- The document discusses macroeconomic stability and equilibrium using the IS-LM model.
- It explains that with one variable (output/Y), stability is achieved if the change in output (dy/dt) becomes smaller over time as equilibrium is approached.
- With two dynamic variables (output/Y and interest rate/r) in the IS-LM model, stability conditions can be analyzed using a 2x2 matrix where the determinant is positive and trace is negative. This ensures the system converges to equilibrium after a shock.
This document provides an overview of balance of payments accounts and open economic macroeconomics. It discusses that balance of payments is an accounting procedure that records surplus and deficit items related to a country's interactions with other countries. The main accounts included in balance of payments are the current account and capital account. The current account has three sub-accounts: the trade account, services account, and transfer payments account. The trade account records exports and imports of goods, while the services account records exports and imports of services such as shipping, professional services, and dividend/interest payments.
Through this slide I try hard to explain it in as simple as possible, so you guys easily understand what IL-SM curve is & its derivation graphically & mathematically, and I hope you guys no need to open you books after you go through with it.
This presentation provides an overview of the goods market equilibrium and money market equilibrium using the IS-LM model. It defines the equilibrium conditions for the goods market as savings equaling investment, and for the money market as money supply equaling money demand. It derives the downward sloping IS curve and upward sloping LM curve, and explains how their intersection shows the overall equilibrium in the goods and money markets. The document then discusses how fiscal and monetary policies can shift the IS and LM curves and discusses the 2001 US recession within this framework.
This document provides a summary of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. The lecture discusses business cycles and how they relate to changes in actual output levels and rates of change. It notes that a recession can be defined as successive quarters of declining growth rates, even if output levels are not falling. The lecture then addresses the problem of "stagflation" seen in some economies in the 1970s-1980s - when growth rates were falling yet inflation was high. This contradicted traditional Keynesian models, suggesting supply-side factors were involved. The lecture analyzes demand-supply diagrams and how demand-side policies cannot effectively address stagflation if caused by supply shocks. It questions policies adopted in a recent
The professor discusses the multiplier effect under flexible and fixed exchange rate systems.
Under flexible exchange rates, when money supply increases, the interest rate falls, leading to capital outflows and depreciation of the exchange rate. This shifts the IS curve right and makes the BP curve flatter, reaching a new equilibrium with higher output.
Under fixed exchange rates, a government spending increase shifts the IS curve right. Interest rates rise to clear the money market, creating a balance of payments surplus. Higher reserves shift the LM curve right until a new equilibrium is reached with higher output.
When money supply increases under fixed rates, interest rates initially fall, causing capital outflows that shift the LM curve back. This res
This document provides an overview and summary of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. It discusses the IS-LM model, which uses two equations to solve for two unknowns - national income (Y) and interest rate (r). It explains that the IS curve plots combinations of Y and r that satisfy goods market equilibrium in the Keynesian cross model. It then introduces the concept of the money market and how Keynes expanded the demand for money to include speculative demand, based on the interest rate, in addition to transaction demand based on national income. The lecture elaborates on conceptualizing the overall assets market in terms of demand and supply and focuses on elaborating the demand for money component, where Keynes' contribution lies
This document discusses the Keynesian macroeconomic model. It begins by deriving the Keynesian demand function from the IS-LM model. The demand function shows that as prices fall, output will rise, with a negative slope. Parameter restrictions like the liquidity preference (LR) can impact the effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policy and even make the demand curve perfectly inelastic. The document then notes that the classical model can be obtained as a special case if these parameter restrictions are applied. It outlines the classical model of the goods and money markets. Finally, it states that the discussion will now turn to deriving the Keynesian supply side model.
This document provides an overview and summary of key concepts from a lecture on the Keynesian model that allows for variable prices. It begins by recapping the previous lecture where the Keynesian supply function was developed based on a production function with labor as the single input. It then derives the positive slope of the aggregate supply curve based on the production function and labor demand equations. This shows that unlike earlier Keynesian models which assumed a horizontal supply curve, this model allows for upward sloping supply that is determined by technology and responsiveness of output to changes in employment. The document concludes by outlining the four equations that define the complete Keynesian model with variable prices: the IS-LM equations, production function, and labor
This document provides an overview of balance of payments accounts and open economic macroeconomics. It discusses that balance of payments is an accounting procedure that records surplus and deficit items related to a country's interactions with other countries. The main accounts included in balance of payments are the current account and capital account. The current account has three sub-accounts: the trade account, services account, and transfer payments account. The trade account records exports and imports of goods, while the services account records exports and imports of services such as shipping, professional services, and dividend/interest payments.
Through this slide I try hard to explain it in as simple as possible, so you guys easily understand what IL-SM curve is & its derivation graphically & mathematically, and I hope you guys no need to open you books after you go through with it.
This presentation provides an overview of the goods market equilibrium and money market equilibrium using the IS-LM model. It defines the equilibrium conditions for the goods market as savings equaling investment, and for the money market as money supply equaling money demand. It derives the downward sloping IS curve and upward sloping LM curve, and explains how their intersection shows the overall equilibrium in the goods and money markets. The document then discusses how fiscal and monetary policies can shift the IS and LM curves and discusses the 2001 US recession within this framework.
This document provides a summary of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. The lecture discusses business cycles and how they relate to changes in actual output levels and rates of change. It notes that a recession can be defined as successive quarters of declining growth rates, even if output levels are not falling. The lecture then addresses the problem of "stagflation" seen in some economies in the 1970s-1980s - when growth rates were falling yet inflation was high. This contradicted traditional Keynesian models, suggesting supply-side factors were involved. The lecture analyzes demand-supply diagrams and how demand-side policies cannot effectively address stagflation if caused by supply shocks. It questions policies adopted in a recent
The professor discusses the multiplier effect under flexible and fixed exchange rate systems.
Under flexible exchange rates, when money supply increases, the interest rate falls, leading to capital outflows and depreciation of the exchange rate. This shifts the IS curve right and makes the BP curve flatter, reaching a new equilibrium with higher output.
Under fixed exchange rates, a government spending increase shifts the IS curve right. Interest rates rise to clear the money market, creating a balance of payments surplus. Higher reserves shift the LM curve right until a new equilibrium is reached with higher output.
