2.8 The Phillips Curve Flashcards
What is meant by the natural rate of unemployment
The unemployment rate when the labour market is at equilibrium
This is the difference between those who are willing to have a job at the current wage level and those who are willing and able to have a job
What does the Keynesian long run AS curve look like
Explain the Keynesian AS curve
The price level in the economy is fixed until resources are fully employed
Horizontal section shows resources are not fully employed and there is spare capacity
Explain this diagram
At the spare capacity section, output can be increased (AD1 to AD2) without affecting price level
Once resources are fully employed and increase in output (AD3 to AD4) will be inflationary and increase price level from P2 to P3
Explain the neoclassical AS curve
In the long run output is fixed at each level and all factors of production are fully employed
Changing AD only changes the price level and not National output
Explain Unemployment vs Inflation
In the short run there is a trade off between the two
As economic growth increases unemployment falls due to jobs created
This increased wages which increase C and the price level
What does the Phillips curve look like
What are the implications of the short run and long run Phillips curve for economic policy
If the government tries to lower unemployment in the short run there could be inflationary pressure on PL.
In the short run the economy suffers from demand deficient unemployment which can encourage demand side policies to tackle
In the long run changes in unemployment rate do not affect inflation meaning policies can be more flexible but as there is no demand deficient unemployment then supply side policies are more likely