Mankiw8e Chap13
Mankiw8e Chap13
Mankiw8e Chap13
MACROECONOMICS
N. Gregory Mankiw
PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich
© 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved
IN THIS CHAPTER, YOU WILL LEARN:
1
The Mundell-Fleming model
Key assumption:
Small open economy with perfect capital mobility.
r = r*
Goods market equilibrium—the IS* curve:
Y C (Y T ) I (r *) G NX (e )
where
e = nominal exchange rate
= foreign currency per unit domestic currency
Y C (Y T ) I (r *) G NX (e )
e NX Y
IS*
Y
M P L (r *,Y )
The LM* curve:
e LM*
is drawn for a given
value of r*.
is vertical because
given r*, there is
only one value of Y
that equates money
demand with supply, Y
regardless of e.
CHAPTER 13 The Open Economy Revisited 4
Equilibrium in the Mundell-Fleming model
Y C (Y T ) I (r *) G NX (e )
M P L (r *,Y )
e LM*
equilibrium
exchange
rate
IS*
Y
equilibrium
income
CHAPTER 13 The Open Economy Revisited 5
Floating & fixed exchange rates
Y C (Y T ) I (r *) G NX (e )
M P L (r *,Y )
e LM 1*
At any given value of e,
e2
a fiscal expansion
increases Y, e1
shifting IS* to the right.
IS 2*
Results:
IS 1*
e > 0, Y = 0 Y
Y1
Y C (Y T ) I (r *) G NX (e )
M P L (r *,Y )
e LM 1*
At any given value of e,
a tariff or quota reduces e2
imports, increases NX,
and shifts IS* to the right. e1
IS 2*
Results:
IS 1*
e > 0, Y = 0 Y
Y1
Under
Underfloating
floatingrates,
rates,
afiscal
fiscalpolicy
expansion
is ineffective
e LM 1*LM 2*
would raise e.output.
at changing
To keepfixed
Under e from rising,
rates,
the central
fiscal bank
policy must
is very
sell domestic
effective currency,
at changing e1
which
output.increases M IS 2*
and shifts LM* right.
IS 1*
Results: Y
Y1 Y2
e = 0, Y > 0
CHAPTER 13 The Open Economy Revisited 15
Monetary policy under fixed exchange rates
An increase
Under in Mrates,
floating would
monetary
shift policy
LM* right andisreduce e.
very effective at e LM 1*LM 2*
To prevent the fall in e,
changing
the central output.
bank must
buy
Underdomestic currency,
fixed rates,
which reduces
monetary M and
policy cannot e1
shifts LM*toback
be used left.output.
affect
Results: IS 1*
Y
e = 0, Y = 0 Y1
floating fixed
impact on:
Policy Y e NX Y e NX
fiscal expansion 0 0 0
mon. expansion 0 0 0
import restriction 0 0 0
r r *
where (Greek letter “theta”) is a risk premium,
assumed exogenous.
Substitute the expression for r into the
IS* and LM* equations:
Y C (Y T ) I (r * ) G NX (e )
M P L (r * ,Y )
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(LM* ) M P L (r *,Y )
1. Mundell-Fleming model:
the IS-LM model for a small open economy.
takes P as given.
can show how policies and shocks affect income
and the exchange rate.
2. Fiscal policy:
affects income under fixed exchange rates, but not
under floating exchange rates.
41
CHAPTER SUMMARY
3. Monetary policy:
affects income under floating exchange rates.
under fixed exchange rates is not available to affect
output.
4. Interest rate differentials:
exist if investors require a risk premium to hold a
country’s assets.
An increase in this risk premium raises domestic
interest rates and causes the country’s exchange
rate to depreciate.
42
CHAPTER SUMMARY
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