When money supply increases under fixed rates, interest rates initially fall, causing capital outflows that shift the LM curve back. This res
This document provides an overview and summary of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. It discusses the IS-LM model, which uses two equations to solve for two unknowns - national income (Y) and interest rate (r). It explains that the IS curve plots combinations of Y and r that satisfy goods market equilibrium in the Keynesian cross model. It then introduces the concept of the money market and how Keynes expanded the demand for money to include speculative demand, based on the interest rate, in addition to transaction demand based on national income. The lecture elaborates on conceptualizing the overall assets market in terms of demand and supply and focuses on elaborating the demand for money component, where Keynes' contribution lies
This document discusses the Keynesian macroeconomic model. It begins by deriving the Keynesian demand function from the IS-LM model. The demand function shows that as prices fall, output will rise, with a negative slope. Parameter restrictions like the liquidity preference (LR) can impact the effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policy and even make the demand curve perfectly inelastic. The document then notes that the classical model can be obtained as a special case if these parameter restrictions are applied. It outlines the classical model of the goods and money markets. Finally, it states that the discussion will now turn to deriving the Keynesian supply side model.
This document provides an overview and summary of key concepts from a lecture on the Keynesian model that allows for variable prices. It begins by recapping the previous lecture where the Keynesian supply function was developed based on a production function with labor as the single input. It then derives the positive slope of the aggregate supply curve based on the production function and labor demand equations. This shows that unlike earlier Keynesian models which assumed a horizontal supply curve, this model allows for upward sloping supply that is determined by technology and responsiveness of output to changes in employment. The document concludes by outlining the four equations that define the complete Keynesian model with variable prices: the IS-LM equations, production function, and labor
The document discusses the effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policies. It presents three cases where fiscal policy is most effective:
1) When the interest rate (Ir) is zero, the fiscal policy multiplier becomes 1/(1-c)(1-t), making fiscal policy more effective.
2) When the monetary policy keeps the interest rate fixed at zero, the model becomes recursive with the LM curve endogenously adjusting to maintain equilibrium.
3) When the LM curve is horizontal, representing a liquidity trap scenario where the interest rate is very low, the fiscal policy multiplier again equals 1/(1-c)(1-t), making it most effective.
The document also discusses that fiscal policy becomes less
This document provides an overview of the Keynesian cross model. It begins by stating that the Keynesian model assumes there is unused capacity in the short run, rendering the supply curve horizontal. This makes the model demand-determined, unlike classical models where supply determined output. The model considers only the goods market, ignoring money and labor markets. It presents the goods market equilibrium condition as Y=C+I, where Y is output, C is consumption, and I is investment. It then makes two assumptions: 1) Investment I is autonomous (does not depend on other variables) and 2) Consumption C follows a linear function C=C0 + cY, where C0 is autonomous consumption and c is the marginal
This document provides a summary of a lecture on the classical macroeconomic model. It begins by explaining the key components of macroeconomic models - the goods market, money market, and labor market. It then discusses the assumptions of the classical model, which describes the long-run economy with full employment. Specifically, it assumes no government, a closed economy with no trade, and that the private economy consists of consumption and investment. The lecture then sets up an equilibrium condition for the goods market using two identities: the output identity equating total output to consumer and investment goods output, and the income identity equating income to consumption and savings. It shows that equilibrium in the goods market occurs when savings equals investment.
This document provides an overview and summary of key concepts from a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy based on the classical model.
The classical model assumes full employment in the long run. It models the economy as having three sectors: the goods market, money market, and labor market. The demand side consists of the goods and money markets, while the supply side is the labor market.
Key identities and equilibrium conditions in the classical model are discussed, including: savings equals investment (S=I), the money market equilibrium of MV=PY, and the labor demand function derived from profit maximization of F(N)=W/P. Changes in the wage rate or price level could cause firms to hire more
1 Aggregate Demand 4. Explain the intuition behind the wea.docxoswald1horne84988
1 Aggregate Demand
4. Explain the intuition behind the wealth, interest rate, and exchange rate effects.
The intuition behind the real wealth effect is that when the price level decreases, it takes less
money to buy goods and services. The money you have is now worth more and you feel
wealthier. So, in response to a decrease in the price level, real GDP will increase. More
formally, this means that when households’ assets are worth more in terms of their
purchasing power, they are more likely to purchase more goods and services.
The opposite happens when the price level increases. If the price of everything increases, but
the number of dollars you have doesn’t, then you have to cut back on spending. Some
shorthand of this chain of events can help us wrap our heads around this:
PL↓→real wealth ↑→consumption increases→move right along AD curve
The intuition behind the interest rate effect is that when the price level decreases, you need
less money in your pocket to buy stuff. The less money you need to keep on hand to buy
stuff, the more money you are going to keep in a bank. Banks pay interest to try to lure
people to deposit their money in banks. So, if you are going to keep more money in the bank
anyway, banks don’t have to offer as much interest in order to convince you; that drives
interest rates down. As a result, businesses and households spend more money on investment
and “big ticket” items that are interest sensitive, like X, Y, and Z. So, once again, a decrease
in the price level will increase real GDP.
On the other hand, a higher price level will drive up interest rates. Remember how a higher
price level would make everyone’s dollars are worth less, and they cut back on consumption?
Well, what if they didn’t want to cut back on consumption. Instead, maybe they sell off some
other asset like a bond to try to get more money. The problem is, every other bondholder is
also trying to sell off their bonds, so there are no buyers! Anyone who wants to issue a new
bond is going to have to do something to try to attract buyers. The way to do that is to raise
the interest rate that is offered. All of that excess demand for money leads to an increase in
the interest rate.
Finally, the intuition behind the exchange rate effect is that a decrease in the price level in
country A makes its goods cheaper to country B, so country B buys more of country A’s
exports. When the price level in one country goes down, its goods are suddenly more
attractive to every other country. It’s like the whole country is on sale! Since that country’s
goods are suddenly cheaper, their exports go up.
2 Multipliers
4. Households in Iron Island save 10% of every additional dollar in income that they
receive. What will happen to aggregate demand Maggietopia if there is a $4 billion
increase in lump-sum taxes?
Note: Please answer this question on your own.
3 Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)
.
Khit Wong introduces himself and his background in financial astrology. He has written articles for publications like Traders World and Technical Analysis Stocks & Commodities, and published books on the topic. He created an app to provide daily forecasts based on astrological factors. Wong was also invited to write comments on foreign exchange movements for the website FX Street. While the main topic is Gann theory, Wong discusses how financial astrology can help identify implied rules that govern market movements over time, allowing investors to earn consistently without large resources. He uses examples from currency exchange rates and the Hong Kong stock market to illustrate how prices rise gradually according to these rules, not sharply immediately after news. Wong advocates studying Gann's theories to understand
This document discusses the concept of efficiency in economics. It begins by introducing indifference curves, which represent combinations of goods that provide the same level of satisfaction to an individual. Pareto efficiency is defined as an allocation where no individual can be made better off without making another individual worse off. The first fundamental theorem of welfare economics states that under perfect competition, the market will lead to a Pareto efficient allocation of resources. However, the conditions required for perfect competition are often not met in reality, and governments may need to intervene to address market failures or fairness/equity concerns.
this is breakout trading strategy to use. if you understand how the breakout works.you can gain up to 100pips 200pips.
