1 / 18

Output, Unemployment, & Inflation

Output, Unemployment, & Inflation. Tools for Disinflation Modified Phillips Curve : unemployment and the change in inflation Okun’s Law : output growth and the change in unemployment Aggregate Demand : Money, output, and prices  Money growth, Output growth , Inflation.

kerem
Télécharger la présentation

Output, Unemployment, & Inflation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Output, Unemployment, & Inflation Tools for Disinflation • Modified Phillips Curve: unemployment and the change in inflation • Okun’s Law: output growth and the change in unemployment • Aggregate Demand: Money, output, and prices  Money growth, Output growth, Inflation

  2. Modified Phillips Curve

  3. Okun’s Law: The Data

  4. Okun’s Law: The Equation ut - ut-1 = - 0.4 (gyt - 3%) • gyt must be at least 3% to keep unemployment from rising • WHY? • Labor force growth • Increases in labor productivity • Why is the coefficient only 0.4? • Firms need a minimum number of workers • Firms hoard labor • Changes in labor force participation • When economy tanks, workers drop out of the laborforce •  u doesn’t rise as much as it otherwise would • Okun’s Law Coefficients Across Countries • Country 1960-1980 1981-1998 • United States 0.39 0.42 United Kingdom 0.15 0.51 Germany* 0.20 0.32 Japan 0.10 0.20

  5. Okun’s Law : how growth in excess of normal growth impacts the unemployment rate : normal growth rate In general, the relation between changes in unem-ployment and output growth is:

  6. The Aggregate Demand Relation: Money Growth (gmt), Inflation (πt), Output Growth (gyt) M/P = Y L(i) Y = (1/L) M/P • Disinflation • According to the AD relation, given inflation, output growth rate decreases when money growth decreases • From Okun’s Law, a decrease in output growth increases unemployment (or reduces it by less than otherwise) • From Modified Phillip’s Curve, • higher unemployment  lower inflation

  7. IN MEDIUM RUN: ut = un gy keeps up with productivity and labor force growth and (Assume a constant growth in the nominal money supply) Medium Run: (Okun’s Law) (Aggregate Demand) Output, Unemployment, & Inflation

  8. If decreases to : u remains at un & falls A Adjusted money growth B Adjusted money growth Natural unemployment rate un Output, Unemployment, & Inflation:The Medium Run Adjusting to a decrease in nominal money growth Inflation Rate,  Unemployment Rate, u

  9. Disinflation: How much unemployment? And for how long? = Reduce it in 1 yr: Scenario: Reduce inflation from 14 to 4 percent &  = 1 Conclusion: Point years of excess unemployment equals 10 The Sacrifice Ratio: Excess point years of unemployment Decrease in Inflation If  = 1, what is the sacrifice ratio?

  10. Year Before Disinflation After 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Inflation (%) 14 12 10 8 6 4 4 4 4 Δ Inflation 0 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 0 0 0 Unemployment rate (%) 6.5 8.5 8.5 8.5 8.5 8.5 6.5 6.5 6.5 Output growth (%) 3 -2 3 3 3 3 8 3 3 Nominal money growth (%) 17 10 13 11 9 7 12 7 7 Working on the required path of money growth A Scenario: Reduce inflation from 14% to 4% in 5 years

  11. Year 0 A Year 1 Year 2 Inflation Rate (percent) Year 3 Year 4 Year 5 C B Year 6+ Unemployment Rate (percent) The disinflation path • Transition to lower money growth and inflation is associated with a period of higher unemployment • Regardless of the path, the number of point-years of excess unemployment is the same • In the medium run: output and unemployment return to normal

  12. This model indicates that policy can change the timing but not number of point-years of excess unemployment. • Challenges to this model: Expectations, credibility • Lucas  Rat-X New Classical • Sargent  Low sacrifice in history Economics Expectations & Credibility: The Lucas Critique • The previous model assumed: te = t-1 • What if teis based on an expectation that Fed policy would reduce inflation from 14% to 4%. • Then: 4% = 4% - 0% • Inflation falls to 4% and unemployment remains at the natural rate • Reduction in money growth could be neutral

  13. A Second Challenge: Nominal rigidities and contractsFischer – sticky wages New Keynesian Taylor – staggered contracts Economics • Disinflation Without Unemployment in the Taylor Model: • Full credibility and staggered wage decisions • Wages in new contracts set close to wages in recent contracts • Commit to slow money growth dramatically in the near future • Wage and price inflation begin to decline when new policy is announced…but only slowly.

  14. The U.S. Disinflation, 1979-1985 1979 • Unemployment = 5.8% • GDP growth = 2.5% • Inflation = 13.3% • The Fed shifted from targeting interest to targeting the growth rate of nominal money

  15. The U.S. Disinflation, 1979-1984 Did Fed credibility reduce the sacrifice ratio? 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 • GDP growth (%) 2.5 -0.5 1.8 -2.2 3.9 6.2 3.2 • Unemployment rate(%) 5.8 7.1 7.6 9.7 9.6 7.5 7.2 • CPI Inflation (%) 13.3 12.5 8.9 3.8 3.8 3.9 3.8 • Cumulative unemployment 0.6 1.7 4.9 8.0 9.0 9.7 • Cumulative disinflation 0.8 4.4 9.5 9.5 9.4 9.5 • Sacrifice ratio 0.75 0.39 0.51 0.84 0.95 1.02 Cumulative unemployment is the sum of point-years of excess unemployment from 1980 on, assuming a natural rate of 6.5%. Cumulative disinflation is the difference between inflation in a given year and inflation in 1979. The sacrifice ratio is the ratio of cumulative unemployment to cumulative disinflation. • Disinflation was associated with high unemployment • The sacrifice ratio was very close to 1: 10% disinflation with 10 point-years of excess unemployment • The Modified Phillips Curve relation was very robust

  16. Laurence Ball: Disinflation Experiences in 19 OECD Countries • Disinflation leads to higher unemployment • Faster disinflations are associated with small sacrifice ratios (Lucas/Sargent) • Sacrifice ratios are smaller in countries that have shorter wage contracts (Fischer & Taylor)

  17. Problem 9.6 Get πtdown from 12% to 2% by keeping u at 6% • πt = πte – 1 (u – 5%) a) πte = πt-1  how long to disinflate? b) πte = .25 * 2 + .75 * πt-1  how long to disinflate? c) π1e = .25 * 2 + .75 * π0 & π2e = 2 %  how long to disinflate?

  18. Problem 9.3 • Δu = - .4 (gy – 3%) • Δπ = - 1 (u – 5%) • gy = gm – π • un = ? • If u = un and π = 8%. Then gy = ? and gm = ? • Get π down from 8% to 4% in one year! • Trace values of π, u, gyand gm

More Related