Chapter 16
Output and the Exchange Rate in the Short Run
Slide 16-2Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Chapter Organization
Determinants of Aggregate Demand in an Open
Economy
The Equation of Aggregate Demand
How Output Is Determined in the Short Run
Output Market Equilibrium in the Sort Run,The DD
Schedule
Asset Market Equilibrium in the Short Run,The AA
Schedule
Short-Run Equilibrium for an Open Economy,
Putting the DD and AA Schedules Together
Slide 16-3Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Temporary Changes in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Inflation Bias and Other Problems of Policy
Formulation
Permanent Shifts in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Macroeconomic Policies and the Current Account
Gradual Trade Flow Adjustment and Current Account
Dynamics
Summary
Chapter Organization
Slide 16-4Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Appendix I,The IS-LM Model and the DD-AA Model
Appendix II,Intertemporal Trade and Consumption
Demand
Appendix III,The Marshall-Lerner Condition and
Empirical Estimates of Trade Elasticities
Chapter Organization
Slide 16-5Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Introduction
Macroeconomic changes that affect exchange rates,
interest rates,and price levels may also affect output.
This chapter introduces a new theory of how the
output market adjusts to demand changes when
product prices are themselves slow to adjust.
A short-run model of the output market in an open
economy will be utilized to analyze:
The effects of macroeconomic policy tools on output
and the current account
The use of macroeconomic policy tools to maintain
full employment
Slide 16-6Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Aggregate demand
The amount of a country’s goods and services
demanded by households and firms throughout the
world.
The aggregate demand for an open economy’s output
consists of four components:
Consumption demand (C)
Investment demand (I)
Government demand (G)
Current account (CA)
Slide 16-7Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Determinants of Consumption Demand
Consumption demand increases as disposable income
(i.e.,national income less taxes) increases at the
aggregate level.
– The increase in consumption demand is less than the
increase in the disposable income because part of the
income increase is saved.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Slide 16-8Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Determinants of the Current Account
The CA balance is viewed as the demand for a
country’s exports (EX) less that country's own demand
for imports (IM).
The CA balance is determined by two main factors:
– The domestic currency’s real exchange rate against
foreign currency (q = EP*/P)
– Domestic disposable income (Yd)
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Slide 16-9Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
How Real Exchange Rate Changes Affect the Current
Account
An increase in q raises EX and improves the domestic
country’s CA.
– Each unit of domestic output now purchases fewer units
of foreign output,therefore,foreign will demand more
exports.
An increase q can raise or lower IM and has an
ambiguous effect on CA.
– IM denotes the value of imports measured in terms of
domestic output.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Slide 16-10Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
There are two effects of a real exchange rate:
Volume effect
– The effect of consumer spending shifts on export and
import quantities
Value effect
– It changes the domestic output worth of a given volume
of foreign imports.
Whether the CA improves or worsens depends on
which effect of a real exchange rate change is
dominant.
We assume that the volume effect of a real exchange
rate change always outweighs the value effect.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Slide 16-11Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
How Disposable Income Changes Affect the Current
Account
An increase in disposable income (Yd) worsens the CA.
A rise in Yd causes domestic consumers to increase
their spending on all goods.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Slide 16-12Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Determinants of Aggregate
Demand in an Open Economy
Table 16-1,Factors Determining the Current Account
Slide 16-13Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
The four components of aggregate demand are
combined to get the total aggregate demand:
D = C(Y – T) + I + G + CA(EP*/P,Y – T)
This equation shows that aggregate demand for home
output can be written as:
D = D(EP*/P,Y – T,I,G)
The Equation of Aggregate Demand
Slide 16-14Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
The Real Exchange Rate and Aggregate Demand
An increase in q raises CA and D.
– It makes domestic goods and services cheaper relative
to foreign goods and services.
– It shifts both domestic and foreign spending from
foreign goods to domestic goods.
– A real depreciation of the home currency raises
aggregate demand for home output,
– A real appreciation lowers aggregate demand for home output.
The Equation of Aggregate Demand
Slide 16-15Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Real Income and Aggregate Demand
A rise in domestic real income raises aggregate
demand for home output.
A fall in domestic real income lowers aggregate
demand for home output.