.
if you understand market trending and break out. you can make money with forex.
.
Here is a potential excerpt from a research paper on this prompt:
My curiosity got the better of me as I approached the mysterious stone door in the Himalayas. As I knocked, I wondered what secrets might lie beyond. When no one answered, I cautiously took the key and turned it in the lock. A click signaled that it had opened, so I pushed on the door and peered inside. What greeted my eyes was unlike anything I had ever seen. Before me stretched a vast underground cavern, its walls glittering with gemstones of every color. In the center was a crystal clear lake that glowed with an otherworldly light.
But the most incredible sight was at the water's edge. Kne
- The document discusses the ISLMBP model under a flexible exchange rate system. It finds that there are three dependent variables - output (y), interest rate (r), and exchange rate (e).
- Under flexible exchange rates, the monetary policy multiplier becomes stronger while the fiscal policy multiplier becomes weaker compared to the ISLM model.
- An expansionary fiscal policy could depreciate the currency if the slope of the LM curve is less than the slope of the BP curve, meaning BP is steeper. This suggests capital movement sensitivity may be lower for India.
Requirements.docxRequirementsFont Times New RomanI NEED .docxheunice
Requirements.docx
Requirements:
Font: Times New Roman
I NEED 7 APA Style reference and In-text citation
Spacing: SINGLE
All the number of words are included next to the questions.
__________________________________________________________________________________
BSBLDR511 - Develop and use emotional intelligence
Questions:
1. Explain emotional intelligence principles and strategies (100 words)
2. Describe the relationship between emotionally effective people and the attainment of business objectives (100 words)
3. Explain how to communicate with a diverse workforce which has varying cultural expressions of emotion (100 words)
4. List at least five (5) examples of emotional strengths and weaknesses. Explain all. (100 words)
5. Identify at least three (3) examples of emotional states you might identify in co-workers in the workplace, and outline the common cues for each. (100 words)
6. Why is it essential to consider varying cultural expressions of emotions when working and responding to emotional cues in a diverse workforce? (100 words)
7. There are a variety of opportunities you may provide in your workplace for others to express their thoughts and feelings. List two (2). ( 100 words)
8. Why is it important to assist others to understand the effect of their behavior and emotions on others in the workplace? ( 100 words)
9. What information will you need to consider to ensure you use the strengths of workgroup members to achieve workplace outcomes? (100 words)
Quiz 8 Notes
Scatterplots, Correlation and Regression
We are turning to our last quiz topic; regression. To get to regression, we need to understand several concepts first.
To start with, we will be working with two quantitative variables. The goal is to see if there is a relationship/association between the two variables. As one variable increases, what does the second variable do? If the second variable makes a consistent change then a relationship may exist. MAJOR POINT: saying a relationship exists does NOT mean there is Causation. The greatest abuse of statistical work is here, when a person runs a regression then says Variable A causes Variable B to change. You must have experimental results to establish causation.
Looking at the two variables that will be in a regression you need to know that each variable plays a specific role. One of the variables, X, will be the independent/explanatory variable and the other, Y, will be the dependent/ response variable. In a regression we are looking to see if changes in, Y; occur as X changes. It is very important that you establish at the beginning which of your variables will be X and which will be Y. Swapping the places for the two variables may not work. Let’s do an example.
In economics, we discuss the relationship of the quantity demand and the price of a good. Which one would be the X in a regression, and which would be, Y? The Law of Demand says, “as the price of a good increases, the quantity demanded decreases”. Which is allow.
- The document discusses introducing the government into the Keynesian cross model (case b).
- There are two main changes: 1) Government expenditure (G) is added to consumption (C) and investment (I) on the demand side. 2) Consumption is now a function of disposable income rather than total income, where disposable income equals total income minus taxes plus transfer payments.
- Taxes are modeled as either a lump sum tax (fixed amount) or a proportional tax (a percentage of income). The model uses a proportional tax.
Discover the Smart Money with the Order Block Indicator & S&D indicator.pdfStaceyJarred
As a retail trader, you and I can’t control the market. We are talking about over $6 trillion worth of transactions daily in the forex market; how can we control that?
It’s the big boys known as smart money who control the market. Smart money refers to central banks, market makers, and institutional investors.
When they place an order, they don’t place it for thousands of dollars; they place it for millions and billions of dollars. That’s when the market moves, creating a situation known as order blocks.
The idea of an order block strategy is to ride along with the smart money. As mentioned earlier, as retail traders, we don’t control the market, so how about we do what smart money is doing?
We must create order blocks for the order block trading strategy. Bearish order blocks form when there is a large sell order by smart money. Bullish order blocks appear when there is a large buy order.
You can locate these zones at the end of a strong trend. After that, you just have to draw a rectangle on the origin of the new trend.
By plotting order block zones, we can move along with the big boys and place buy and sell orders.
You might be thinking, “How will these zones help me?”
Central banks and other market movers don’t place their orders at once. They wait and place their orders in regular intervals creating “blocks.”
They don’t place their orders at once because it can create high volatility and disrupt the market. That’s when the price returns to certain levels, so smart money can place their orders again, which presents us with an entry point.
So, now you know what order blocks are, we can move into the best order block trading strategies.
The document provides details of a trading strategy developed by Amit Kumar Singh based on candlestick patterns, Fibonacci retracement levels, and indicators like RSI and ADX. The strategy involves two conditions for reversal candlestick patterns on trends near support/resistance or Fibonacci levels. Numerous currency pair charts across timeframes are analyzed to substantiate that reversals occur when the candlestick pattern conditions are met. The strategy aims to enter trades in the direction of reversals and take profits at predetermined Fibonacci or support/resistance levels.
The document provides an introduction to trading institutional order blocks using the Sonarlab SMC Indicator. It discusses key concepts like order blocks, market structure, liquidity, and imbalance/FVG. Order blocks represent areas where institutions enter the market algorithmically. The SMC Indicator identifies order blocks and analyzes market structure to find high probability trade entries. Understanding concepts like swing structure, internal structure, premium/discount pricing, and liquidity can help traders capitalize on institutional order flow.
