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CCllaassssiiccaall MMaaccrrooeeccoonnoommiiccss II 
CChhaapptteerr 33 
Professor Steve Cunningham 
Intermediate Macroeconomics 
ECON 219
CCllaassssiiccaall RReevvoolluuttiioonn 
 Classical economics emerged as a 
revolution against an earlier theory known 
as mercantilism. 
 Two tenets of mercantilism: 
– Bullionism: a belief that the wealth and power 
of a nation were determined by its stock of 
precious metals, and 
– Active Gov’t Policy: a belief in the need for 
government coordination to direct the 
development of the capitalist system.
BBuulllliioonniissmm 
 In practical terms, this lead countries to believe 
that the economic success of the country 
depended upon running a trade surplus—more 
exports than imports. 
 This results in a positive flow of payments to the 
country. 
 Because the payments would be in gold and 
silver, this leads to the country amassing a 
growing stock of “bullion”. 
 To achieve this, trade was carefully regulated, 
and the export of bullion prohibited.
CCllaassssiiccaall TThheeoorryy 
 Emphasized the importance of real factors and 
productive capacity in determining the “wealth of 
nations”. 
 Emphasized the optimizing tendencies of free 
markets in the absence of state controls. 
 Classical analysis was real analysis—growth of 
an economy was the result of the growth and 
quality of the workforce, capital, and 
technological advances. 
 Money only facilitates exchange. The desire to 
trade “reals for reals” is what motivates 
transactions.
CCllaassssiiccaall VViieeww ooff MMoonneeyy 
 Money is simply a convenience, a means of 
exchange. 
 Money has no intrinsic value. People hold money 
only for the sake of the goods that it can 
purchase. 
 Mercantilists had argued that on the short run an 
increase in the supply of money would increase 
demand and stimulate employment and 
production. Classical economists argued that 
increases in the supply of money ultimately have 
the effect of only causing inflation.
MMaarrkkeettss 
 Mercantilists argued that the government needs 
to make sure that markets exist for all goods. 
 Classical economists argued that “consumption 
never needs encouragement”, that the free 
market mechanism would provide markets for 
any goods that were produced. 
 Classical economists argued that there will 
always be sufficient demand for whatever was 
produced.
OOvveerrvviieeww ooff tthhee mmooddeell 
The story being told in this chapter is 
about the classical view of the real 
sector of the macroeconomy, and how 
it produces optimal, stable outcomes 
(equilibria).
LLaabboorr MMaarrkkeett 
w/p 
Ns 
N* N 
(w/p)* 
Nd
CCaappiittaall MMaarrkkeett 
S, I 
r 
S*, I* 
r* 
Investment (I) is the 
change in the amount 
(stock) of capital. 
I 
S 
Saving = supply of funds 
Investment = demand for funds
PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn 
Y Y=F(N,K*) 
Y* The level of 
N 
N* 
capital has already 
been established in 
the capital market.
CCllaassssiiccaall RReeaall SSeeccttoorr 
4 
N 
Y 
Y=F(N*,K*) 
N* 
Y* 
S, I 
r 
S*, I* 
r* 
I 
S 
S*, I*, r*, K* 
w/P 
Ns 
N* N 
(w/P)* 
Nd 
(w/P)*, N* 
Y* Y 
P 
1 
2 
3 
LRAS
LLaabboorr MMaarrkkeett AAssssuummppttiioonnss 
Differences among workers are not 
considered. 
Wages are determined in fully 
competitive labor markets (with flexible 
wages). 
Firms’ sole concern is profit 
maximization. In doing so, firms 
consider the marginal revenue product 
of labor (MRPN = P x MPN), comparing 
it to nominal wages.
TThhee FFiirrmm PPrrooffiitt MMaaxxiimmiizzeess 
Firm’s profit function: p = PY – wN – Pr(K – K0) 
Maximize profit: Assume A=1, Y=F(N,K) and construct expressions for change 
in profit relative to changes in employment (N) and capital (K) and set to zero. 
Solve. 
