B1: Short Run Trade Of Between Inflation And Unemployment - Phillips Curve Flashcards
What does inflation depend upon (3) (phillips)
Expected inflation
Cyclical unemployment
Supply shocks
How is this expressed?
𝜋=𝐸𝜋−𝛽(𝑢−𝑢𝑛) +𝑣
Expected inflation is 𝐸𝜋
Cyclical unemployment is (𝑢−𝑢𝑛) where un is natural unemployment
Supply shocks is 𝑣
Where is the Phillips curve derived from?
SRAS curve. Which is
P= EP +1/a (Y-Ybar)
How to derive the phillips curve
Add a supply shock (v) to this SRAS equation
P= EP +1/a (Y-Ybar) + v
Include time periods to swap prices for inflation
rewrite as…
(P-P-₁) = (EP - P-₁) +1/a (Y-Ybar) + v
and then as inflation is π
π= Eπ + 1/a (Y-Ybar) + v
This gives us the output form of phillips curve (Y-Ybar).
We can also use unemployment form how?
Okun’s law
How to show Okun’s law for phillips curve
Recall standard inflation formula
π = Eπ - β(u-un) + v
And Phillips curve
(Which is just SRAS equation replacing P’s with π and adding supply shocks v)
π= Eπ + 1/a (Y-Ybar) + v
We can then equate
-β(u-un) = 1/a (Y-Ybar)
Where we can see if unemployment u increases, output Y falls. (Showing Okun’s law)
Modern vs Old Phillips curve
What is new? (3)
Price inflation is used instead of wage inflation
Now features expectations
Now includes supply shocks.
We can also determine the types of inflation.
π = Eπ - β(u-un) + v
Which components determine demand-pull inflation vs cost push inflation?
Demand pull inflation:
cyclical unemployment (u-un)
(in a strong economy, u falls since firms demand more labour, thus wages and consequently price increases)
Cost-push inflation:
supply shocks (v)
- Theoretical implication (classical dichotomy) of phillips curve
And how is this concept applied to the upward sloping SRAS and phillips curve itself.
- Real variables depend on nominal variables.
Upward sloping SRAS: Output (real) depends on unexpected changes in price level (nominal)
(Output differing from natural level depends on P≉EP)
Phillips curve: Unemployment (real) depends upon unexpected changes in the rate of inflation (nominal)
Slope of phillips curve (unemployment version) and intercept
- What does high vs low expected inflation look like graphically
-β is slope. Eπ+v is intercept
- As expected inflation is part of intercept, it causes a shift in Phillips curve. High expected inflation (Eπ) = shift upwards
Suppose the government wants to reduce inflation.
How can the diagram be used?
According to the Phillips curve, this requires higher unemployment (i.e. lower output) for a time.
Since in this case higher unemployment (lower output) is required to lower inflation, what is this called?
Sacrifice ratio: the % of annual GDP required to lower inflation by 1%.
Why is knowing the sacrifice ratio useful
Is the trade off worth it?
Should they still pursue the disinflationary policy if a lot of GDP is required to lose?
The long run assumptions for Phillips curve (2)
And what does the long run phillips equation look like?
π=Eπ (inflation=expected inflation)
and v=0 (no supply shocks)
leaves us with
u=un (or equivalently, output reaches its natural level Y=Ybar where LRAS vertical)
What is natural rate of unemployment (output) un determined by?
Supply side factors e.g population growth, productivity of workforce (just like A level)