The document provides an introduction to trading institutional order blocks using the Sonarlab SMC Indicator. It discusses key concepts like order blocks, market structure, liquidity, and imbalance/FVG. Order blocks represent areas where institutions enter the market algorithmically in increments. The SMC Indicator identifies these blocks and allows for accurate trade entries. Learning the strategy takes time and practice but will improve one's understanding of how markets operate.
- The lecture discusses non-linear finite element analysis and the challenges in solving non-linear problems. It provides an example of analyzing a simple non-linear problem with one element.
- Iterations are required at each increment to achieve convergence. KT values decrease with each iteration, making the problem more difficult to solve.
- Analyzing elastoplastic problems introduces additional challenges like calculating stress updates accurately when the material yields and satisfies consistency conditions. A series of research papers addressed algorithms for stress updates.
Testing for Multiple RegressionIn Week 9, you completed your Par.docxmehek4
Testing for Multiple Regression
In Week 9, you completed your Part 1 for this Assignment. For this week, you will complete Part 2 where you will create a research question that can be answered through multiple regression using dummy variables.
Part 2 To prepare for this Part 2 of your Assignment:
Review Warner’s Chapter 12 and Chapter 2 of the Wagner course text and the media program found in this week’s Learning Resources and consider the use of dummy variables.
Using the SPSS software, open the Afrobarometer dataset or the High School Longitudinal Study dataset (whichever you choose) found in this week’s Learning Resources. Consider the following:
Create a research question with metric variables and one variable that requires dummy coding. Estimate the model and report results. Note: You are expected to perform regression diagnostics and report that as well.
Once you perform your analysis, review Chapter 11 of the Wagner text to understand how to copy and paste your output into your Word document.
For this Part 2 Assignment:
Write a 2- to 3-page analysis of your multiple regression using dummy variables results for each research question. In your analysis, display the data for the output. Based on your results, provide an explanation of what the implications of social change might be.
Use proper APA format, citations, and referencing for your analysis, research question, and display of output.
HS_Long_Study_[student].sav
GSS2014_student_8210_(6).sav
Dummy Variables
Dummy Variables
Program Transcript
DR. MATT JONES: Hi everybody, this is Dr. Matt Jones from the Center for
Research Quality here to talk to you today about constructing dummy variables in
SPSS. The purpose behind our conversation today is to show you how to
construct these dummy variables to use as independent variables when you are
fitting a multiple regression model or constructing a multiple regression model,
And I have in front of us the Afro barometer data set. I've greatly simplified it for
the purpose of this demonstration. You'll see, there are obviously only three
variables in it, country in alphabetical order, country by region, and trust in
government index. Now I might want to construct a variable or use a variable,
country by region, that that might be relevant to my research question or might
be an important controlling variable that I need to use in my multiple regression
analysis. And it's very tempting just to throw it in as an independent variable as it
is here.
SPSS will allow me to do that. It will produce some output for that variable or
coefficient so forth and associated p values. But the statistics generated really
won't necessarily make any sense unless I'm creating a dummy variable or set of
dummy variables from this original variable. So if I go and click on values here,
you'll see that there are five 4 attributes or four groups to this variable country by
region, West Africa, East Africa, Southern ...
This document discusses national income accounting methods and measuring GDP using the income approach. It explains that the income method, also called factor cost valuation, measures the total income generated in an economy over a given time period by factoring in incomes to all factors of production, including labor, capital, land, and organization. GDP at factor cost is the income counterpart of GDP at market prices, and can be calculated by deducting indirect taxes from GDP and adding any subsidies provided by the government. The document provides examples to illustrate how subsidies and public sector surpluses are treated in national income accounting.
This document discusses macroeconomic concepts and national income accounting methods. It contains lecture slides and explanations from a professor on topics such as:
- Macroeconomic problems like business cycles and inflation
- Cyclical and long-run macroeconomic models
- Stabilization policy, Okun's Law, and the relationship between unemployment and output
- Measurement of aggregate variables in national income accounting, including GDP, GNP, personal and disposable income
- Components included and excluded from these aggregate variables based on national income accounting conventions
The professor provides examples and clarifies questions from students on these macroeconomic topics and accounting approaches. Key areas discussed are the treatment of depreciation, taxes, transfers, and social insurance
The document discusses the effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policies. It presents three cases where fiscal policy is most effective:
1) When the interest rate (Ir) is zero, the fiscal policy multiplier becomes 1/(1-c)(1-t), making fiscal policy more effective.
2) When the monetary policy keeps the interest rate fixed at zero, the model becomes recursive with the LM curve endogenously adjusting to maintain equilibrium.
3) When the LM curve is horizontal, representing a liquidity trap scenario where the interest rate is very low, the fiscal policy multiplier again equals 1/(1-c)(1-t), making it most effective.
The document also discusses that fiscal policy becomes less
This document provides an overview of the Keynesian cross model. It begins by stating that the Keynesian model assumes there is unused capacity in the short run, rendering the supply curve horizontal. This makes the model demand-determined, unlike classical models where supply determined output. The model considers only the goods market, ignoring money and labor markets. It presents the goods market equilibrium condition as Y=C+I, where Y is output, C is consumption, and I is investment. It then makes two assumptions: 1) Investment I is autonomous (does not depend on other variables) and 2) Consumption C follows a linear function C=C0 + cY, where C0 is autonomous consumption and c is the marginal
This document provides a summary of a lecture on the classical macroeconomic model. It begins by explaining the key components of macroeconomic models - the goods market, money market, and labor market. It then discusses the assumptions of the classical model, which describes the long-run economy with full employment. Specifically, it assumes no government, a closed economy with no trade, and that the private economy consists of consumption and investment. The lecture then sets up an equilibrium condition for the goods market using two identities: the output identity equating total output to consumer and investment goods output, and the income identity equating income to consumption and savings. It shows that equilibrium in the goods market occurs when savings equals investment.
This document provides an overview and summary of key concepts from a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy based on the classical model.
The classical model assumes full employment in the long run. It models the economy as having three sectors: the goods market, money market, and labor market. The demand side consists of the goods and money markets, while the supply side is the labor market.
Key identities and equilibrium conditions in the classical model are discussed, including: savings equals investment (S=I), the money market equilibrium of MV=PY, and the labor demand function derived from profit maximization of F(N)=W/P. Changes in the wage rate or price level could cause firms to hire more
1 Aggregate Demand 4. Explain the intuition behind the wea.docxoswald1horne84988
1 Aggregate Demand
4. Explain the intuition behind the wealth, interest rate, and exchange rate effects.
The intuition behind the real wealth effect is that when the price level decreases, it takes less
money to buy goods and services. The money you have is now worth more and you feel
wealthier. So, in response to a decrease in the price level, real GDP will increase. More
formally, this means that when households’ assets are worth more in terms of their
purchasing power, they are more likely to purchase more goods and services.