Dp = P(DY) – w DN = 0 
Dp = P(DY) – Pr DK = 0 
---------------------- 
DY/ DN = w/P 
DY/ DK = r 
The firm is profit- maximizing 
when these conditions are met. 
Marginal Product of Labor = Real Wage 
Marginal Product of Capital = Real Interest Rate
IImmpplliiccaattiioonnss 
S, I 
r 
I 
w/P 
N 
Nd 
Cet. Par., investment 
demand by firms rises as 
interest rates fall. The 
investment curve slopes 
downward. 
Cet. Par., labor demand by 
firms rises as real wages 
fall. Labor demand slopes 
downward.
LLaabboorr SSuuppppllyy 
 Workers have a plan for things they wish to buy. 
 Workers exchange their labor to buy the goods. 
 In a monetary economy, workers exchange their 
labor for money and use the money to buy the 
goods, but it is not the money they want. It is the 
goods. 
 That is, households trade “reals for reals”, labor 
for goods, to achieve the consumption they 
desire to maximize their utility.
HHoouusseehhoollddss OOppttiimmiizzee 
Households maximize utility by maximizing 
consumption. This requires income. 
So, within normal operating ranges, 
households supply labor at an increasing rate 
with increasing wage rates. 
Saving increases with rising interest rates. 
That is, DNs/ D(w/P) > 0 and DS/ Dy > 0 
or (w/P)­Þ Ns­ and (S)­Þ r­
MMiiccrroo AAnnaallyyssiiss ooff LLaabboorr SSuuppppllyy 
hours of leisure 
U3 
U2 
24 
W/P 
4 
3 
2 
15 16 18 
W/P 
4 
3 
2 
6 8 9 
hours of work 
Ns 
U1
IImmpplliiccaattiioonnss 
S, I 
r S 
w/P 
Ns 
N 
Cet. Par., saving by 
households increases as 
interest rates rise. The 
saving curve slopes 
upward. 
Cet. Par., labor supply by 
households rise as real 
wages rise. Labor supply 
slopes upward.
AAbbssttiinneennccee TThheeoorryy 
 William Nassau Senior argued that, all else equal, people 
would prefer to consume now rather than later. 
 But people are induced by interest rates to forego current 
consumption and save in anticipation of being able to 
consume more in the future. 
 Therefore the higher the interest rate, the more people will 
be inclined to forego current consumption (abstinence from 
consumption) in favor of the return which promises higher 
consumption in the future. 
 This means that the higher the interest rate, the higher the 
saving rate. 
 Saving makes the buying power available to firms and 
other borrowers who will spend it, so buying power is 
never lost. Ultimately all current income is spent in the 
current period.
FFaaccttoorr MMaarrkkeettss aarree RReessoollvveedd 
S, I 
r 
S*, I* 
r* 
I 
S 
S*, I*, r*, K* 
w/P 
Ns 
N* N 
(w/P)* 
Nd 
(w/P)*, N* 
Each market has 
supply and demand 
related to a single 
variable. The two 
factor markets can 
achieve stable 
equilibrium.
Effect of aann IInnccrreeaassee iinn LLaabboorr PPrroodduuccttiivviittyy 
w/p 
N N 1 
(w/p)1 
Nd 
1 
Ns 
Nd 
2 
N2 
(w/p)2 
1. Labor is more 
productive. 
2. Firms increase 
demand for 
labor. 
3. Employment 
increasese and 
wages are bid 
upward.
IInnccoommee TTaaxx CCuutt 
w/p 
Ns 
2 
N N 1 
(w/p)2 
Nd 
N2 
(w/p)1 
1. The same real 
wage is more 
attractive to 
workers. 
2. Labor supply 
increases. 
3. Employment 
increases and 
wages fall. 
4. Unemployment 
Rate falls. 
Ns 
1
PPrroodduuccttiioonn 
Capital (K) 
Land (L) 
Labor (N) 
Production 
AF(K,L,N) Output (Y) 
Factors of Production 
(Inputs)
PPrroodduuccttiioonn ((22)) 
A simplified form of the Production Function is 
Y = AF(K,N) 
where 
Y = real output per period of time 
A = total factor productivity 
K = capital stock 
N = labor (number of workers or labor hours used 
F = function relating the amount of output produced 
from the capital and labor used
PPrroodduuccttiioonn ((33)) 
 Y = AF(K,N) is a mathematical expression 
that computes how much output will be 
produced with a certain technology (A) 
from inputs K and N. 
