way of Thinking ” 12 th Edition

“ The Economic Way of Thinking ” 12 th Edition. Chapter 15: Economic Performance and Real-world Politics. Chapter Outline. The Great Depression What Happens in a Recession? A Cluster of Errors Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation Monetary Equilibrium

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“ The Economic Way of Thinking ” 12 th Edition

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  1. “The Economic Way of Thinking”12th Edition Chapter 15: Economic Performance and Real-world Politics

  2. Chapter Outline • The Great Depression • What Happens in a Recession? • A Cluster of Errors • Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation • Monetary Equilibrium • When is Monetary Policy Effective?

  3. Chapter Outline • The Case for Fiscal Policy • The Necessity of Good Timing • The government Budget as a Policy Tool • The Horizons and the Sequence of Effects • Deficits Unlimited • Why Not Government at All Levels? • Discretion and Rules • Who is at the Controls?

  4. Introduction • What difference does it make whetheer the quantity of money in the hands of the public grows rapidly or slowly? • A comon view • An excessive rate of growth in a society’s stock of money will cause inflation

  5. Introduction • Questions • What constitutes an excessive rate of growth? • Is there such a thing as an insufficient rate of growth? • Does too little growth cause deflation(通货紧缩), or recession?

  6. Introduction • Even if we know the appropriate rate to prevent these undesireable outcomes, does anyone have the ability to bring it about? • Are there other (perhaps better) ways to prevent undesirable fluctations in the aggregate level of economic activity?

  7. The Great Depression • GDP fall: • 1930 - 9 % • 1931 - 8% • 1932 - 14% • 1933 - 2% • Since WWII output declined in 2 consecutive years only once: • 1974 - 0.6% • 1975 - 0.4%

  8. The Great Depression • In 1939 output reached 1929 level. • Per capita after tax income fell by: • 30% - 1929 to 1933 • 7% - 1929 to 1939 • Unemployment rate= 19% average in 1930’s • Unemployment rate= 25% in 1933

  9. The Great Depression • Marx and Engels (Communist Manifesto) • Predicted calamity due to epidemic of overproduction(源于生产过剩瘟疫的灾难) • Claimed the epidemic would bring an end to capitalism.

  10. What Happens in a Recession? • Recession – to recede (retreat) • Recession • Entail unintended and, thus, disruptive slowdowns • The result of frustrated expectations(预期落空) • Occurs when, for some reason, the number and depth of the disappointments increase without any compensating increase in the quantity and quality of delightful surprises

  11. What Happens in a Recession? • Production – undertaken in anticipation of a demand for the product or service • Recessions occur when demand falls short of expectations • When recession occurs, production and employment are reduced.

  12. A Cluster of Errors(错误的集群) • Recessions – accumulated mistakes • A cluster of errors among participants throuthout the economy • Thousands of entrepreneurs misread price signals provided by the market process • Recessions – correction to prior period accumulation of mistakes • Production curtailed • Workers laid off • Capital liquidated at a loss

  13. A Cluster of Errors • Questions • Why would mistakes accumulate in an economic system? • Why wouldn’t overly pessimistic decisions roughly cancel out overly optimistic decisions? • How could so many people be mistaken?

  14. A Cluster of Errors • Great Depression • Worldwide in scope • US – deeper and longer • Great Depression questions: • Cause of the cluster of errors • Length and severity

  15. A Cluster of Errors • Authors contend the cause of errors • Expansionary monetary policy of 1920’s • Credit expansion • Boom to Bust

  16. A Cluster of Errors Milton Friedman (1912-2006) University of Chicago Nobel Prize Winner 1976 Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) University of Nevada Dean of the Austrian School economics

  17. A Cluster of Errors • Rothbard’s America’s Great Depression and Friedman’s A Monetary History of the US • Chanllenge the popular perspective • That the Great Depression was caused by the collaplw of the self-organizing properties of the market system • Provide arguments and evidence • That the cause, and length and severity of the Great Depression was a consequence of government policy

  18. Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation • Credit expansion fueled by money expansion • lowers interest rates • Over-investment • Unsustainable boom • If savings increase generated - sustainable • Recessionary bust • Investment projects revealed as mistakes

  19. Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation • Credit expansion by central bank • Lowers market rate of interest • Investors engage in projects previously unprofitable (at higher cost of capital) • The investment bite is bigger than the economy’s chew, so the system chokes

  20. Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation • There is no logic reason why the bust need be lengthy and severe • The adjustment process, while painful, can be relatively quick • During the Great Depression, this process of adjustment was thwarted by government policies that • slowed down the process of adjustment • or actually set in motion new disturbances

  21. Monetary Mismanagement, Monetary Miscalculation • The Great Depression should be viewed • Not as an indictment(控诉) of the market economy • But as the major lesson in history on how monetary policy disturb the coordination process in economic life, both through expansion and contraction of the money supply

  22. Monetary Equilibrium • Coordination central to the economic system • Although there may be macroeconomicquestions, there are in the end only microeconomic answers • What matters is the incentives and information that individuals face • That will lead them to successfully coordinate their actions with others in the market • Or direct them to activities which result in coordination failures

  23. Monetary Equilibrium • The monetary system is at the center of any advanced economy • Money by its nature cannot be “neutral” (中立)because • It provides the link to all exchange relationships throughout the economy • Imbalance of the monetary system • Have an impact on the pattern of exchange and production in an economy

  24. Monetary Equilibrium • From a monetary equilibrium perspective • Goal of monetary policy should be to strive for: • Monetary neutrality by keeping Quantity supplied = quantity demanded • Then • Price stability, or stability of the purchasing power of money • No seriously relative price distortions

