Aggregate Supply in the Long-Run
- Equilibrium adjustments in the long run
- demand-pull inflation→ increased output→ higher price level→ higher nominal wages → therefore, a shift of aggregate supply to the left (to full employment)
- cost-push inflation → leftward shift in AS caused by cost changes→ Price level increases → dilemma
- choice 1: fiscal or monetary policy to increase AD, but also further increase price level (cost-spiral inflation, one thing leads to another, etc.).
- Choice 2: Ignore the shift (laissez-faire) and allow the recession to occur (high unemployment, business failures) and to reduce nominal wages and demand for inputs, shifting supply back to the right.
- Recession due to decrease in aggregate demand → decrease in output→ decrease in price level → decrease in wages → rightward shift in AS and back to full output at lower price level (big assumption that probably would only occur after long-lasting recession)
The Phillips Curve
The unemployment-Inflation Relationship
Inflation
Rate (%)
Unemployment Rate (%)
- Key Elements
- As unemployment increases, the inflation rate decreases
- As unemployment decreases, the inflation rate increases
- On surface (figure 16.7, pg 298, suggests that full employment demands a significant inflation level)
- There is reason to believe this is true in the short-run. However, dependable forecasts from the Phillips curve are unpredictable.
Example: 1990’s and the significant productivity gains that caused rapid increase in AS to offset inflation.
- Aggregate Supply Shocks (figure 16.8, pg. 299)
- Stagflation (stagnation and inflation)- high unemployment, high inflation
This occurred in the 1970’s and early 1980’s- would indicate an outward shift of the Phillips Curve
- The cause- Sudden increase in resource costs- 1970’s oil prices-caused significant shifts in the AS to the left
- Stagflation declined in the 1980’s due to tight money supply, causing a serious recession and increasing unemployment to 9.5 % in 1982. Wages did drop in some cases, eventually causing the AS to shift right again. See the Misery index, pg. 300.
- Short-run Phillips Curve- based on the supposition that when the inflation rate is higher than expected (increasing AD), firms receive higher profits temporarily and hire more workers (Figure 16.9, pg. 301)
- Long-Run Phillips Curve-vertical- in response to the increase in AD and profits, wage levels increase and unemployment returns to previous levels, but at the higher inflation rate- this continues as long as AD is increasing. The stable unemployment-inflation relationship does not exist in the long-run.
- Disinflation-the reverse of above because of declines in AD
Shifts in Aggregate Supply:Taxation
- “Supply-Side” economists believe that changes in AS can be a powerful fiscal tool
- High marginal tax rates impede productivity and investment by workers
- Lower tax rates encourage this productivity, shifting AS
- Lower tax rates encourage saving and investing, shifting AS
- Laffer curve
100
Tax
Rate
0 Tax Revenue
- Claims that reasonable tax rates maximize revenue by encouraging work, reducing tax avoidance and tax evasion
- Criticisms-lower tax rates allow some people to “buy more leisure”-counterproductive to the claims
- Increases in AD creates higher interest rates and lower investment-counterproductive to the claims
- Where are we on the curve? Although logical, the determination of where we are will affect the validity of the claim.
- The debate lingers.