 Example: Cobb-Douglas Production 
Function: 
Y = AKaN1-a , 0 < a < 1. 
Typical values are 
Y = AK0.3N0.7.
TThhee SShhaappee ooff PPrroodduuccttiioonn 
 The production function slopes upward from left 
to right--more capital stock results in more 
output. (DY/DK > 0) 
 The production function becomes flatter as 
capital increases--more capital results in more 
output, but at a diminishing rate. (You get less 
increase in output from adding the second unit of 
capital than you did from adding the first.) 
 This is referred to as diminishing marginal 
returns to capital.
PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn 
Y Y=F(N*,K) 
K 
K2 
Y3 
Y2 
The level of 
employment has already 
been established in 
the labor market. 
Y1 
K1 K3
PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn:: MMPPKK 
A The slope of the 
K 
Y 
Y=F(N*,K) 
K2 
Y3 
Y2 
Y1 
B 
K1 K3 
tangent at point A is 
the MPK at point A. 
The slope of the 
tangent at point B is 
the MPK at point B.
PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn:: MMPPNN 
N 
Y 
Y=F(N,K*) 
N2 
Y3 
Y2 
Y1 
B 
A 
N1 N3 
The slope of the 
tangent at point A is 
the MPN at point A. 
The slope of the 
tangent at point B is 
the MPN at point B.
CCaappiittaall CChhaannggee 
N 
Y 
Y=F(N,K2) 
Y2 
Y1 
N1 
Y=F(N,K1)
TTeecchhnnoollooggyy CChhaannggee 
Y=A2F(N,K*) 
N 
Y 
Y2 
Y1 
N1 
Y=A1F(N,K*)
CCllaassssiiccaall RReeaall SSeeccttoorr 
4 
N 
Y 
Y=F(N*,K*) 
N* 
Y* 
S, I 
r 
S*, I* 
r* 
I 
S 
S*, I*, r*, K* 
w/P 
Ns 
N* N 
(w/P)* 
Nd 
(w/P)*, N* 
Y* Y 
P 
1 
2 
3 
LRAS
IInnccrreeaassee iinn LLaabboorr PPrroodduuccttiivviittyy 
w/P 
N 
Y 
P 
S 
I 
S,I 
r 
r* 
S*,I* 
Ns 
Nd 
2 
LRAS1 
Y=F(N,K) 
Nd 
1 
LRAS2 
+ 
+ 
+
DDeetteerrmmiinnaannttss ooff OOuuttppuutt && EEmmppllooyymmeenntt 
 Only real variables affect output and employment. 
Money is irrelevant. 
 Only supply/production factors affect output and 
employment. Demand factors are irrelevant. 
 Only changes in labor supply, labor productivity, 
capital formation, or improvements in production 
technology can increase output. 
 Note that taxes, to the extent that they affect the 
supply of labor or the cost of capital formation, 
can affect output. (How they affect demand is 
irrelevant.)
SSuuppppllyy--ssiiddee TTaaxx CCuutt 
w/P 
N 
Y 
S 
I 
S,I 
r 
r* 
S*,I* 
Ns 
1 
Ns 
2 
LRAS1 
Y=F(N,K) 
Nd 
LRAS2 
- 
+ 
+ 
P
SSaayy’’ss LLaaww 
 Jean Baptiste Say argued that widespread, 
prolonged over-production of goods was 
impossible. 
 This implies that prolonged, widespread 
unemployment is also impossible. 
 He argued that “supply creates its own 
demand.” The production process creates 
the incomes to buy the goods produced. 
 Recessions and depressions can’t 
happen?
WWaallrraass’’ LLaaww 
If there are n markets in the 
economy, and n-1 of them are in 
equilibrium, then the nth one must 
also be in equilibrium. 