The Equation of Aggregate Demand
Slide 16-16Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-1,Aggregate Demand as a Function of Output
Output (real income),Y
Aggregate
demand,D
Aggregate demand function,
D(EP*/P,Y – T,I,G)
45°
The Equation of Aggregate Demand
Slide 16-17Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
How Output Is
Determined in the Short Run
Output market is in equilibrium in the short-run when
real output,Y,equals the aggregate demand for
domestic output:
Y = D(EP*/P,Y – T,I,G) (16-1)
Slide 16-18Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-2,The Determination of Output in the Short Run
Output,Y
Aggregate
demand,D
45°
Aggregate demand =
aggregate output,D = Y
Aggregate demand
2
Y2
D1
1
Y1
3
Y3
How Output Is
Determined in the Short Run
Slide 16-19Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Output,the Exchange Rate,and Output Market
Equilibrium
With fixed price levels at home and abroad,a rise in
the nominal exchange rate makes foreign goods and
services more expensive relative to domestic goods
and services.
– Any rise in q will cause an upward shift in the aggregate
demand function and an expansion of output.
– Any fall in q will cause output to contract.
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Slide 16-20Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Figure 16-3,Output Effect of a Currency Depreciation with Fixed
Output Prices
Output,Y
Aggregate
demand,D
45°
D = Y
1
Y1
Aggregate demand (E2)
Aggregate demand (E1)
Y2
2Currencydepreciates
Slide 16-21Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Deriving the DD Schedule
DD schedule
– It shows all combinations of output and the exchange
rate for which the output market is in short-run
equilibrium (aggregate demand = aggregate output).
– It slopes upward because a rise in the exchange rate
causes output to rise.
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Slide 16-22Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Y2
DD
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Figure 16-4,Deriving the DD Schedule
Output,Y
Aggregate demand,D D = Y
Y1
Aggregate demand (E2)
Aggregate demand (E1)
Y2
Output,Y
Exchange rate,E
Y1
1E
1
E2 2
Slide 16-23Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Factors that Shift the DD Schedule
Government purchases
Taxes
Investment
Domestic price levels
Foreign price levels
Domestic consumption
Demand shift between foreign and domestic goods
A disturbance that raises (lowers) aggregate demand for
domestic output shifts the DD schedule to the right (left).
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Slide 16-24Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Y2
Output Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The DD Schedule
Figure 16-5,Government Demand and the Position of the DD Schedule
D = Y
Y1
D(E0P*/P,Y – T,I,G2)
D(E0P*/P,Y – T,I,G1)
Y2
Output,Y
Exchange rate,E
Y1
Aggregate demand curves
2
Government
spending rises
Output,Y
Aggregate demand,D
DD1
E0 1
DD2
Slide 16-25Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
AA Schedule
It shows all combinations of exchange rate and output
that are consistent with equilibrium in the domestic
money market and the foreign exchange market.
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-26Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Output,the Exchange Rate,and Asset Market
Equilibrium
We will combine the interest parity condition with the
money market to derive the asset market equilibrium
in the short-run.
The interest parity condition describing foreign
exchange market equilibrium is:
R = R* + (Ee – E)/E
where,Ee is the expected future exchange rate
R is the interest rate on domestic currency deposits
R* is the interest rate on foreign currency deposits
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-27Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
The R satisfying the interest parity condition must also
equate the real domestic money supply to aggregate
real money demand,
Ms/P = L(R,Y)
Aggregate real money demand L(R,Y) rises when the
interest rate falls because a fall in R makes interest-
bearing nonmoney assets less attractive to hold.
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-28Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Figure 16-6,Output and the Exchange Rate in Asset Market Equilibrium
Domestic-currency
return on foreign-
currency deposits
Foreign
exchange
market
Money
market
E2 2'
R2
E1 1'
R1
Real money
supply
MS
P 1
L(R,Y2)
L(R,Y1)
Real domestic money holdings
Domestic
interest
rate,R
Exchange Rate,E
0
2
Output rises
Slide 16-29Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
For asset markets to remain in equilibrium:
A rise in domestic output must be accompanied by an
appreciation of the domestic currency.
A fall in domestic output must be accompanied by a
depreciation of the domestic currency.
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-30Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Deriving the AA Schedule
It relates exchange rates and output levels that keep the
money and foreign exchange markets in equilibrium.
It slopes downward because a rise in output causes a
rise in the home interest rate and a domestic currency
appreciation.
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-31Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-7,The AA Schedule
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
AA
Y1
E1
1
Y2
E2
2
Slide 16-32Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Factors that Shift the AA Schedule
Domestic money supply
Domestic price level
Expected future exchange rate
Foreign interest rate
Shifts in the aggregate real money demand schedule
Asset Market Equilibrium in the
Short Run,The AA Schedule
Slide 16-33Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Short-Run Equilibrium for an Open Economy,
Putting the DD and AA Schedules Together
A short-run equilibrium for the economy as a whole
must bring equilibrium simultaneously in the output
and asset markets.
