MACROECONOMICS I May 16th, 2014 Class 11. Inflation • Final Exam: May 30th, 10:30 – 12:30, S6 • HW Assignment #4 is due: May 23rd • Project deadline: May 30th, before exam N!B! Project is an individual, not a group assignment Announcements Financial crisis (panic): depositors lose faith in the quality of bank’s assents and withdraw their deposits • Self-fulfilling • Recent crisis was a classical financial panic in broader institutional setting Trigger: Housing bubble burst • Drop in housing prices by 30 % • Deterioration of lending standards => sub-prime mortgages • Complex nature of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) Recent Financial Crisis Government-sponsored enterprises (GSE) Securitization Fannie Mae Freddie Mac Banks Mortgage holders • Established by the Congress • Largest packagers of MBS • Guarantees against the loss • Inadequate capital Securitization (Cont.) Default of mortgages + mortgages under water => losses for the holders of MBS • Subprime mortgages were distributed throughout the financial system => Uncertainty in the financial markets • Runs on financial companies => investors pulled funding from any firm thought to be vulnerable to losses • Two possibilities: acquire funding or file for bankruptcy • Recent Financial Crisis Large Financial Firms Under Pressure Peak of the crisis (2008) Bear Sterns March 16th Fannie and Freddie Sep 7th Lehman Brothers Merrill Lynch Sep 15th AIG Sep 16th Wash Mutual Bank Sep 25th Wachovia Oct 3rd Bear Sterns: Forced sale Fannie and Freddie: Liabilities guaranteed by the US Treasury Lehman Brothers: Files for bankruptcy Merrill Lynch: Acquisition by the Bank of America The Role of the FED Central bank as a lender-of-last-resort •Providing commercial banks with overnight liquidity (a discount window) •Fed extended its liquidity provisions on other financial institution •Providing liquidity backed by a collateral ÞFinancial institutions will have access to liquid assets => panic will be calmed Macroeconomic stability •Quantitative easing – purchase of large-scale assets (government guaranteed) •Affecting the long-run interest rate Þ Liquidity Trap Source: www.federalreserve.gov Real Economic Consequences In the US: Reduced credit flows, high borrowing costs, falling assets values ÞContraction of spending and output •GDP fell by more than 5 % •8.5 million people lost jobs •Unemployment increases to 10 % Official recession: December 2007 – June 2009 Comparison to the Great Depression Stock market Industrial production Comparison to the Great Depression International Contagion •The key transmission channel: international trade •Drop in C, I and Y => Drop in demand for imports •The US economy accounts for 13 % of total world imports § US major trading partners EU (17 %), China (16 %), Canada (16 %), Mexico (10 %) •The effect was amplified in countries (the UK and Ireland) where domestic banks suffered similar problems as the US banks. The Role of Policy §Fiscal policy Expansion: Governments increase spending to compensate the drop in C and I ÞIncrease in budget deficit, higher taxes Government investments into infrastructure (Long-term) §Monetary policy Expansion: Interest rates are pushed to 0 % ÞLiquidity trap •Monetary policy is inefficient => waiting for the results of fiscal expansion •The key role of a central bank as a lender-of-last resort •Providing liquidity (short-term collateralized loans) to financial institutions •Central banks buy the assets commercial banks want to sell (quantitative easing or LSAP), government-guaranteed securities only => Cost of borrowing will not change (increase) Introducing Inflation • An ongoing rise in the general level of prices over a period of time • Price shock – one-time increase in prices • Inflation implies the fall in the overall purchasing power of the currency Deflation - a fall in the general price level over a period of time • Danger: psychology of falling prices • Stagflation - a combination of inflation and recession Inflation in the United States Source: BEA Inflation in the United States Source:BEA Inflation in Europe Source: Eurostat Measuring Inflation Price indexes • Consumer Price Index (CPI) • Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) • Producer Price Index • GDP Deflator • Employment Cost Index Which measure of inflation to use? • Consumer Price Index (CPI) • The average price of a fixed basket of goods and services A representative household: housing, food, clothing, transportation, medical care, entertainment, education • A single number which indicates a change in the households’ standards of living relative to base year •Each category of goods in the CPI enters with a weight • • •CPI is only a rough approximation European analog: a Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) > CPI Components Source: BLS Consumer Price Index (Cont.) • CPI with respect to the base year • • • •Inflation rate using CPI • • • TE CPI2000=120 implies that in year 2000 it takes $120 to purchase a representative basket of goods that $100 purchased in the base year Current comparison for the US: 1982-1984 > > Alternative