Part III
Part III
Part III
2. Macroeconomics
2023/2024, P4
2
3
Source:
https://www.ecb.europa.eu/ecb/e
ducational/explainers/tell-me-
more/html/interest_rates.en.html
4
Monetary Policy Influences AD
- The relationship between the Money Market and the slope of the
Aggregate-Demand Curve.
5
The Money Market (with a rigid supply of money) and
the Slope of the Aggregate-Demand Curve
(a) The Money Market (b) The Aggregate-Demand Curve
Interest Price
rate Money 2. . . . increases the level 1. An increase in the price level . . .
supply demand for money . . .
4. . . . which in turn
3. . . . which increases reduces the quantity
equilibrium interest rate . . . of goods and
r2 P2 services demanded.
r1 Money demand at
price level P2, MD2 P1
An increase in the price level from P1 to P2 shifts the money-demand curve to the right, as in panel (a). This
increase in money demand causes the interest rate to rise from r1 to r2. Because the interest rate is the cost of
borrowing, the increase in the interest rate reduces the quantity of goods and services demanded from Y1 to Y2.
This negative relationship between the price level and quantity demanded is represented with a downward-
sloping aggregate-demand curve, as in panel (b). 6
The Money Market with perfectly elastic money supply
(unlimited supply of money)
Money demand at
money supply
Perfectly elastic
price level P2, MD2
r1
Money demand at
price level P1, MD1
0 Quantity
of money
7
Monetary Policy Influences AD
8
A Monetary Injection
Interest (a) The Money Market Price (b) The Aggregate-Demand Curve
rate level
Money supply,
MS1 MS2
1. When the ECB
increases the
r1 money supply . . .
P
r2
AD2
Money demand Aggregate
at price level P demand, AD1
0 Quantity 0 Y1 Y2 Quantity of output
2. . . . the equilibrium of money 3. . . . which increases the quantity of goods
interest rate falls . . . and services demanded at a given price level.
In panel (a), an increase in the money supply from MS1 to MS2 reduces the equilibrium interest
rate from r1 to r2. Because the interest rate is the cost of borrowing, the fall in the interest rate
raises the quantity of goods and services demanded at a given price level from Y1 to Y2. Thus,
in panel (b), the aggregate-demand curve shifts to the right from AD1 to AD2. 9
Monetary Policy Influences AD
10
11
ECB announces €750 billion Pandemic Emergency
Purchase Programme (PEPP)
18 March 2020
… 12
13
The Governing Council takes its monetary policy
decision every six weeks. Immediately after the
meeting, the President and the Vice President of the
ECB explain the decision at the press conference
Press Conference, 11 March 2021
Unchanged
since March 2016
15
Monetary policy decisions, May 2023
16
Monetary policy decisions, May 2023
17
Monetary policy decisions, May 2023
18
Monetary policy decisions, April 2024
19
Monetary policy decisions, April 2024
20
Monetary policy decisions, April 2024
21
Monetary Policy Influences AD
22
Monetary Policy Influences AD
23
Transmission mechanism of monetary policy
See https://www.ecb.europa.eu/mopo/intro/transmission/html/index.en.html 24
Fiscal Policy Influences AD
• Fiscal policy
– Government policymakers
– Set the level of government spending and taxation (budget)
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(1) Multiplier Effect
26
The Multiplier Effect
Price
level 2. . . . but the multiplier effect
can amplify the shift in
aggregate demand.