Equivalently, it is impossible to have 
only on market in disequilibrium.
NNeeuuttrraalliittyy 
 We say that money is long-run neutral if the level 
of the money supply is irrelevant to the real-sector 
outcomes (output and employment) in the 
long-run. 
 We say that money is short-run neutral if the level 
of the money supply is irrelevant to the real-sector 
outcomes (output and employment) in the 
short-run. 
 Neutrality implies that we still need to consider 
the money supply to compute the real-sector 
equilibrium, but ultimately the money supply 
doesn’t change the real sector equilibrium.
DDiicchhoottoommyy 
We say a model is dichotomous, or that 
there is a dichotomy of money, if it is 
possible to solve a model for all the real 
sector variables without ever using the 
monetary sector equations. 
 That is, we can separate the model into 
real sector equations and monetary sector 
equations, and solve the two halves of the 
model independently. 
 The classical model is dichotomous.

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  • 1. CCllaassssiiccaall MMaaccrrooeeccoonnoommiiccss II CChhaapptteerr 33 Professor Steve Cunningham Intermediate Macroeconomics ECON 219
  • 2. CCllaassssiiccaall RReevvoolluuttiioonn  Classical economics emerged as a revolution against an earlier theory known as mercantilism.  Two tenets of mercantilism: – Bullionism: a belief that the wealth and power of a nation were determined by its stock of precious metals, and – Active Gov’t Policy: a belief in the need for government coordination to direct the development of the capitalist system.
  • 3. BBuulllliioonniissmm  In practical terms, this lead countries to believe that the economic success of the country depended upon running a trade surplus—more exports than imports.  This results in a positive flow of payments to the country.  Because the payments would be in gold and silver, this leads to the country amassing a growing stock of “bullion”.  To achieve this, trade was carefully regulated, and the export of bullion prohibited.
  • 4. CCllaassssiiccaall TThheeoorryy  Emphasized the importance of real factors and productive capacity in determining the “wealth of nations”.  Emphasized the optimizing tendencies of free markets in the absence of state controls.  Classical analysis was real analysis—growth of an economy was the result of the growth and quality of the workforce, capital, and technological advances.  Money only facilitates exchange. The desire to trade “reals for reals” is what motivates transactions.
  • 5. CCllaassssiiccaall VViieeww ooff MMoonneeyy  Money is simply a convenience, a means of exchange.  Money has no intrinsic value. People hold money only for the sake of the goods that it can purchase.  Mercantilists had argued that on the short run an increase in the supply of money would increase demand and stimulate employment and production. Classical economists argued that increases in the supply of money ultimately have the effect of only causing inflation.
  • 6. MMaarrkkeettss  Mercantilists argued that the government needs to make sure that markets exist for all goods.  Classical economists argued that “consumption never needs encouragement”, that the free market mechanism would provide markets for any goods that were produced.  Classical economists argued that there will always be sufficient demand for whatever was produced.
  • 7. OOvveerrvviieeww ooff tthhee mmooddeell The story being told in this chapter is about the classical view of the real sector of the macroeconomy, and how it produces optimal, stable outcomes (equilibria).
  • 8. LLaabboorr MMaarrkkeett w/p Ns N* N (w/p)* Nd
  • 9. CCaappiittaall MMaarrkkeett S, I r S*, I* r* Investment (I) is the change in the amount (stock) of capital. I S Saving = supply of funds Investment = demand for funds
  • 10. PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn Y Y=F(N,K*) Y* The level of N N* capital has already been established in the capital market.
  • 11. CCllaassssiiccaall RReeaall SSeeccttoorr 4 N Y Y=F(N*,K*) N* Y* S, I r S*, I* r* I S S*, I*, r*, K* w/P Ns N* N (w/P)* Nd (w/P)*, N* Y* Y P 1 2 3 LRAS
  • 12. LLaabboorr MMaarrkkeett AAssssuummppttiioonnss Differences among workers are not considered. Wages are determined in fully competitive labor markets (with flexible wages). Firms’ sole concern is profit maximization. In doing so, firms consider the marginal revenue product of labor (MRPN = P x MPN), comparing it to nominal wages.
