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Chapter 12

Unemployment and Inflation

I. Unemployment and Inflation: Is There a Trade-Off?

just as in Chapters 14 (Monetary Policy) and 15 (Fiscal Policy),


this chapter continues our analysis of how macroeconomic
policy works and how it can best be used

in Section 12.1, we study unemployment and inflation together

these two variables are sometimes referred to as the “twin


evils”—they represent the most important macroeconomic
problems

studying unemployment and inflation together gives us the


Phillips curve relationship

after that, we separately examine unemployment (Section 12.2)


and inflation (Section 12.3)

A. The Original Phillips Curve

conventional wisdom leads the public to believe that there is a


trade-off between inflation and unemployment

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1. The “Phillips curve” is the relation derived by A.W. Phillips
in 1958 that shows the negative (inverse) relationship between
unemployment and inflation

technically, though, this is incorrect

Phillips’s actual study examined the rate of nominal wage


growth in British industries

later economists changed the variable “nominal wage growth” to


“inflation”

2. Phillips’s data showed that many countries in the 1950s and


1960s (including the U.S.) seemed to have this negative
relationship between the two variables

3. This relationship suggested that policymakers faced a menu of


options; they could choose the combination of unemployment
and inflation they most desired

“you can pick where you want to be on the curve”

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4. The original relationship fell apart in the next three decades

in the 1970s, there was both high inflation and high


unemployment

this situation is called “stagflation”, and it is totally inconsistent


with the Phillips curve

B. The Expectations-Augmented Phillips Curve

1. The original relationship broke down so quickly because the


public’s way of forming expectations changed

in the original model, there is an implicit assumption that πe = 0

but once inflation started to become persistently positive, the


public changed its expectations

2. Even before the original Phillips curve began to break down


in the 1970s, a new theory argued that the cyclical
unemployment rate (u - u) depends only on unanticipated
inflation (π – πe)

this idea was published by Friedman and Phelps

NOTE: The terms “Friedman-Phelps Phillips curve”,


“expectations-augmented Phillips curve”, and “modified Phillips
curve” all mean the same thing!

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this implies that the relationship between inflation and the
unemployment rate is not stable; it can fluctuate

so now we talk about the relationship between the rate of


unemployment and the change in the inflation rate

3. The expectations-augmented Phillips curve is written as

π = π e
− h (u − u )

where h is the slope of the curve and (u − u) is cyclical


unemployment

in words: the change in the rate of inflation depends on the


difference between the actual unemployment rate and the natural
rate of unemployment

the “natural rate of unemployment” is the rate which maintains a


constant rate of inflation

this means Δ π = 0, NOT π = 0

so we can infer the following relationships:

(1) when π = π e
→u= u
this means we are at a point on the curve

(2) when π < π e


→u> u
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this means the economy is in a recession

(3) when π > π e


→u< u
this means the economy is in an expansion

C. Shifting the Phillips curve

1. The Phillips curve shows the relationship between


unemployment (u) and inflation (π) for a given expected rate of
inflation (πe) and natural rate of unemployment ( u )

2. If you ↑ πe or ↑ u , this shifts the Phillips curve up and to the


right

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3. Supply Shocks (SRAS) and the Phillips curve

adverse supply shocks increase both πe and u , so the Phillips


curve will shift up and to the right

this is partly why the original relationship started to fall apart in


the 1970s

there were the oil crises of 1973/74 and 1979/80, and the
Phillips curve will always be unstable in periods with many
supply shocks

plus, demographic changes were increasing the U.S. natural rate


of unemployment

plus, monetary policy was very expansionary and this led to


high and volatile inflation

D. Macroeconomic Policy and the Phillips curve

1. Can the Phillips curve be exploited? Is it really a policy


menu? Can politicians choose the desired combination of
unemployment and inflation?