€20 billion
AD3
AD2
Aggregate demand, AD1
An increase in government purchases of €20 billion can shift the aggregate-demand curve to the
right by more than €20 billion. This multiplier effect arises because increases in aggregate
income stimulate additional spending by consumers. 27
Spending multiplier (MPC)
• Spending multiplier
– Marginal propensity to consume, MPC
• Fraction of extra income that consumers spend
28
Spending multiplier (MPC)
• Spending multiplier = 1/(1 – MPC)
29
Crowding-out Effect
30
The Crowding-Out Effect
(a) The Money Market (b) The Aggregate-Demand Curve
Interest
rate 2. . . . the increase in Price 1. When an increase in
Money
spending increases level government purchases
supply
money demand . . . increases aggregate demand…
r1
MD2
AD2
AD3
Money demand, MD1 Aggregate demand, AD1
0 Quantity fixed Quantity 4. . . 0which in turn partly offsets the Quantity
by the ECB of money initial increase in aggregate demand. of output
Panel (a) shows the money market. When the government increases its purchases of goods and services, the resulting increase in
income raises the demand for money from MD1 to MD2, and this causes the equilibrium interest rate to rise from r1 to r2. Panel (b)
shows the effects on aggregate demand. The initial impact of the increase in government purchases shifts the aggregate-demand
curve from AD1 to AD2. Yet because the interest rate is the cost of borrowing, the increase in the interest rate tends to reduce the
quantity of goods and services demanded, particularly for investment goods. This crowding out of investment partially offsets the
impact of the fiscal expansion on aggregate demand. In the end, the aggregate-demand curve shifts only to AD3. 31
Crowding-out effect with accommodative monetary
policy (unlimited supply of money)?
money supply
Perfectly elastic
r1
0 Quantity
of money
32
Fiscal Policy Influences AD
– Multiplier effect
• Aggregate Demand increases
– Crowding-out effect (because money demand increases, so interest
rate increases and investment falls)
• Aggregate Demand decreases
33
Fiscal Policy Influences AD
– Multiplier effect
• Aggregate Demand increases
– Crowding-out effect (because money demand increases, so interest
rate increases and investment falls)
• Aggregate Demand decreases
35
The Effect of a Government Budget Deficit
Interest S2
Rate Supply, S1
6% 1. A budget deficit
decreases the supply of
5%
loanable funds . . .
2. . . . which
raises the
Demand
equilibrium
interest rate
...
0 $800 $1,200 Loanable Funds
(in billions of dollars)
3. . . . and reduces the equilibrium quantity of loanable funds,
leaving less funds for private investment.
When the government spends more than it receives in tax revenue, the resulting budget deficit lowers national
saving. The supply of loanable funds decreases, and the equilibrium interest rate rises. Thus, when the
government borrows to finance its budget deficit, it crowds out households and firms that otherwise would borrow
to finance investment. Here, when the supply shifts from S1 to S2, the equilibrium interest rate rises from 5 to 6
percent, and the equilibrium quantity of loanable funds saved and invested falls from $1,200 billion to $800 billion.
36
The Effect of a Government Budget Deficit
37
Keynesians in the White House
• Fiscal policy
– Short-run: increase production through higher Aggregate Demand
– Long-run: increase production through higher Aggregate Supply
39
Using Policy for Stabilization Purposes
• Keynes
– Key role of AD in explaining short-run economic fluctuations
– The government should actively stimulate Aggregate Demand
• When AD appeared insufficient to maintain production at its full-
employment level
40
Using Policy for Stabilization Purposes
– Government
• Should avoid active use of monetary and fiscal policy to try to
stabilize the economy
• Because they affect the economy with a big lag
– Policy instruments
• Should be set to achieve long-run goals
• The economy should be left alone to deal with short-run
fluctuations
41
42
Using Policy for Stabilization Purposes
• Automatic stabilizers
– Changes in fiscal policy
• That stimulate Aggregate Demand when the economy goes into
a recession without policymakers having to take any
deliberate action from:
• The tax system
• Government spending
43
Using Policy for Stabilization Purposes
• In a recession
– Taxes fall, government spending rises
• Government’s budget moves toward deficit
44
The Laffer curve
45
The Laffer curve
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Readings
https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/fandd/issues/2023/03/rethinking-
monetary-policy-in-a-changing-world-brunnermeier
47