Model(宏观经济学加州大学詹姆斯·布拉德某汽车·德wri.pptx
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1、CHAPTER 6Building Blocks of the Flexible-Price Model1Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.QuestionsWhat is a full-employment analysis?What keeps the economy at full employment when wages and prices are flexible?What determines the level of consumption spending?What det
2、ermines the level of investment spending?2Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.QuestionsWhat determines the level of net exports?What determines the level of the exchange rate?3Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Full-Employment Analysis
3、We will now look at the economy over the short-runa period in which its productive resources are fixedWe will assume that wages and prices are flexible so that all markets clearsupply equals demand in the labor marketfull-employment analysis4Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights
4、 reserved.Flexible-Price ModelTwo sets of factors determine the levels of potential output and real wagesthe production functionthe balance of supply and demand in the labor market5Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Production FunctionPotential output(Y*)is deter
5、mined bythe size of the labor force(L)the economys capital stock(K)the efficiency of labor(E)a parameter indicating how quickly returns to investment diminish()6Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.1-The Production Function7Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Co
6、mpanies,Inc.All rights reserved.Flexible-Price ModelThe assumption that wages and prices are flexible was commonly made by“classical”economistsThus,this assumption is often called the classical assumptionguarantees that markets workguarantees full employmentguarantees that actual output is equal to
7、potential output8Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Flexible-Price ModelThe flexible-price assumption is not always a good onea market economy does not always produce full employmentThe“Keynesian”model assumes that wages and prices are stickythis will be covered in S
8、ection III of textThe Classical assumption simplifies the analysis of the economy9Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Table 6.1-Classical Flexible-Price versus Keynesian Sticky-Price Analyses10Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Lab
9、or MarketAssume there are K identical firmseach firm owns one unit of the economys capital stockeach firm hires L workers and pays them the same wage Weach firm sells Y units of output at a per-unit price of Pno firm has control over the price it receives or the wage it paysthese are determined by t
10、he market11Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketTo determine how many workers to hire,the firm follows two ruleshire workers to boost outputstop hiring when the extra revenue from the output hired by the last worker just equals his or her wage12Copyrigh
11、t 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketThe value of the output produced by the last worker hired is the product price(P)multiplied by the marginal product of labor(MPL)The cost of hiring the last worker is his or her wage(W)The firm will keep hiring until13Copyri
12、ght 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketThe marginal product of labor is the difference between what the firm can produce with its current labor force(Lfirm)and what it could produce if it hired one more workerAt its current labor force,the output of the firm wi
13、ll be14Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketTherefore,the marginal product of labor(MPL)must be equal to15Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.2-The Firms Output as a Function of the Firms Employment16Copyright 20
14、02 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketUsing the Cobb-Douglas form of the production functionSince Kfirm=117Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketThe term in the brackets is a growth rate of a variable raised to a power18
15、Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketThe firm hires workers up to the point where the product price multiplied by the marginal product of labor equals the wageSubstituting for MPL19Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figu
16、re 6.3-The Typical Firms Hiring Policy20Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketThe typical firms demand for labor isBecause there are K firms in the economy,total economy-wide employment will be21Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights
17、reserved.The Labor MarketIf there are more workers than firms want to hire at the current wagesome of the unemployed will underbid their fellow employed workersthose who are employed will respond by accepting a lower wage to keep their jobsreal wages will fall and firms will hire more workers22Copyr
18、ight 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketIf there are fewer workers than firms want to hire at the current wagesome firms will try to bid workers away by offering higher wagesthe real wage will rise and firms will reduce the quantity of labor demandedEquilibrium
19、 occurs in the labor market when labor demand is equal to the labor force23Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.4-Equilibrium in the Labor Market24Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketEquilibrium in the labor mark
20、et means thatThis means that the equilibrium real wage is equal to25Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketWhen the labor market is in equilibrium,the typical firm produces an output level equal toTotal output will be K multiplied by the typical firms out
21、put26Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.The Labor MarketSimplifying,we get the Cobb-Douglas production functionIf markets work well,the actual level of output in the economy(Y)will be equal to the economys potential output(Y*)27Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Compa
22、nies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.5-In a Full-Employment Economy,Real GDP Equals Potential Output28Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Domestic SpendingNational income can be divided into four componentsconsumption spending(C)investment spending(I)government purch
23、ases(G)net exports(NX)29Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.6-The Four Components of Spending Add Up to Real GDP30Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Consumption SpendingHouseholds use income(Y)in three wayspay net taxes(T)assu
24、me that T=t Y,where t is an average tax ratedisposable income is equal to income minus taxes YD=Y-T=(1-t)Ysave(SH)consume(C)31Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.All rights reserved.Figure 6.7-From National Income to Consumption Spending32Copyright 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,Inc.A
25、ll rights reserved.Consumption SpendingConsumption spending can be broken down into two componentsa baseline level of consumption(C0)the amount that households would spend on consumption goods if they had no income a fraction of disposable income(Cy YD)Cy is the marginal propensity to consume,amount
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