That is,it must lie on both DD and AA schedules.
Slide 16-34Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-8,Short-Run Equilibrium,The Intersection of DD and AA
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
Y1
E1
1
Short-Run Equilibrium for an Open Economy,
Putting the DD and AA Schedules Together
DD
Slide 16-35Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-9,How the Economy Reaches Its Short-Run Equilibrium
AA
Y1
E1
1
Short-Run Equilibrium for an Open Economy,
Putting the DD and AA Schedules Together
DD
3E
3
2E2
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
Slide 16-36Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Two types of government policy:
Monetary policy
– It works through changes in the money supply.
Fiscal policy
– It works through changes in government spending or
taxes.
Temporary policy shifts are those that the public
expects to be reversed in the near future and do not
affect the long-run expected exchange rate.
Assume that policy shifts do not influence the foreign
interest rate and the foreign price level.
Slide 16-37Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Monetary Policy
An increase in money supply (i.e.,expansionary
monetary policy) raises the economy’s output.
– The increase in money supply creates an excess supply
of money,which lowers the home interest rate.
– As a result,the domestic currency must depreciate (i.e.,home
products become cheaper relative to foreign products) and
aggregate demand increases.
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-38Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD
Figure 16-10,Effects of a Temporary Increase in the Money Supply
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
AA2
Y2
E2
2
AA1
1
E1
Y1
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-39Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Fiscal Policy
An increase in government spending,a cut in taxes,or
some combination of the two (i.e,expansionary fiscal
policy) raises output.
– The increase in output raises the transactions demand
for real money holdings,which in turn increases the
home interest rate,
– As a result,the domestic currency must appreciate.
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-40Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD1
Figure 16-11,Effects of a Temporary Fiscal Expansion
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
AA
DD2
Y1
E1
1
2
Y2
E2
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-41Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Policies to Maintain Full Employment
Temporary disturbances that lead to recession can be
offset through expansionary monetary or fiscal policies.
– Temporary disturbances that lead to overemployment
can be offset through contractionary monetary or fiscal
policies.
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-42Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-12,Maintaining Full Employment After a Temporary Fall in
World Demand for Domestic Products
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
DD1
AA2
AA1
YfY2
E2
2
DD2
1E1
3E3
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-43Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD1
Figure 16-13,Policies to Maintain Full Employment After
a Money-Demand Increase
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
DD2
AA1
AA2
YfY2
E2
2
3E3
1E1
Temporary Changes
in Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-44Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Inflation Bias and Other
Problems of Policy Formulation
Problems of policy formulation:
Inflation bias
– High inflation with no average gain in output that
results from governments’ policies to prevent recession
Identifying the sources of economic changes
Identifying the durations of economic changes
The impact of fiscal policy on the government budget
Time lags in implementing policies
Slide 16-45Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
A permanent policy shift affects not only the current
value of the government’s policy instrument but also
the long-run exchange rate.
This affects expectations about future exchange rates.
A Permanent Increase in the Money Supply
A permanent increase in the money supply causes the
expected future exchange rate to rise proportionally.
– As a result,the upward shift in the AA schedule is
greater than that caused by an equal,but transitory,
increase (compare point 2 with point 3 in Figure 16-14).
Slide 16-46Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD1
Figure 16-14,Short-Run Effects of a Permanent Increase in the Money
Supply
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
AA2
Y2
E2
2
AA1
1E1
Yf
3
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-47Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Adjustment to a Permanent Increase in the Money
Supply
The permanent increase in the money supply raises
output above its full-employment level.
– As a result,the price level increases to bring the
economy back to full employment.
Figure 16-15 shows the adjustment back to full
employment.
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-48Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD2
Figure 16-15,Long-Run Adjustment to a Permanent Increase in the
Money Supply
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
DD1
AA2
AA3
Yf
3E3
AA1
Y2
E2
2
E1 1
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-49Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
A Permanent Fiscal Expansion
A permanent fiscal expansion changes the long-run
expected exchange rate.
– If the economy starts at long-run equilibrium,a
permanent change in fiscal policy has no effect on
output.
– It causes an immediate and permanent exchange rate jump that
offsets exactly the fiscal policy’s direct effect on aggregate
demand.
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Slide 16-50Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
DD1
Figure 16-16,Effects of a Permanent Fiscal Expansion Changing
the Capital Stock
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
DD2
AA1
AA2
Yf
2E2
1E1
Permanent Shifts in
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
3
Slide 16-51Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Macroeconomic Policies
and the Current Account
XX schedule
It shows combinations of the exchange rate and output
at which the CA balance would be equal to some
desired level.
