1 4-1
Elements of the Model
Before examining the components of the dynamic AD –AS model, we need to
introduce one piece of notation: Throughout this chapter, the subscript t on a
variable represents time. For example, Y is used to represent total output and
national income, as it has been throughout this book. But now it takes the form
Y
t
, which represents national income in time period t. Similarly, Y
t
−1
represents
national income in period t
− 1, and Y
t
+1
represents national income in period
t
+ 1. This new notation will allow us to keep track of variables as they change
over time.
Let’s now look at the five equations that make up the dynamic AD–AS model.
Output: The Demand for Goods and Services
The demand for goods and services is given by the equation
Y
t
= Y−
t
–
a
(r
t
–
r) +
e
t
,
where Y
t
is the total output of goods and services, Y
−
t
is the economy’s natural
level of output, r
t
is the real interest rate,
e
t
is a random demand shock, and
a
and
r are parameters greater than zero. This equation is similar in spirit to the
demand for goods and services equation in Chapter 3 and the IS equation in
Chapter 10. Because this equation is so central to the dynamic AD –AS model,
let’s examine each of the terms with some care.
The key feature of this equation is the negative relationship between the real
interest rate r
t
and the demand for goods and services Y
t
. When the real inter-
est rate increases, borrowing becomes more expensive, and saving yields a
greater reward. As a result, firms engage in fewer investment projects, and con-
sumers save more and spend less. Both of these effects reduce the demand for
goods and services. (In addition, the dollar might appreciate in foreign-
exchange markets, causing net exports to fall, but for our purposes in this chap-
ter these open-economy effects need not play a central role and can largely be
ignored.) The parameter
a
tells us how sensitive demand is to changes in the
real interest rate. The larger the value of
a
, the more the demand for goods and
services responds to a given change in the real interest rate.
The first term on the right-hand side of the equation, Y
−
t
, implies that the
demand for goods and services rises with the economy’s natural level of output.
In most cases, we can simplify matters by taking this variable to be constant; that
is, Y
−
t
will be assumed to be the same for every time period t. We will, however,
examine how this model can incorporate long-run growth, represented by
exogenous increases in Y
−
t
over time. A key piece of that analysis is apparent in
this demand equation: as long-run growth makes the economy richer, the
demand for goods and services grows proportionately.
The last term in the demand equation,
e
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