The opposite happens when the price level increases. If the price of everything increases, but
the number of dollars you have doesn’t, then you have to cut back on spending. Some
shorthand of this chain of events can help us wrap our heads around this:
PL↓→real wealth ↑→consumption increases→move right along AD curve
The intuition behind the interest rate effect is that when the price level decreases, you need
less money in your pocket to buy stuff. The less money you need to keep on hand to buy
stuff, the more money you are going to keep in a bank. Banks pay interest to try to lure
people to deposit their money in banks. So, if you are going to keep more money in the bank
anyway, banks don’t have to offer as much interest in order to convince you; that drives
interest rates down. As a result, businesses and households spend more money on investment
and “big ticket” items that are interest sensitive, like X, Y, and Z. So, once again, a decrease
in the price level will increase real GDP.
On the other hand, a higher price level will drive up interest rates. Remember how a higher
price level would make everyone’s dollars are worth less, and they cut back on consumption?
Well, what if they didn’t want to cut back on consumption. Instead, maybe they sell off some
other asset like a bond to try to get more money. The problem is, every other bondholder is
also trying to sell off their bonds, so there are no buyers! Anyone who wants to issue a new
bond is going to have to do something to try to attract buyers. The way to do that is to raise
the interest rate that is offered. All of that excess demand for money leads to an increase in
the interest rate.
Finally, the intuition behind the exchange rate effect is that a decrease in the price level in
country A makes its goods cheaper to country B, so country B buys more of country A’s
exports. When the price level in one country goes down, its goods are suddenly more
attractive to every other country. It’s like the whole country is on sale! Since that country’s
goods are suddenly cheaper, their exports go up.
2 Multipliers
4. Households in Iron Island save 10% of every additional dollar in income that they
receive. What will happen to aggregate demand Maggietopia if there is a $4 billion
increase in lump-sum taxes?
Note: Please answer this question on your own.
3 Short-run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)
.
Khit Wong introduces himself and his background in financial astrology. He has written articles for publications like Traders World and Technical Analysis Stocks & Commodities, and published books on the topic. He created an app to provide daily forecasts based on astrological factors. Wong was also invited to write comments on foreign exchange movements for the website FX Street. While the main topic is Gann theory, Wong discusses how financial astrology can help identify implied rules that govern market movements over time, allowing investors to earn consistently without large resources. He uses examples from currency exchange rates and the Hong Kong stock market to illustrate how prices rise gradually according to these rules, not sharply immediately after news. Wong advocates studying Gann's theories to understand
This document discusses the concept of efficiency in economics. It begins by introducing indifference curves, which represent combinations of goods that provide the same level of satisfaction to an individual. Pareto efficiency is defined as an allocation where no individual can be made better off without making another individual worse off. The first fundamental theorem of welfare economics states that under perfect competition, the market will lead to a Pareto efficient allocation of resources. However, the conditions required for perfect competition are often not met in reality, and governments may need to intervene to address market failures or fairness/equity concerns.
this is breakout trading strategy to use. if you understand how the breakout works.you can gain up to 100pips 200pips.
.
if you understand market trending and break out. you can make money with forex.
.
Here is a potential excerpt from a research paper on this prompt:
My curiosity got the better of me as I approached the mysterious stone door in the Himalayas. As I knocked, I wondered what secrets might lie beyond. When no one answered, I cautiously took the key and turned it in the lock. A click signaled that it had opened, so I pushed on the door and peered inside. What greeted my eyes was unlike anything I had ever seen. Before me stretched a vast underground cavern, its walls glittering with gemstones of every color. In the center was a crystal clear lake that glowed with an otherworldly light.
But the most incredible sight was at the water's edge. Kne
- The document discusses the ISLMBP model under a flexible exchange rate system. It finds that there are three dependent variables - output (y), interest rate (r), and exchange rate (e).
- Under flexible exchange rates, the monetary policy multiplier becomes stronger while the fiscal policy multiplier becomes weaker compared to the ISLM model.
- An expansionary fiscal policy could depreciate the currency if the slope of the LM curve is less than the slope of the BP curve, meaning BP is steeper. This suggests capital movement sensitivity may be lower for India.
Requirements.docxRequirementsFont Times New RomanI NEED .docxheunice
Requirements.docx
Requirements:
Font: Times New Roman
I NEED 7 APA Style reference and In-text citation
Spacing: SINGLE
All the number of words are included next to the questions.
__________________________________________________________________________________
BSBLDR511 - Develop and use emotional intelligence
Questions:
1. Explain emotional intelligence principles and strategies (100 words)
2. Describe the relationship between emotionally effective people and the attainment of business objectives (100 words)
3. Explain how to communicate with a diverse workforce which has varying cultural expressions of emotion (100 words)
4. List at least five (5) examples of emotional strengths and weaknesses. Explain all. (100 words)
5. Identify at least three (3) examples of emotional states you might identify in co-workers in the workplace, and outline the common cues for each. (100 words)
6. Why is it essential to consider varying cultural expressions of emotions when working and responding to emotional cues in a diverse workforce? (100 words)
7. There are a variety of opportunities you may provide in your workplace for others to express their thoughts and feelings. List two (2). ( 100 words)
8. Why is it important to assist others to understand the effect of their behavior and emotions on others in the workplace? ( 100 words)
9. What information will you need to consider to ensure you use the strengths of workgroup members to achieve workplace outcomes? (100 words)
Quiz 8 Notes
Scatterplots, Correlation and Regression
We are turning to our last quiz topic; regression. To get to regression, we need to understand several concepts first.
To start with, we will be working with two quantitative variables. The goal is to see if there is a relationship/association between the two variables. As one variable increases, what does the second variable do? If the second variable makes a consistent change then a relationship may exist. MAJOR POINT: saying a relationship exists does NOT mean there is Causation. The greatest abuse of statistical work is here, when a person runs a regression then says Variable A causes Variable B to change. You must have experimental results to establish causation.
Looking at the two variables that will be in a regression you need to know that each variable plays a specific role. One of the variables, X, will be the independent/explanatory variable and the other, Y, will be the dependent/ response variable. In a regression we are looking to see if changes in, Y; occur as X changes. It is very important that you establish at the beginning which of your variables will be X and which will be Y. Swapping the places for the two variables may not work. Let’s do an example.
In economics, we discuss the relationship of the quantity demand and the price of a good. Which one would be the X in a regression, and which would be, Y? The Law of Demand says, “as the price of a good increases, the quantity demanded decreases”. Which is allow.