(1) classicals say “no” because if people are rational, they will
change their expectations in response to political actions

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as the public’s expectations adjust, the unemployment rate
returns to its natural level quickly

so long as the public is characterized by forward-looking


“rational expectations” (in contrast to backward-looking
“adaptive expectations”), unemployment can change from its
natural level only for a very brief time

why? because people will catch on to policy games and they will
anticipate policy changes; they cannot be systematically fooled

(2) Keynesians say “yes, temporarily”

if prices, wages, and expected future prices are sticky, then the
actual unemployment rate may differ from the natural rate for
some time

2. The Lucas Critique

you cannot expect historical relationships between variables to


continue to hold if there has been a major policy change

when the rules of the game change, behavior changes

the Phillips curve fell apart as soon as policymakers tried to


exploit it

Lucas argued that both economic theory and empirical analysis


are necessary to evaluate policy changes

E. The Long-Run Phillips curve


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1. In the long-run both Keynesians and classical agree that u =
u
2. Thus, the long-run Phillips curve is vertical, since when π =
π e, u = u

3. Classicals and Keynesians also agree that money (and the


growth rate of the nominal money supply) is neutral in the long-
run

so, even though expansionary monetary policy may reduce


unemployment temporarily (think about what’s happening to the
LM curve!), policymakers may want to do this if they can create
an economic boom right before elections

II. Unemployment

A. The Costs of Unemployment

1. Loss in output from idle resources

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workers lose income

society has to pay for unemployment benefits and the


government loses tax revenue

2. Okun’s Law (from Chapter 3, Section 3.6)

Arthur Okun, chair of the Council of Economic Advisors during


the 1960s, posited a relationship between output (relative to full-
employment output) and cyclical unemployment

Okun’s Law states that each percentage point of cyclical


unemployment is associated with a loss equal to 2 percent of
full-employment output

algebraically, the formula is

( Y − Y) / Y = 2 (u − u )

the coefficient in Okun’s Law is 2 (and not just 1) because


several other things happen when cyclical unemployment rises

for example: the labor force falls, hours of work per worker
decline, and the average productivity of labor declines

if that’s true, then the result is a 2 percent reduction in output for


every 1 percentage point increase in the actual unemployment
rate

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a possible numerical example might be if full-employment
output is $ 7.5 trillion, then each percentage point of
unemployment sustained for one year would cost the economy $
150 billion

3. Personal and Psychological Cost

these costs affect not just workers, but also their families

this is especially true for those who experience long spells of


unemployment

4. Offsetting Benefits

(1) unemployment leads to increased job search and learning


new skills

hopefully, this frictional unemployment will lead to increased


future output

(2) unemployed workers have increased leisure time

but is this really worth being out of work?

B. The long-term behavior of the unemployment rate

1. The changing natural rate

from the 1950s – 1960s, and from the 1990s – 2008: around 5 –
5½%

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in the 1970s and 1980s: over 6 %

it has been falling due to demographic forces; the proportion of


the labor force aged 16 – 24 years old fell from 25 % in 1980 to
16 % in 1998

some economists think the natural rate of unemployment is 4.5


% or even lower

the natural rate has also been falling because of ↑ efficiency in


the Labor Market and better matching of workers and jobs (this
reduces frictional and structural unemployment)

2. Measuring the natural rate of unemployment

economists disagree about how to measure the natural rate of


unemployment

because of this, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has


revised its measure of the natural rate several times

economists have tried to calculate the natural rate, but it cannot


be measured precisely with current econometric methods (the
confidence interval is too large)

policymakers need a measure of the natural rate of


unemployment to use the unemployment rate for setting policy

but since we don’t know what the natural rate is, that implies
policy decisions are probably wrong

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or, at the very least, U.S. policy is based on the wrong
information

III. Inflation

A. The Costs of Inflation

1. Perfectly-Anticipated Inflation

this is one extreme

if all prices and wages (and therefore, incomes) keep up with


inflation, then there are no adverse effects

but even under the best conditions, technically we would still


have two costs to worry about

(1) “shoe-leather costs”: ↑ π → ↑ i → a higher opportunity cost


of holding currency

this is often called the “inflation tax”

as a result, people ↓ money balances by making more trips, more


often, to the bank (and they wear out their shoes)

if inflation were lower, then people could be doing other things


instead (like working more or enjoying more leisure)

