Topic 4 - Aggregate Supply and the Short run tradeoff between Inflation and Unemployment Flashcards
(45 cards)
What are the 3 models of Aggregate Supply in the SR?
1) Sticky wage model
2) Sticky price model
3) Imperfect Information Model
What do all 3 models imply?
That aggregate output is equal to the natural rate of output + a positive parameter multplied by the actual price level minus the expected price level
(Y = Ybar +a(P-Pe)
SEE IN NOTES
What does the Sticky wage model assume?
Assumes that firms and workers negotiate contracts and fix nominal wage before they know what the price level will turn out to be
How do we calculate the Nominal Wage (Sticky wage model)?
W = w x Pe
Where:
W = Nominal Wage
w = Target real wage (What you aim your target wage is)
Pe = Expected Price
How do we find the Real Wage (Sticky wage model)?
W/P = w x Pe/P
Where:
W/P = Real wage
How do we find the Equilibrium level of Employment (Sticky wage model)?
MPL = W/P = w x Pe/P
So firms employ up until the MPL
How do find the Labour demand (Sticky wage model)?
L = Ld (W/P)
which gives us:
Ld (w) = Lbar (Natural rate of employment)
How do we find the Output (Sticky wage model)?
(Y) = f(Kbar,L) = f(Kbar, Ld (W x(Pe/P))
Note if Pe = P, then W/P =w so Ld(W/P) = L and Y=Ybar
What does the Sticky wage model imply about the AS curve?
Implies it can be represented as Y= Y+α (P - Pe)
Approximates that the true AS Curve implied by the model, which says that deviations of output from Ybar depend on P/Pe
When is the level of employment not/at its optimal level?
If:
- P = Pe: Unemployment and Output is at its natural rates
- P> Pe: Real wages less than its target so firms hire more workers and output rise above its natural rates
- P
What does the Sticky wage model imply about the economy?
-Implies that the real wage should be counter-cyclical
i. e.
- In booms, when P is rising, the real wage should fall
- In recessions, when P falls the real wage should rise
This dont happen in real life
What does Barsky and Solon (1989) claim about the Sticky wage model?
- Real wages were, in turn, acyclical, procyclical, and countercyclical
- Looking at industry-wide data, Barsky and Solon (1989) find that there is little if any evidence of countercyclical real wages
- Studies of micro data, however, provide quite strong evidence of procyclicality in the real wage.
- Find procyclicality when they look at data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, which studies the behavior of individual households.
What does Sumner and Silver (1989) claim about the sticky wage model?
-Results on the cyclicality of the real wage are sensitive to sample period.
Argument is that shocks to aggregate demand will cause prices to be procyclical and shocks to aggregate supply will cause prices to be countercyclical.
If nominal wages are sticky, then we should observe procyclical real wages when inflation is countercyclical, and vice versa. This is borne out by the data
What are the reasons for Sticky prices according to the Sticky Price model?
- Long-term contracts between firms and customers
- Menu costs
- Firms not wishing to annoy with frequent price changes
What is assumed in the Sticky Price Model?
- Firms set their own prices(like Monopolistic Competition)
What is a Firm desired price? (Sticky price model)
p = P + α( Y - Ybar)
Where: α > 0
(Firms with flexible prices set prices using this)
What are the two types of Firms in the economy? (According to the Sticky price model)
firms with flexible prices
firms with sticky prices—must set their prices before they know how P and Y will turn out
How do Sticky price firms set their prices? (Sticky price model)
According to the equation:
p = EP - α (EY -EYbar)
What can we identify off the firms desired price? (The flexible firm price strat)
-If P high then firms assume costs higher, causing desired prices to go higher
- Y > Ybar, means the economy is in a boom
- Y
How do we simplify the Sticky price firm desired price strat?
Assume that expected output is equal to Expected natural level of output (EY = EYbar)
So leaves the equation as,
p = EP
How do we find the overall price level (P)? (Sticky price model) (Part 1)
- Create value S to represent:
Fraction of firms with sticky prices
Implies 1-S, gives us number of flexible firms - Combine non- sticky wages desired prices and sticky wages desired price:
P = S[EP] + (1-S)[ P+ α(Y-Ybar)] - Multiply (1-S) by P and the 2nd term:
P = S[EP] + (1-S)P) + [(1-S)α(Y-Ybar)
How do we find the overall price level (P)? (Sticky price model) (Part 2)
- Minus (1-S) on both sides:
sP = s [EP] + (1-S)[α(Y-Ybar)] - Divide both sides by S to give final answer:
P= EP + (1-S)α/S (Y-Ybar)
What is the equation for the overall price level in the economy?
P = EP + (1-S)α/S (Y-Ybar)
What can be implied from the overall price level in the economy?
High EP means high P
If firms expect high prices, then firms that must set prices in advance will set them high.Other firms respond by setting prices high.
High Y leads to high P
When income is high, the demand for goods is high. Firms with flexible prices set prices high.
The greater the fraction of flexible-price firms, the smaller is s and the bigger the effect of ΔY on P.