Inflation Measures • Measurement issues with CPI: changes in consumption habits + substitution bias •Producer Price Index - average changes in the prices domestic producers receive for their output • Personal Consumption Expenditure – all domestic consumption of durable and non-durable goods and services targeted toward individuals and households • GDP deflator : measure the overall inflation • • Core inflation: Price indexes excluding food and energy products Assessing the overall (long-term ) trends in price changes due to the monetary policy • CPI vs. GDP Deflator Source: Mankiw, 2012 Inflation rate vs. Core Inflation rate in the US Source:BEA Classification N!B! Inflation thresholds are arbitrary Types of Inflation: Deflation Deflation - a fall in the general price level over a period of time Deflation leads to recession 1.Psychology of falling prices => shifting consumption from present to future AE => Prices => AE => Y 2.Increases real value of debt (real interest rate): burden on borrowers AE => Y •Discourage new borrowings and makes existing borrowers worse off •Redistribution of wealth from borrower to lender 3. Reduced employment: Sticky wages => increase in costs of labor => unemployment => AE TE The US during the Great Depression and Japan in 1990s Types of Inflation: Hyperinflation Hyperinflation – monthly inflation rate greater than 50 % Germany after the W W I: 322 % per month Hungary after the WW II: 19 000 % per month Zimbabwe (2008): 79,600,000,000 % per month Causes: extremely rapid growth of the money supply • Monetarization of the government debt Self-perpetuating: The public is trying to spend the money quickly in order to avoid the inflation tax; the government responds to higher inflation with even higher rates of money issue • Transfer of wealth from public to the government • Moving away from money transactions to barter • Dollarization as a remedy Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply Model • Relationship between prices and output (AD-AS Model) Two-way causation: 1.Prices determine output level Increase in prices => Contractionary effect on the economy 2. Output level determines prices Output moves toward full capacity => Increase in prices Determining the equilibrium price level Equilibrium in Goods and Money Markets • For a particular price level (P) • Prices enter MD üShow graphically how Y* and i* change due to increase and decrease in prices AD-AS Model Aggregate demand (AD) curve: For any price level, what is Y* and i* • Effect of prices on Y* AD-AS Model (Cont.) Aggregate supply (AS) curve: For each Y*, there is only one level of prices that would be sustainable • Higher Y* puts an upward pressure on prices (through inputs market) P Y YF AD-AS Model: The Equilibrium Equilibrium: Y* and P* AD-AS Model: Movement Toward Equilibrium Equilibrium: Y* and P* P` Y` AD-AS Model: Expansionary Policy 1.Expansionary policy leads to inflation Demand-pull inflation •Shifts of the AD curve •Part of the effect is eaten by inflation The size of two effects depends on how close the economy is to the YF • Economy is coming out of recession (expansionary policy) • Economy is booming (expectations) AD-AS Model: Stagflation Cost-Push inflation: increase in the costs of production independent of demand •Shifts of the AS curve => Low Y* and higher prices •Expansionary monetary policy => higher inflation and lower output % Source:BEA Causes of Inflation Keynesian school Key assumption: sticky prices Demand-pull inflation: increase in aggregate demand Cost-push inflation: increase in the costs of production independent of demand Monetarists Key assumption: flexible prices “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon” (M. Freedman) • Inflation is a consequence of a more rapid money supply than increase in output •An increase in money supply would lead only to the increase in prices rather than output expansion The Quantity Theory of Money Accounting identity: Velocity - the number of times per year the average currency unit turns over in transactions for final goods and services TE. The US nominal GDP in 2012 was $14 trillion, but the amount of money in circulation in 2012 was only $1 trillion. What is the velocity? > GDP Money in circulation (cash + checks) Velocity The Quantity Theory of Money (Cont.) > • Increase in money supply should be balances by changes in other component Velocity is relatively constant Increase in money supply => Increase in nominal GDP Which component of the nominal GDP changes? Average Inflation Rates & Money Supply Growth Source: Mankiw, 2012 Costs of Inflation • Fall in the real value of savings • Fall in net exports • Fall in investment expenditures • Fall in GDP • Increase in unemployment • Redistribution of real income (decreasing liabilities of debtors and assets of creditors in real terms) Inflation expectations • Anticipated inflation – business and individuals adjust their actions based on inflation expectations • Unanticipated inflation – portion of inflation businesses and households cannot predict Random redistribution of wealth • Next class: Unemployment Handout