  25. When Is Monetary Policy Effective? • The dominant opinion among economicsts • Monetary policy might be effective in preventing inflation • But it is largely ineffectively in countering recession

  26. When Is Monetary Policy Effective? • Monetary authorities can increase excess reserves,but cannot compel banks to extend loans • Larger money stock may not produce increase in spending • Recession can create a confidence crisis • Central Bank efforts may be for naught

  27. The Case for Fiscal Policy(财政政策) • How can the the central bank or some other agency of government persuade people to borrow and spend? • One way would be • to enhance confidence of households and business decision makers

  28. The Case for Fiscal Policy • How can the government help stimulate spending at a time when fear and timidity rule? • Public policy designed to enhance public confidence • Increase spending directly with fiscal policy

  29. The Case for Fiscal Policy • Fiscal Policy • Using government budget to bring about desired levels of spending. • The Keynesian Revolution • The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) • Proposed controlling aggregate demand for fiscal policy to counteract recessions

  30. The Case for Fiscal Policy • Fiscal Policy options • Changing government spending • Changing taxes

  31. The Case for Fiscal Policy • Questions: • Did WWII confirm the power of fiscal policy? • How? • Why?

  32. The Necessity of Good Timing • Effective fiscal policy requires knowledge • Status of the economy • Recognition time lag(认识上的时滞) • Where the economy is headed • Diagnostic time lag (诊断上的时滞) • When policy will impact the economy • Implementation time lag (实施方面的时滞)

  33. The Necessity of Good Timing • Effective fiscal policy requires knowledge of the future, but… • Predicting the future changes the future, because people read the predictions and act accordingly • This is the paradox with which sciences of human behavior must live

  34. The government Budget as a Policy Tool • Congress has little control over the budget • Fiscal Policy requires agreement • Congress • President • Haste makes for increased risk of mistakes

  35. The government Budget as a Policy Tool • Question • Why not give the President and Council of Economic Advisors the authority to implement fiscal policy?

  36. Time Horizons and Politics(任期与政治) • The time horizons of those who are entrusted to construct and implement public policy is important for the selection of the economic policies that will in fact be pursued by the government

  37. Time Horizons and Politics • Changes in Aggregate Demand • Affects output and employment before affecting prices • Politically • Expansionary policy is preferred over contractionary policy because…

  38. Time Horizons and Politics • Politically • Favor policies yielding benefits on • Well organized and well informed interest groups • In the short run • At the expense of costs borne by unorganized and ill-informed mass of voters • The standard pattern in democratically governed societies • More frequent and severe recessions along with a rising rate of inflation

  39. Time Horizons and Politics • Milton Friedman (Nobel Prize winner in 1976) and James Buchanan (Nobel Prize winner in 1986) • Both suport “tying the government’s hands” • Both argued that rules would outperform discretion in generating good economic policy • Friedman argued for a monetary rule • Buchanan argued for constitutional rules that called for a balanced budget

  40. Deficits Unlimited(无限赤字) • Why do budget deficits persist when there is a majority support for a balanced budget? • Answer • There is no way to reduce the total budget while expanding each individual item in it.

  41. Why Not Government at All Levels? • Why don’t local governments do not produce chronic(长期的) deficits? • Answer • Local governments do not have control over the medium of exchange

  42. Why Not Government at All Levels? • Why did national governments not produce such chronic deficits within peacetime before 1970? • Why has it only been within recent years that other industrialized democracies started to make deficits the rule rather than the exception?

  43. Why Not Government at All Levels? • Answer • The demise of the once-strong prejudice against government deficits (i.e., regarded as immoral) • Strong majority convictions influence public policy

  44. Why Not Government at All Levels? How did Keynesian economics impact our willingness to accept federal budget deficits?

  45. Why Not Government at All Levels? • Keynesian(凯恩斯主义) analysis • budgets don’t have to be balanced from year to year • they need noly to be balanced over the course of the business cycle, with surpluses in periods of prosperity making up for deficits in periods of recession • Popular belief among economists in 1960s and 1970s • Anyone insisting on a balanced government budget just did not understand “modern economics”

  46. Why Not Government at All Levels? • The trouble with the new doctrine • Its effect is to permit perennial(持久的) deficits • There is no fiscal period that can be identified with “the course of the business cycle” • The surplus that is supposed to balance the deficit never has to be balanced, it can always be promised for the next year or the year after • The bias of the democratic political process takes over and makes deficits the rule rather than the exception

  47. Why Not Government at All Levels? • Milton Friedman • Inflation is everywhere and always a monetary phenomenon • We can modify Friedman’s dictum(名言) • Hyperinflationa are everywhere and always the consequences of fiscal imbalances

  48. Discretion and Rules(自行决定和规则) • Evidence from US in the 1970s suggest that • The use of discretionary fiscal and monetary policy to stabilize the economy actually increased its instability • But many people still believe that • We do posses the knowledge and skills required to achieve milder recessions and greater price stability through aggregate-demand management • It failed only cecause the right people won’t in charge

  49. Discretion and Rules • However, institutions should be evaluated • Not on the assumption that angels(天使,品行高尚的人) will run them • Rather on the assumption that • Government policies wil be controlled by politicians • Monetary and especially fiscal policies will be formulated in the same political context that produces decisions on import tariffs, highway construction

  50. Discretion and Rules • An Alternative to Discretionary Fiscal and Monetary Policy • Government expenditures without reference to a stabilization goal

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