Aggregate Supply and The Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment
Aggregate Supply and The Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment
Aggregate Supply and The Short-Run Tradeoff Between Inflation and Unemployment
CHAPTER
Y Y (P P ) e
W Pe
ω
P P
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 3
The sticky-wage model
W Pe
ω
P P
If it turns out that then
e
Unemployment and output are
P P at their natural rates.
Real wage is less than its target,
P Pe so firms hire more workers and
output rises above its natural rate.
Real wage exceeds its target,
P Pe so firms hire fewer workers and
output falls below its natural rate.
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 4
CHAPTER 13 Aggregate Supply slide 5
The sticky-wage model
Assumptions:
All wages and prices are perfectly flexible,
all markets are clear.
Each supplier produces one good, consumes
many goods.
Each supplier knows the nominal price of the
good she produces, but does not know the
overall price level.
Y Y (P P ), e
s
where
(1 s )a
P LRAS
Y Y (P P e )
(2) P P e (1 )(Y Y )
(3) P P e (1 )(Y Y )
(5) e (1 )(Y Y )
(6) (1 )(Y Y ) (u u n )
(7) e (u u n )
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 20
The Phillips Curve and SRAS
SRAS: Y Y (P P e )
Phillips curve: e (u u n )
SRAS curve:
Output is related to
unexpected movements in the price level.
Phillips curve:
Unemployment is related to
unexpected movements in the inflation rate.
In the short e (u u n )
run, policymakers
face a tradeoff
between and u.
1 The short-run
e Phillips curve
u
un
E.g., an increase
in e shifts the u
un
short-run P.C.
upward.
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 26
The sacrifice ratio
year u un uu n
1982 9.5% 6.0% 3.5%
1983 9.5 6.0 3.5
1984 7.4 6.0 1.4
1985 7.1 6.0 1.1
Total 9.5%
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 31
Calculating the sacrifice ratio
for the Volcker disinflation
From previous slide: Inflation fell by 6.7%,
total cyclical unemployment was 9.5%.
Okun’s law:
1% of unemployment = 2% of lost output.
So, 9.5% cyclical unemployment
= 19.0% of a year’s real GDP.
Sacrifice ratio = (lost GDP)/(total disinflation)
= 19/6.7 = 2.8 percentage points of GDP were lost
for each 1 percentage point reduction in inflation.
CHAPTER 13.01 slide 32
The natural rate hypothesis
Our analysis of the costs of disinflation, and of
economic fluctuations in the preceding chapters,
is based on the natural rate hypothesis:
2. Phillips curve
derived from the SRAS curve
states that inflation depends on
expected inflation
cyclical unemployment
supply shocks
presents policymakers with a short-run tradeoff
between inflation and unemployment