  • 13. TThhee FFiirrmm PPrrooffiitt MMaaxxiimmiizzeess Firm’s profit function: p = PY – wN – Pr(K – K0) Maximize profit: Assume A=1, Y=F(N,K) and construct expressions for change in profit relative to changes in employment (N) and capital (K) and set to zero. Solve. Dp = P(DY) – w DN = 0 Dp = P(DY) – Pr DK = 0 ---------------------- DY/ DN = w/P DY/ DK = r The firm is profit- maximizing when these conditions are met. Marginal Product of Labor = Real Wage Marginal Product of Capital = Real Interest Rate
  • 14. IImmpplliiccaattiioonnss S, I r I w/P N Nd Cet. Par., investment demand by firms rises as interest rates fall. The investment curve slopes downward. Cet. Par., labor demand by firms rises as real wages fall. Labor demand slopes downward.
  • 15. LLaabboorr SSuuppppllyy  Workers have a plan for things they wish to buy.  Workers exchange their labor to buy the goods.  In a monetary economy, workers exchange their labor for money and use the money to buy the goods, but it is not the money they want. It is the goods.  That is, households trade “reals for reals”, labor for goods, to achieve the consumption they desire to maximize their utility.
  • 16. HHoouusseehhoollddss OOppttiimmiizzee Households maximize utility by maximizing consumption. This requires income. So, within normal operating ranges, households supply labor at an increasing rate with increasing wage rates. Saving increases with rising interest rates. That is, DNs/ D(w/P) > 0 and DS/ Dy > 0 or (w/P)­Þ Ns­ and (S)­Þ r­
  • 17. MMiiccrroo AAnnaallyyssiiss ooff LLaabboorr SSuuppppllyy hours of leisure U3 U2 24 W/P 4 3 2 15 16 18 W/P 4 3 2 6 8 9 hours of work Ns U1
  • 18. IImmpplliiccaattiioonnss S, I r S w/P Ns N Cet. Par., saving by households increases as interest rates rise. The saving curve slopes upward. Cet. Par., labor supply by households rise as real wages rise. Labor supply slopes upward.
  • 19. AAbbssttiinneennccee TThheeoorryy  William Nassau Senior argued that, all else equal, people would prefer to consume now rather than later.  But people are induced by interest rates to forego current consumption and save in anticipation of being able to consume more in the future.  Therefore the higher the interest rate, the more people will be inclined to forego current consumption (abstinence from consumption) in favor of the return which promises higher consumption in the future.  This means that the higher the interest rate, the higher the saving rate.  Saving makes the buying power available to firms and other borrowers who will spend it, so buying power is never lost. Ultimately all current income is spent in the current period.
  • 20. FFaaccttoorr MMaarrkkeettss aarree RReessoollvveedd S, I r S*, I* r* I S S*, I*, r*, K* w/P Ns N* N (w/P)* Nd (w/P)*, N* Each market has supply and demand related to a single variable. The two factor markets can achieve stable equilibrium.
  • 21. Effect of aann IInnccrreeaassee iinn LLaabboorr PPrroodduuccttiivviittyy w/p N N 1 (w/p)1 Nd 1 Ns Nd 2 N2 (w/p)2 1. Labor is more productive. 2. Firms increase demand for labor. 3. Employment increasese and wages are bid upward.
  • 22. IInnccoommee TTaaxx CCuutt w/p Ns 2 N N 1 (w/p)2 Nd N2 (w/p)1 1. The same real wage is more attractive to workers. 2. Labor supply increases. 3. Employment increases and wages fall. 4. Unemployment Rate falls. Ns 1
  • 23. PPrroodduuccttiioonn Capital (K) Land (L) Labor (N) Production AF(K,L,N) Output (Y) Factors of Production (Inputs)
  • 24. PPrroodduuccttiioonn ((22)) A simplified form of the Production Function is Y = AF(K,N) where Y = real output per period of time A = total factor productivity K = capital stock N = labor (number of workers or labor hours used F = function relating the amount of output produced from the capital and labor used
  • 25. PPrroodduuccttiioonn ((33))  Y = AF(K,N) is a mathematical expression that computes how much output will be produced with a certain technology (A) from inputs K and N.  Example: Cobb-Douglas Production Function: Y = AKaN1-a , 0 < a < 1. Typical values are Y = AK0.3N0.7.