- The document discusses introducing the government into the Keynesian cross model (case b).
- There are two main changes: 1) Government expenditure (G) is added to consumption (C) and investment (I) on the demand side. 2) Consumption is now a function of disposable income rather than total income, where disposable income equals total income minus taxes plus transfer payments.
- Taxes are modeled as either a lump sum tax (fixed amount) or a proportional tax (a percentage of income). The model uses a proportional tax.
Discover the Smart Money with the Order Block Indicator & S&D indicator.pdfStaceyJarred
As a retail trader, you and I can’t control the market. We are talking about over $6 trillion worth of transactions daily in the forex market; how can we control that?
It’s the big boys known as smart money who control the market. Smart money refers to central banks, market makers, and institutional investors.
When they place an order, they don’t place it for thousands of dollars; they place it for millions and billions of dollars. That’s when the market moves, creating a situation known as order blocks.
The idea of an order block strategy is to ride along with the smart money. As mentioned earlier, as retail traders, we don’t control the market, so how about we do what smart money is doing?
We must create order blocks for the order block trading strategy. Bearish order blocks form when there is a large sell order by smart money. Bullish order blocks appear when there is a large buy order.
You can locate these zones at the end of a strong trend. After that, you just have to draw a rectangle on the origin of the new trend.
By plotting order block zones, we can move along with the big boys and place buy and sell orders.
You might be thinking, “How will these zones help me?”
Central banks and other market movers don’t place their orders at once. They wait and place their orders in regular intervals creating “blocks.”
They don’t place their orders at once because it can create high volatility and disrupt the market. That’s when the price returns to certain levels, so smart money can place their orders again, which presents us with an entry point.
So, now you know what order blocks are, we can move into the best order block trading strategies.
The document provides details of a trading strategy developed by Amit Kumar Singh based on candlestick patterns, Fibonacci retracement levels, and indicators like RSI and ADX. The strategy involves two conditions for reversal candlestick patterns on trends near support/resistance or Fibonacci levels. Numerous currency pair charts across timeframes are analyzed to substantiate that reversals occur when the candlestick pattern conditions are met. The strategy aims to enter trades in the direction of reversals and take profits at predetermined Fibonacci or support/resistance levels.
The document provides an introduction to trading institutional order blocks using the Sonarlab SMC Indicator. It discusses key concepts like order blocks, market structure, liquidity, and imbalance/FVG. Order blocks represent areas where institutions enter the market algorithmically. The SMC Indicator identifies order blocks and analyzes market structure to find high probability trade entries. Understanding concepts like swing structure, internal structure, premium/discount pricing, and liquidity can help traders capitalize on institutional order flow.
The document provides an introduction to trading institutional order blocks using the Sonarlab SMC Indicator. It discusses key concepts like order blocks, market structure, liquidity, and imbalance/FVG. Order blocks represent areas where institutions enter the market algorithmically in increments. The SMC Indicator identifies these blocks and allows for accurate trade entries. Learning the strategy takes time and practice but will improve one's understanding of how markets operate.
- The lecture discusses non-linear finite element analysis and the challenges in solving non-linear problems. It provides an example of analyzing a simple non-linear problem with one element.
- Iterations are required at each increment to achieve convergence. KT values decrease with each iteration, making the problem more difficult to solve.
- Analyzing elastoplastic problems introduces additional challenges like calculating stress updates accurately when the material yields and satisfies consistency conditions. A series of research papers addressed algorithms for stress updates.
Testing for Multiple RegressionIn Week 9, you completed your Par.docxmehek4
Testing for Multiple Regression
In Week 9, you completed your Part 1 for this Assignment. For this week, you will complete Part 2 where you will create a research question that can be answered through multiple regression using dummy variables.
Part 2 To prepare for this Part 2 of your Assignment:
Review Warner’s Chapter 12 and Chapter 2 of the Wagner course text and the media program found in this week’s Learning Resources and consider the use of dummy variables.
Using the SPSS software, open the Afrobarometer dataset or the High School Longitudinal Study dataset (whichever you choose) found in this week’s Learning Resources. Consider the following:
Create a research question with metric variables and one variable that requires dummy coding. Estimate the model and report results. Note: You are expected to perform regression diagnostics and report that as well.
Once you perform your analysis, review Chapter 11 of the Wagner text to understand how to copy and paste your output into your Word document.
For this Part 2 Assignment:
Write a 2- to 3-page analysis of your multiple regression using dummy variables results for each research question. In your analysis, display the data for the output. Based on your results, provide an explanation of what the implications of social change might be.
Use proper APA format, citations, and referencing for your analysis, research question, and display of output.
HS_Long_Study_[student].sav
GSS2014_student_8210_(6).sav
Dummy Variables
Dummy Variables
Program Transcript
DR. MATT JONES: Hi everybody, this is Dr. Matt Jones from the Center for
Research Quality here to talk to you today about constructing dummy variables in
SPSS. The purpose behind our conversation today is to show you how to
construct these dummy variables to use as independent variables when you are
fitting a multiple regression model or constructing a multiple regression model,
And I have in front of us the Afro barometer data set. I've greatly simplified it for
the purpose of this demonstration. You'll see, there are obviously only three
variables in it, country in alphabetical order, country by region, and trust in
government index. Now I might want to construct a variable or use a variable,
country by region, that that might be relevant to my research question or might
be an important controlling variable that I need to use in my multiple regression
analysis. And it's very tempting just to throw it in as an independent variable as it
is here.
SPSS will allow me to do that. It will produce some output for that variable or
coefficient so forth and associated p values. But the statistics generated really
won't necessarily make any sense unless I'm creating a dummy variable or set of
dummy variables from this original variable. So if I go and click on values here,
you'll see that there are five 4 attributes or four groups to this variable country by
region, West Africa, East Africa, Southern ...
This document discusses national income accounting methods and measuring GDP using the income approach. It explains that the income method, also called factor cost valuation, measures the total income generated in an economy over a given time period by factoring in incomes to all factors of production, including labor, capital, land, and organization. GDP at factor cost is the income counterpart of GDP at market prices, and can be calculated by deducting indirect taxes from GDP and adding any subsidies provided by the government. The document provides examples to illustrate how subsidies and public sector surpluses are treated in national income accounting.