(2) “menu costs”: when prices rise because of inflation, there


are costs involved in changing prices

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technology may mitigate this somewhat

2. Unanticipated Inflation (π − π e)

the main cost here is that actual realized real returns on assets
differ from their expected real returns

the actual “r” differs from the expected “r” by π e


–π

this affects investments, wages, and salaries

it is basically a transfer of wealth

(1) from lenders to borrowers when π > π e

(2) from borrowers to lenders when π < π e

NOTE: To the economy as a whole, on net, there is no change


in wealth. The effect is neutral.

but since people want to avoid the risks of unanticipated


inflation, a second cost is the resources spent on forecasting
inflation

to avoid these costs, some investments and government


contracts are “indexed”; meaning they are linked with the level
of inflation

examples of indexed contracts are adjustable-rate mortgages,


inflation-indexed bonds, and COLAs

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3. Hyperinflation

hyperinflation is a very high, sustained inflation (for example,


50 percent or more per month)

Hungary (August, 1945) had inflation of 19,800 % per month

but then, between August 1945 and July 1946, in Hungary the
purchasing power of a unit of money fell by a factor of 4
octillion!

(that’s 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000)

Bolivia had annual rates of inflation of 1281 % (1984), 11,750


% (1985), and 276 % (1986)

a major cost of hyperinflation is shoe-leather costs, as people


minimize cash balances

people spend many resources getting rid of money as fast as


possible

tax collections fall, as people pay taxes with money whose value
has declined sharply

even worse, the invisible hand falls apart; prices become


worthless signals

this causes markets to become inefficient

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B. Fighting Inflation: The role of Inflationary Expectations

1. Disinflation: a reduction in the rate of inflation

be careful, “disinflation” is not the same as “deflation” (π < 0)

disinflations usually lead to recessions

problem: an unexpected ↓ π leads to ↑ u along the Phillips curve

remember that when π < π e, u > u in the expectations-


augmented Phillips curve

2. The costs of disinflation (specifically, ↑ u) could be reduced if


π e fell at the same time actual π fell

but somehow we have to convince the public to decrease their


expectations of future inflation

3. The Sacrifice Ratio

if the public does not expect (or believe) that tight monetary and
fiscal policies will actually be used to reduce inflation, then
there will be a reduction in output and employment

these costs must be considered against the benefits of lower


inflation

the variable that measures these societal costs is the sacrifice


ratio
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defined as the number of percentage points of output lost in
reducing inflation by one percentage point

Example: In the U.S. in the early 1980s, π ↓ by 8.83 points and


output ↓ by 16.18 % of GDP. Thus, [16.18 / 8.83] = 1.832.

Interpretation: For every percentage point we ↓ π , the country


lost 1.832 % of a year’s potential GDP

NOTE: The sacrifice ratio can also be interpreted as how much


cyclical unemployment we accept to lower inflation. In this
definition, the sacrifice ratio is (1 / h)—the slope of the Phillips
curve.

4. Wage and Price Controls

price controls lead to shortages and inefficiency; once the


controls are lifted (if ever), prices will rise again

the outcome and efficacy of these controls depend on what


happens with fiscal and monetary policy (does the public
actually believe that the government is really trying to fix
things?)

5. Credibility and Reputation

the key determinant of the costs of disinflation is how quickly


π e adjusts

this depends on government credibility


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if people believe the government—and if the government carries
through with its stated policies—then π e should drop rapidly

how does a central bank gain credibility?

(1) establish a reputation for following through on its promises,


even if it’s costly in the short-run

(2) make the central bank follow a rule that is enforced by some
outside agency

(3) have a strong and independent central bank that is committed


to low inflation

(4) appoint a “tough” or “hawkish” central banker

(5) change central bankers’ incentives (fire them if they do not


achieve the stated inflationary goals)

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