  • 26. TThhee SShhaappee ooff PPrroodduuccttiioonn  The production function slopes upward from left to right--more capital stock results in more output. (DY/DK > 0)  The production function becomes flatter as capital increases--more capital results in more output, but at a diminishing rate. (You get less increase in output from adding the second unit of capital than you did from adding the first.)  This is referred to as diminishing marginal returns to capital.
  • 27. PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn Y Y=F(N*,K) K K2 Y3 Y2 The level of employment has already been established in the labor market. Y1 K1 K3
  • 28. PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn:: MMPPKK A The slope of the K Y Y=F(N*,K) K2 Y3 Y2 Y1 B K1 K3 tangent at point A is the MPK at point A. The slope of the tangent at point B is the MPK at point B.
  • 29. PPrroodduuccttiioonn FFuunnccttiioonn:: MMPPNN N Y Y=F(N,K*) N2 Y3 Y2 Y1 B A N1 N3 The slope of the tangent at point A is the MPN at point A. The slope of the tangent at point B is the MPN at point B.
  • 30. CCaappiittaall CChhaannggee N Y Y=F(N,K2) Y2 Y1 N1 Y=F(N,K1)
  • 32. CCllaassssiiccaall RReeaall SSeeccttoorr 4 N Y Y=F(N*,K*) N* Y* S, I r S*, I* r* I S S*, I*, r*, K* w/P Ns N* N (w/P)* Nd (w/P)*, N* Y* Y P 1 2 3 LRAS
  • 33. IInnccrreeaassee iinn LLaabboorr PPrroodduuccttiivviittyy w/P N Y P S I S,I r r* S*,I* Ns Nd 2 LRAS1 Y=F(N,K) Nd 1 LRAS2 + + +
  • 34. DDeetteerrmmiinnaannttss ooff OOuuttppuutt && EEmmppllooyymmeenntt  Only real variables affect output and employment. Money is irrelevant.  Only supply/production factors affect output and employment. Demand factors are irrelevant.  Only changes in labor supply, labor productivity, capital formation, or improvements in production technology can increase output.  Note that taxes, to the extent that they affect the supply of labor or the cost of capital formation, can affect output. (How they affect demand is irrelevant.)
  • 35. SSuuppppllyy--ssiiddee TTaaxx CCuutt w/P N Y S I S,I r r* S*,I* Ns 1 Ns 2 LRAS1 Y=F(N,K) Nd LRAS2 - + + P
  • 36. SSaayy’’ss LLaaww  Jean Baptiste Say argued that widespread, prolonged over-production of goods was impossible.  This implies that prolonged, widespread unemployment is also impossible.  He argued that “supply creates its own demand.” The production process creates the incomes to buy the goods produced.  Recessions and depressions can’t happen?
  • 37. WWaallrraass’’ LLaaww If there are n markets in the economy, and n-1 of them are in equilibrium, then the nth one must also be in equilibrium. Equivalently, it is impossible to have only on market in disequilibrium.
  • 38. NNeeuuttrraalliittyy  We say that money is long-run neutral if the level of the money supply is irrelevant to the real-sector outcomes (output and employment) in the long-run.  We say that money is short-run neutral if the level of the money supply is irrelevant to the real-sector outcomes (output and employment) in the short-run.  Neutrality implies that we still need to consider the money supply to compute the real-sector equilibrium, but ultimately the money supply doesn’t change the real sector equilibrium.
  • 39. DDiicchhoottoommyy We say a model is dichotomous, or that there is a dichotomy of money, if it is possible to solve a model for all the real sector variables without ever using the monetary sector equations.  That is, we can separate the model into real sector equations and monetary sector equations, and solve the two halves of the model independently.  The classical model is dichotomous.