A Monetary Expansion in a Large
Open Economy
Panel (a) shows
that a monetary expansion shifts
the LM curve to the right. Income
rises from Y
1
to Y
2
, and the interest
rate falls from r
1
to r
2
. Panel (b)
shows that the decrease in the inter-
est rate causes the net capital out-
flow to increase from CF
1
to CF
2
.
Panel (c) shows that the increase
in the net capital outflow raises the
net supply of dollars, which causes
the exchange rate to fall from e
1
to e
2
.
F I G U R E
1 2 - 1 7
Real interest
rate, r
Exchange
rate, e
Income,
output, Y
Net capital
outflow,
CF
Net exports, NX
2. ... lowers
the interest
rate, ...
4. ... lowers
the exchange
rate, ...
1. A monetary
expansion ...
Y
2
Y
1
IS
LM
2
LM
1
NX(e)
e
1
e
2
CF(r)
r
r
1
r
2
r
1
r
2
CF
1
CF
2
CF
2
CF
1
NX
1
NX
2
5. ... and
raises net
exports.
3. ... which
increases net
capital
outflow, ...
(a) The IS–LM Model
(b) Net Capital Outflow
(c) The Market for Foreign Exchange
We can now see that the monetary transmission mechanism works through
two channels in a large open economy. As in a closed economy, a monetary
expansion lowers the interest rate, which stimulates investment. As in a small
open economy, a monetary expansion causes the currency to depreciate in the
market for foreign exchange, which stimulates net exports. Both effects result in
a higher level of aggregate income.
A Rule of Thumb
This model of the large open economy describes well the U.S. economy
today. Yet it is somewhat more complicated and cumbersome than the model
of the closed economy we studied in Chapters 10 and 11 and the model of
the small open economy we developed in this chapter. Fortunately, there is a
useful rule of thumb to help you determine how policies influence a large
open economy without remembering all the details of the model: The large
open economy is an average of the closed economy and the small open economy. To find
how any policy will affect any variable, find the answer in the two extreme cases and
take an average.
For example, how does a monetary contraction affect the interest rate and
investment in the short run? In a closed economy, the interest rate rises, and
investment falls. In a small open economy, neither the interest rate nor investment
changes. The effect in the large open economy is an average of these two cases:
a monetary contraction raises the interest rate and reduces investment, but only
somewhat. The fall in the net capital outflow mitigates the rise in the interest
rate and the fall in investment that would occur in a closed economy. But unlike
in a small open economy, the international flow of capital is not so strong as to
negate fully these effects.
This rule of thumb makes the simple models all the more valuable. Although
they do not describe perfectly the world in which we live, they do provide a use-
ful guide to the effects of economic policy.
C H A P T E R 1 2
The Open Economy Revisited: The Mundell-Fleming Model and the Exchange-Rate Regime
| 377
M O R E P R O B L E M S A N D A P P L I C A T I O N S
1.
Imagine that you run the central bank in a large
open economy. Your goal is to stabilize income,
and you adjust the money supply accordingly.
Under your policy, what happens to the money
supply, the interest rate, the exchange rate, and
the trade balance in response to each of the fol-
lowing shocks?
a. The president raises taxes to reduce the bud-
get deficit.
b. The president restricts the import of Japanese
cars.
2.
Over the past several decades, investors around
the world have become more willing to take
advantage of opportunities in other countries.
Because of this increasing sophistication,
economies are more open today than in the
past. Consider how this development affects
the ability of monetary policy to influence
the economy.
a. If investors become more willing to substitute
foreign and domestic assets, what happens to
the slope of the CF function?
378
|
P A R T I V
Business Cycle Theory: The Economy in the Short Run
b. If the CF function changes in this way, what
happens to the slope of the IS curve?
c. How does this change in the IS curve affect
the Fed’s ability to control the interest rate?
d. How does this change in the IS curve affect
the Fed’s ability to control national income?
3.
Suppose that policymakers in a large open
economy want to raise the level of investment
without changing aggregate income or the
exchange rate.
a. Is there any combination of domestic monetary
and fiscal policies that would achieve this goal?
b. Is there any combination of domestic mone-
tary, fiscal, and trade policies that would
achieve this goal?
c. Is there any combination of monetary and fis-
cal policies at home and abroad that would
achieve this goal?
4.
Suppose that a large open economy has a fixed
exchange rate.
a. Describe what happens in response to a fis-
cal contraction, such as a tax increase. Com-
pare your answer to the case of a small open
economy.
b. Describe what happens if the central bank
expands the money supply by buying bonds
from the public. Compare your answer to the
case of a small open economy.
379
Aggregate Supply and the
Short-Run Tradeoff Between
Inflation and Unemployment
Probably the single most important macroeconomic relationship is the Phillips curve.
—George Akerlof
There is always a temporary tradeoff between inflation and unemployment;
there is no permanent tradeoff. The temporary tradeoff comes not from inflation
per se, but from unanticipated inflation, which generally means, from a rising
rate of inflation.
—Milton Friedman
13
C H A P T E R
M
ost economists analyze short-run fluctuations in national income and
the price level using the model of aggregate demand and aggregate
supply. In the previous three chapters, we examined aggregate demand
in some detail. The IS–LM model—together with its open-economy cousin the
Mundell–Fleming model—shows how changes in monetary and fiscal policy
and shocks to the money and goods markets shift the aggregate demand curve.
In this chapter, we turn our attention to aggregate supply and develop theories
that explain the position and slope of the aggregate supply curve.
When we introduced the aggregate supply curve in Chapter 9, we established
that aggregate supply behaves differently in the short run than in the long run.
In the long run, prices are flexible, and the aggregate supply curve is vertical.
When the aggregate supply curve is vertical, shifts in the aggregate demand
curve affect the price level, but the output of the economy remains at its natur-
al level. By contrast, in the short run, prices are sticky, and the aggregate supply
curve is not vertical. In this case, shifts in aggregate demand do cause fluctua-
tions in output. In Chapter 9 we took a simplified view of price stickiness by
drawing the short-run aggregate supply curve as a horizontal line, representing
the extreme situation in which all prices are fixed. Our task now is to refine this
380
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P A R T I V
Business Cycle Theory: The Economy in the Short Run
understanding of short-run aggregate supply to better reflect the real world in
which some prices are sticky and others are not.
After examining the basic theory of the short-run aggregate supply curve, we
establish a key implication. We show that this curve implies a tradeoff between
two measures of economic performance—inflation and unemployment. This
tradeoff, called the Phillips curve, tell us that to reduce the rate of inflation poli-
cymakers must temporarily raise unemployment, and to reduce unemployment
they must accept higher inflation. As the quotation from Milton Friedman at the
beginning of the chapter suggests, the tradeoff between inflation and unemploy-
ment is only temporary. One goal of this chapter is to explain why policymak-
ers face such a tradeoff in the short run and, just as important, why they do not
face it in the long run.
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