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[N. Gregory(N. Gregory Mankiw) Mankiw] Principles (BookFi)

Phillips curve.
Figure 33-1 shows an example of a Phillips curve
like the one found by Samuelson and Solow.
As the title of their paper suggests, Samuelson and Solow were interested in
the Phillips curve because they believed that it held important lessons for policy-
makers. In particular, they suggested that the Phillips curve offers policymakers a
menu of possible economic outcomes. By altering monetary and fiscal policy to in-
fluence aggregate demand, policymakers could choose any point on this curve.
Point A offers high unemployment and low inflation. Point B offers low unem-
ployment and high inflation. Policymakers might prefer both low inflation and
low unemployment, but the historical data as summarized by the Phillips curve
indicate that this combination is impossible. According to Samuelson and Solow,
policymakers face a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment, and the
Phillips curve illustrates that tradeoff.
A G G R E G AT E D E M A N D , A G G R E G AT E S U P P LY,
A N D T H E P H I L L I P S C U R V E
The model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply provides an easy explana-
tion for the menu of possible outcomes described by the Phillips curve. 
The Phillips
curve simply shows the combinations of inflation and unemployment that arise in the
short run as shifts in the aggregate-demand curve move the economy along the short-run
aggregate-supply curve.
As we saw in Chapter 31, an increase in the aggregate de-
mand for goods and services leads, in the short run, to a larger output of goods
and services and a higher price level. Larger output means greater employment
P h i l l i p s c u r v e
a curve that shows the short-run
tradeoff between inflation and
unemployment
Unemployment
Rate (percent)
0
4
7
Inflation
Rate
(percent
per year)
B
A
6
2
Phillips curve
F i g u r e 3 3 - 1
T
HE
P
HILLIPS
C
URVE
.
The
Phillips curve illustrates
a negative association between
the inflation rate and the
unemployment rate. At
point A, inflation is low and
unemployment is high. At
point B, inflation is high
and unemployment is low.


7 6 4
PA R T T W E LV E
S H O R T - R U N E C O N O M I C F L U C T U AT I O N S
and, thus, a lower rate of unemployment. In addition, whatever the previous
year’s price level happens to be, the higher the price level in the current year, the
higher the rate of inflation. Thus, shifts in aggregate demand push inflation and
unemployment in opposite directions in the short run—a relationship illustrated
by the Phillips curve.
To see more fully how this works, let’s consider an example. To keep the num-
bers simple, imagine that the price level (as measured, for instance, by the con-
sumer price index) equals 100 in the year 2000. Figure 33-2 shows two possible
outcomes that might occur in year 2001. Panel (a) shows the two outcomes using
the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply. Panel (b) illustrates the
same two outcomes using the Phillips curve.
In panel (a) of the figure, we can see the implications for output and the price
level in the year 2001. If the aggregate demand for goods and services is relatively
low, the economy experiences outcome A. The economy produces output of 7,500,
and the price level is 102. By contrast, if aggregate demand is relatively high, the
economy experiences outcome B. Output is 8,000, and the price level is 106. Thus,
higher aggregate demand moves the economy to an equilibrium with higher out-
put and a higher price level.
Quantity
of Output
8,000
7,500
0
106
102
Short-run
aggregate
supply
(a) The Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply 
Unemployment
Rate (percent)
0
Inflation
Rate
(percent
per year)
Price
Level
(b) The Phillips Curve
4
(output is
8,000)
7
(output is
7,500)
B
A
6
2
Phillips curve
A
B
Low aggregate
demand
High
aggregate demand
(unemployment
is 7%)
(unemployment
is 4%)
F i g u r e 3 3 - 2
H
OW THE
P
HILLIPS
C
URVE
I
S
R
ELATED TO THE
M
ODEL OF
A
GGREGATE
D
EMAND
AND
A
GGREGATE
S
UPPLY
.
This figure assumes a price level of 100 for the year 2000 and
charts possible outcomes for the year 2001. Panel (a) shows the model of aggregate
demand and aggregate supply. If aggregate demand is low, the economy is at point A;
output is low (7,500), and the price level is low (102). If aggregate demand is high, the
economy is at point B; output is high (8,000), and the price level is high (106). Panel (b)
shows the implications for the Phillips curve. Point A, which arises when aggregate
demand is low, has high unemployment (7 percent) and low inflation (2 percent). Point B,
which arises when aggregate demand is high, has low unemployment (4 percent) and
high inflation (6 percent).


C H A P T E R 3 3
T H E S H O R T - R U N T R A D E O F F B E T W E E N I N F L AT I O N A N D U N E M P L O Y M E N T
7 6 5
In panel (b) of the figure, we can see what these two possible outcomes mean
for unemployment and inflation. Because firms need more workers when they
produce a greater output of goods and services, unemployment is lower in out-
come B than in outcome A. In this example, when output rises from 7,500 to 8,000,
unemployment falls from 7 percent to 4 percent. Moreover, because the price level
is higher at outcome B than at outcome A, the inflation rate (the percentage change
in the price level from the previous year) is also higher. In particular, since the
price level was 100 in year 2000, outcome A has an inflation rate of 2 percent, and
outcome B has an inflation rate of 6 percent. Thus, we can compare the two possi-
ble outcomes for the economy either in terms of output and the price level (using
the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply) or in terms of unemploy-
ment and inflation (using the Phillips curve).
As we saw in the preceding chapter, monetary and fiscal policy can shift
the aggregate-demand curve. Therefore, monetary and fiscal policy can move the
economy along the Phillips curve. Increases in the money supply, increases in
government spending, or cuts in taxes expand aggregate demand and move the
economy to a point on the Phillips curve with lower unemployment and higher
inflation. Decreases in the money supply, cuts in government spending, or in-
creases in taxes contract aggregate demand and move the economy to a point
on the Phillips curve with lower inflation and higher unemployment. In this sense,
the Phillips curve offers policymakers a menu of combinations of inflation and
unemployment.
Q U I C K Q U I Z :
Draw the Phillips curve. Use the model of aggregate
demand and aggregate supply to show how policy can move the economy
from a point on this curve with high inflation to a point with low inflation.
S H I F T S I N T H E P H I L L I P S C U R V E :
T H E R O L E O F E X P E C TAT I O N S
The Phillips curve seems to offer policymakers a menu of possible inflation-
unemployment outcomes. But does this menu remain stable over time? Is the
Phillips curve a relationship on which policymakers can rely? Economists took up
these questions in the late 1960s, shortly after Samuelson and Solow had intro-
duced the Phillips curve into the macroeconomic policy debate.
T H E L O N G - R U N P H I L L I P S C U R V E
In 1968 economist Milton Friedman published a paper in the 
American Economic
Review,
based on an address he had recently given as president of the American
Economic Association. The paper, titled “The Role of Monetary Policy,” contained
sections on “What Monetary Policy Can Do” and “What Monetary Policy Cannot
Do.” Friedman argued that one thing monetary policy cannot do, other than for
only a short time, is pick a combination of inflation and unemployment on the
Phillips curve. At about the same time, another economist, Edmund Phelps, also


7 6 6
PA R T T W E LV E
S H O R T - R U N E C O N O M I C F L U C T U AT I O N S
published a paper denying the existence of a long-run tradeoff between inflation
and unemployment.
Friedman and Phelps based their conclusions on classical principles of macro-
economics, which we discussed in Chapters 24 through 30. Recall that classical
theory points to growth in the money supply as the primary determinant of infla-
tion. But classical theory also states that monetary growth does not have real ef-
fects—it merely alters all prices and nominal incomes proportionately. In
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