Sunday, May 17, 2015

Phillips Curve

Philips Curve - Shows the relationship between unemployment and inflation
Long Run Philips Curve - Occurs at natural rate of unemployment
  • Represented by vertical line
  • There is no trade-off between unemployment and inflation in the long run (economy produces at full employment level
  • LRPC will only shift if LRAS curve shifts
  • LRAS shifts when technology and economic growth (same thing as outward PPC curve)
  • Cyclical does not happen during full employment 
  • The major LRPC assumption is that more worker benefits create higher natural rates and fewer worker benefits create lower natural rates
  • There is trade off between inflation and unemployment that only occurs in the short run
  • Inflation and unemployment are inverse
  • SRPC has relevance to Okun's Law
  • Since wages are sticky, inflation changes move the points on the SRPC
  • If inflation persists and the expected rate of inflation rises, then the entire SRPC moves upward which causes a situation called stagflation
  • If inflation expectations drop due to new tech or economic growth, then SRPC moves downward
  • Shift in PC is caused by determinants of AS
  • If it is AD it moves ALONG the curve
  • AS shocks cause both rate of inflation and rate of unemployment to increase
  • Supply shocks are a rapid and significant increase in resource cos
  • Misery index is a combo of inflation and unemployment in any given year. Single digit misery is good.
The Long-Run Phillips Curve (LRPC)
Because the LRPC exists at the natural rate of unemployment (Un), structural changes in the economy that affect Un will also cause LPRC to shift
  • Increase in Un shifts LPRC right
  • Vice versa




    3 comments:

    1. A pretty long video, but it explains the phillips curve and the relationship between unemployment and inflation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GycD6uitKrA

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    2. Your notes are really well-organized and I appreciate the images of the graphs since I am personally a visual learner. Good job!

      ReplyDelete
    3. Ruth, you are missing the notes on stagflation, disinflation, and deflation. You can check them out on my blog.

      ReplyDelete