This document discusses macroeconomic concepts and national income accounting methods. It contains lecture slides and explanations from a professor on topics such as:
- Macroeconomic problems like business cycles and inflation
- Cyclical and long-run macroeconomic models
- Stabilization policy, Okun's Law, and the relationship between unemployment and output
- Measurement of aggregate variables in national income accounting, including GDP, GNP, personal and disposable income
- Components included and excluded from these aggregate variables based on national income accounting conventions
The professor provides examples and clarifies questions from students on these macroeconomic topics and accounting approaches. Key areas discussed are the treatment of depreciation, taxes, transfers, and social insurance
The document discusses different types of investment that contribute to a country's capital stock and macroeconomic growth. It explains that there are three main types of investment: business fixed investment, inventory investment, and residential investment. Business fixed investment includes physical capital like buildings, plants, and machinery. Inventory investment includes raw materials and finished goods held by companies. Residential investment includes new housing construction. The document also discusses models for how companies determine their desired capital stock and reach that level over time through gradual investment, such as the flexible accelerator model of investment.
The document is a transcript of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. It discusses three main topics:
1. The professor corrects a mistake from the previous class regarding the intercept of the savings function line. The correct intercept is minus C naught plus S*T f, not just minus C naught.
2. When government increases expenditure (dG) and finances it through increased taxes (dT) such that the budget surplus does not change, the multiplier effect on output (dY/dG) is equal to 1. This is known as the balanced budget multiplier.
3. The professor provides a diagrammatic explanation of how the budget surplus line would shift if government increases expenditure and taxes to keep the
I apologize, upon reviewing the transcript I do not see any clear question being asked that I can directly answer. The discussion covered several concepts related to GDP, GNP, national income accounting and differences between various measures. Please feel free to ask a more specific question if you would like me to clarify or expand on any part of the discussion.
This document provides a summary of a lecture on measuring real GDP and prices. The professor discusses how nominal GDP measured at current market prices can provide misleading information if prices change. To obtain a true measure of real output, it is necessary to use constant prices from a base year to calculate real GDP. The GDP deflator, which is nominal GDP divided by real GDP, provides a measure of overall price changes in the economy. The professor also discusses how consumer price index and wholesale price index are used to measure inflation in India.
This document discusses national income accounting methods and measuring GDP using the income approach. It explains that the income method, also called factor cost valuation, measures GDP by looking at the total income generated in an economy during a given time period. GDP at factor cost is the income counterpart of GDP at market prices. To calculate GDP at factor cost from GDP at market prices, you deduct indirect taxes and add any subsidies provided by the government. This gives the total income received by the factors of production, including labor, capital, land, and organizations.
This lecture discusses national income accounting methods for measuring macroeconomic activity. It introduces three key economic agents - households, firms, and the government - and how they interact in a circular flow. It also notes that the government, which provides public goods, was omitted from the previous discussion of the circular flow diagram.
The lecture then explains that there are three main approaches to national income accounting: the output method, income method, and expenditure method. The output method values the total output produced across all industries in a country. However, this poses challenges with double-counting intermediary goods that are used as inputs by other firms.
Finally, it distinguishes between GDP, which measures all output within a country's geographical boundaries
This document provides a summary of a lecture on macroeconomic theory and stabilization policy. The lecture begins by distinguishing between microeconomics, which deals with individual economic problems, and macroeconomics, which must aggregate individuals and consider more complex problems facing entire economies, such as inflation and unemployment.
The lecture then discusses different economic systems, including socialist systems where the government controls production and allocation of resources, capitalist systems where capital is privately owned, and mixed economies. Examples of different countries representing these systems are provided. The lecture focuses on macroeconomic models that examine the very long-run, long-run, and short-run/medium-run behavior of economies. It explains the assumptions and analytical frameworks used in these different time horiz
This document provides an overview of geotechnical engineering and soils. It discusses the origin of soils through weathering of rocks, including physical and chemical weathering processes. It describes different types of soils based on their mode of deposition, such as alluvial, lacustrine, marine, aeolian, and colluvial soils. It also discusses major soil types found in India like black cotton soils, marine soils, and desert soils; and their key engineering properties. The document provides useful background information on soil formation and classification for geotechnical engineering applications.
This document does not contain any meaningful information to summarize in 3 sentences or less. It consists of repeated symbols and characters without any context.
The document provides equations to determine the elastic curve of beams under different loading and boundary conditions. It gives the equations of the elastic curve in terms of the slope and deflection at points along the beam. The maximum deflection is calculated to be wL4/1823EI between supports A and B for a beam with a constant distributed load w and of length L with both ends fixed.
Fabular Frames and the Four Ratio ProblemMajid Iqbal
Digital, interactive art showing the struggle of a society in providing for its present population while also saving planetary resources for future generations. Spread across several frames, the art is actually the rendering of real and speculative data. The stereographic projections change shape in response to prompts and provocations. Visitors interact with the model through speculative statements about how to increase savings across communities, regions, ecosystems and environments. Their fabulations combined with random noise, i.e. factors beyond control, have a dramatic effect on the societal transition. Things get better. Things get worse. The aim is to give visitors a new grasp and feel of the ongoing struggles in democracies around the world.
Stunning art in the small multiples format brings out the spatiotemporal nature of societal transitions, against backdrop issues such as energy, housing, waste, farmland and forest. In each frame we see hopeful and frightful interplays between spending and saving. Problems emerge when one of the two parts of the existential anaglyph rapidly shrinks like Arctic ice, as factors cross thresholds. Ecological wealth and intergenerational equity areFour at stake. Not enough spending could mean economic stress, social unrest and political conflict. Not enough saving and there will be climate breakdown and ‘bankruptcy’. So where does speculative design start and the gambling and betting end? Behind each fabular frame is a four ratio problem. Each ratio reflects the level of sacrifice and self-restraint a society is willing to accept, against promises of prosperity and freedom. Some values seem to stabilise a frame while others cause collapse. Get the ratios right and we can have it all. Get them wrong and things get more desperate.
Dr. Alyce Su Cover Story - China's Investment Leadermsthrill
In World Expo 2010 Shanghai – the most visited Expo in the World History
https://www.britannica.com/event/Expo-Shanghai-2010
China’s official organizer of the Expo, CCPIT (China Council for the Promotion of International Trade https://en.ccpit.org/) has chosen Dr. Alyce Su as the Cover Person with Cover Story, in the Expo’s official magazine distributed throughout the Expo, showcasing China’s New Generation of Leaders to the World.
An accounting information system (AIS) refers to tools and systems designed for the collection and display of accounting information so accountants and executives can make informed decisions.
OJP data from firms like Vicinity Jobs have emerged as a complement to traditional sources of labour demand data, such as the Job Vacancy and Wages Survey (JVWS). Ibrahim Abuallail, PhD Candidate, University of Ottawa, presented research relating to bias in OJPs and a proposed approach to effectively adjust OJP data to complement existing official data (such as from the JVWS) and improve the measurement of labour demand.