It slopes upward because a rise in output encourages
spending on imports and thus worsens the current
account (if it is not accompanied by a currency
depreciation).
It is flatter than DD.
Slide 16-52Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Monetary expansion causes the CA balance to increase
in the short run (point 2 in Figure 16-17).
Expansionary fiscal policy reduces the CA balance,
– If it is temporary,the DD schedule shifts to the right
(point 3 in Figure 16-17).
– If it is permanent,both AA and DD schedules shift
(point 4 in Figure 16-17).
Macroeconomic Policies
and the Current Account
Slide 16-53Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16-17,How Macroeconomic Policies Affect the Current Account
Output,Y
Exchange
Rate,E
Yf
E1
1
DD
XX
4
3
2
Macroeconomic Policies
and the Current Account
Slide 16-54Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
The J-Curve
If imports and exports adjust gradually to real
exchange rate changes,the CA may follow a J-curve
pattern after a real currency depreciation,first
worsening and then improving.
– Currency depreciation may have a contractionary initial
effect on output,and exchange rate overshooting will be
amplified.
It describes the time lag with which a real currency
depreciation improves the CA.
Gradual Trade Flow Adjustment
and Current Account Dynamics
Slide 16-55Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
2
Figure 16-18,The J-Curve
Time
Current account (in
domestic output units)
1 3
Long-run
effect of real
depreciation
on the current
account
Real depreciation takes
place and J-curve begins
End of J-curve
Gradual Trade Flow Adjustment
and Current Account Dynamics
Slide 16-56Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Exchange Rate Pass-Through and Inflation
The CA in the DD-AA model has assumed that
nominal exchange rate changes cause proportional
changes in the real exchange rates in the short run.
Degree of Pass-through
– It is the percentage by which import prices rise when the
home currency depreciates by 1%.
– In the DD-AA model,the degree of pass-through is 1.
– Exchange rate pass-through can be incomplete because
of international market segmentation.
– Currency movements have less-than-proportional effects on
the relative prices determining trade volumes.
Gradual Trade Flow Adjustment
and Current Account Dynamics
Slide 16-57Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Summary
The aggregate demand for an open economy’s output
consists of four components,consumption demand,
investment demand,government demand,and the
current account.
Output is determined in the short run by the equality
of aggregate demand and aggregate supply.
The economy’s short-run equilibrium occurs at the
exchange rate and output level.
Slide 16-58Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Summary
A temporary increase in the money supply causes a
depreciation of the currency and a rise in output.
Permanent shifts in the money supply cause sharper
exchange rate movements and therefore have stronger
short-run effects on output than transitory shifts.
If exports and imports adjust gradually to real
exchange rate changes,the current account may
follow a J-curve pattern after a real currency
depreciation,first worsening and then improving.
Slide 16-59Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Figure 16AI-1,Short-Run Equilibrium in the IS-LM Model
Output,Y
Interest
rate,R
Y1
R1
1
Appendix I,The IS-LM Model
and the DD-AA Model
LM
Slide 16-60Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
R2
Figure 16AI-2,Effects of Permanent and Temporary Increases in the
Money Supply in the IS-LM Model
Appendix I,The IS-LM Model
and the DD-AA Model
R3
LM2
Output,Y
Interest rate,R
LM1
Y3
3
Y2
2
Y1
1
R1
3′
E3
1′
E1E2
2′
Exchange rate,E (? increasing)
Expected
domestic-currency
return on
foreign-currency
deposits
Slide 16-61Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
R2
Figure 16AI-3,Effects of Permanent and Temporary Fiscal
Expansions in the IS-LM Model
Appendix I,The IS-LM Model and
the DD-AA Model
R1
Output,Y
Interest rate,R LM
Yf
1
Y2
22′
E2
Exchange rate,E (? increasing)
Expected
domestic-currency
return on
foreign-currency
deposits
E1
1′
E3
3′
Slide 16-62Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Appendix II,Intertemporal Trade
and Consumption Demand
Present
consumption
Future
consumption
D1P = Q1P
1
Figure 16AII-1,Change in Output and Saving
Indifference
curves
Intertemporal
budget constraints
2
D2P
2′
Q2P
D1F = Q1F
D2F
Slide 16-63Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc.
Appendix III,The Marshall-Lerner Condition
and Empirical Estimates of Trade Elasticities
Table 16AIII-1,Estimated Price Elasticities for International Trade
in Manufactured Goods