Unit 5
Sras- time too short for wages to adjust to the price level. The reason is that workers may not be aware of changes in their real wages due to inflation therefore they adjust their labor decisions accordingly as well as wage demands.
Nominal wage- is the amount of money received per day, per hour, per year
Real wage- adjusted for inflation and everything else.
Long run AS- time long enough for wages to adjust to the price level. Key assumptions:
1. Wage and price is flexible
2. Changes in wage and price offset eachother
3. LRAS = vertical line
4. Changes:
Phillips Curve:
3 generalization:
-Inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment
-Aggregate supply shock can case higher rates of inflation and higher rates of unemployment
-No significant trade off between inflation and unemployment in the long run
If inflation persists, and the expected rate if inflation rises then the entire SRPC moves upwards (stagflation is possible or probably)
If inflation expectations drop due to new technology then the SRPC moves downwards.
Increase in AD = up/ left movement along SRPC
Decrease in AD = down\ right along SRPC
*SRPC label at the bottom
SRAS -> = <- SRPC
SRAS <- = -> SRPC (Stagflation)
LRPC:
-vertical at full employment
-major LRPC assumption is that more worker benefit create higher natural rates of unemployment and fewer worker benefit create fewer natural rate of unemployment
-shift= same as LRAS
Misery index:
-a combination of inflation and unemployment in a given year.
-single digit misery is good.
*seasonal, structional, frictional = Natural rate of unemployment
Supply Shock- it is a rapid an significant increase in resource prices which cause the SRAS to shift which results in producing a shift in the SRPC curve.
Ex: Oil embargo
increase in input prices
Wage height
(Positive or negative)
Disinflation- reduction in inflation rate from year to year which can be seen in the long run Phillips curve.
Stagflation- increase in inflation and unemployment.
Supply side economics(Raeganomics) -Tends to believe AS curve will determine levels of inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.
Increase economy= shift AS right
-focus on marginal tax rate
Marginal tax rate- amount of tax payed on an addition dollar of income
* by reducing marginal tax rate it will encourage more people to work longer
* high marginal tax rates may end up reducing savings since when you save money you are then taxed at a higher rate on your profit of interest
As tax rate increase from zero, tax revenues increase from zero to maximum number then they decline.
3 criticisms of laffer curve:
1. Where the economy is actually located on the curve is difficult to determine.
2. Tax cuts increase demand which can fuel inflation and demand may exceed supply
3. Research states that tax rates impact peoples incentives to work, invest and save.
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