TEST BANK Principles of cost accounting 17th edition edward j vanderbeck mari...Donc Test
TEST BANK Principles of cost accounting 17th edition edward j vanderbeck maria r mitchell.docx
TEST BANK Principles of cost accounting 17th edition edward j vanderbeck maria r mitchell.docx
TEST BANK Principles of cost accounting 17th edition edward j vanderbeck maria r mitchell.docx
University of North Carolina at Charlotte degree offer diploma Transcripttscdzuip
办理美国UNCC毕业证书制作北卡大学夏洛特分校假文凭定制Q微168899991做UNCC留信网教留服认证海牙认证改UNCC成绩单GPA做UNCC假学位证假文凭高仿毕业证GRE代考如何申请北卡罗莱纳大学夏洛特分校University of North Carolina at Charlotte degree offer diploma Transcript
13 Jun 24 ILC Retirement Income Summit - slides.pptxILC- UK
ILC's Retirement Income Summit was hosted by M&G and supported by Canada Life. The event brought together key policymakers, influencers and experts to help identify policy priorities for the next Government and ensure more of us have access to a decent income in retirement.
Contributors included:
Jo Blanden, Professor in Economics, University of Surrey
Clive Bolton, CEO, Life Insurance M&G Plc
Jim Boyd, CEO, Equity Release Council
Molly Broome, Economist, Resolution Foundation
Nida Broughton, Co-Director of Economic Policy, Behavioural Insights Team
Jonathan Cribb, Associate Director and Head of Retirement, Savings, and Ageing, Institute for Fiscal Studies
Joanna Elson CBE, Chief Executive Officer, Independent Age
Tom Evans, Managing Director of Retirement, Canada Life
Steve Groves, Chair, Key Retirement Group
Tish Hanifan, Founder and Joint Chair of the Society of Later life Advisers
Sue Lewis, ILC Trustee
Siobhan Lough, Senior Consultant, Hymans Robertson
Mick McAteer, Co-Director, The Financial Inclusion Centre
Stuart McDonald MBE, Head of Longevity and Democratic Insights, LCP
Anusha Mittal, Managing Director, Individual Life and Pensions, M&G Life
Shelley Morris, Senior Project Manager, Living Pension, Living Wage Foundation
Sarah O'Grady, Journalist
Will Sherlock, Head of External Relations, M&G Plc
Daniela Silcock, Head of Policy Research, Pensions Policy Institute
David Sinclair, Chief Executive, ILC
Jordi Skilbeck, Senior Policy Advisor, Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association
Rt Hon Sir Stephen Timms, former Chair, Work & Pensions Committee
Nigel Waterson, ILC Trustee
Jackie Wells, Strategy and Policy Consultant, ILC Strategic Advisory Board
KYC Compliance: A Cornerstone of Global Crypto Regulatory FrameworksAny kyc Account
This presentation explores the pivotal role of KYC compliance in shaping and enforcing global regulations within the dynamic landscape of cryptocurrencies. Dive into the intricate connection between KYC practices and the evolving legal frameworks governing the crypto industry.
Discover the Future of Dogecoin with Our Comprehensive Guidance36 Crypto
Learn in-depth about Dogecoin's trajectory and stay informed with 36crypto's essential and up-to-date information about the crypto space.
Our presentation delves into Dogecoin's potential future, exploring whether it's destined to skyrocket to the moon or face a downward spiral. In addition, it highlights invaluable insights. Don't miss out on this opportunity to enhance your crypto understanding!
https://36crypto.com/the-future-of-dogecoin-how-high-can-this-cryptocurrency-reach/
1. Macroeconomic Theory and Stabilization Policy
Prof. Dr. Surajit Sinha
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences
Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur
Lecture – 14
So, I have the assets market description and that is all description, it is not the crucial
assumption that we used. If you remember, this was that the rate of interest and prices of
assets are inversely, none are inversely related whether it is true in the economy.
Suppose, you go back to early days like even 10, 15 years 20 years back in Indian
economy interests were all much regulated. So, stock market price and interest rates were
never related because they were regulated interest rates, RBI was putting a restriction on
interest rates and banks did not have the freedom to increase or decrease them.
Now, we are entering a regime where interest rates are set free, so banks are deregulating
them, deregulating them means they are saying we put any restriction banks, what
interest rate is going to be, what you want to charge. So, in a system, now it is very funny
you probably have different banks have different interest rates. Earlier, when I was
growing up, any bank you go to particularly public sector banks were there, private
sector banks hardly we know there were no Citi bank, no standard chartered, no Hong
Kong bank, no deutsche bank, nothing.
I have never seen them, before I saw them, only a few years back, so any public sector
bank you go to government bank which were all nationalized in India in 1969 Allahabad
bank, Punjab national bank, state bank of India, you know Canara bank, Bank of Baroda.
Funny thing was any bank you go to it is a public sector bank, it is more or less the same
interest rate or if not exactly the same interest rate you will get.
So, why do different banks exist you wonder actually their origin was different their
origin was different. They were all in the private sector, they were nationalized and they
remained a separate entity, they were initially before nationalization, they were private
sector banks. So, it is debatable, but we need not go into that, we are into
macroeconomic theory, understanding if macroeconomic theory fails to explain
something, some of the assumptions that we are making are not realistic.
2. We will have to take note of that at the time of discussing that particular issue say about
Indian economy. Now, interest rates are regulated well LM function invalid, you cannot
have a LM function like that. At least, you got to connect it with the stock market, then
the model becomes more deficient and if you have interest rates regulated what would
happen is LM model. You can have excess supply, excess demand situations, you may
not have an equilibrium point. If you are regulating it, controlling it, it is not a free
variable.
Then, it cannot correct the imbalance and like demand supply function may not intersect,
the price may be at a place where demand is more or the supply is more because you
have fixed it. It does not change same thing will happen in LM model if interest rates are
regulated, they will get fixed, you have permanent disequilibrium, and it cannot correct
and go to the intersection of LM. So, these issues are there, but we need not worry about
it because we want to know the macroeconomic theory.
Now, in LM model, yesterday I was doing something one more theoretical exercise, I
will do before I go into those x multipliers etcetera is that, I was trying to talk about not
in this simultaneous equation system that you have. We have two equations and x and y
variables that have to be solved are output and interest rate, you know simultaneous
equation. It is no big deal, you know that, so the two equations will solve for the values
of rate of interest and output. Those were those will be the equilibrium values the
question is if you are in the disequilibrium zone like the zone 1, zone 2, zone 3, zone 4.
Then, you have various kinds of disequilibrium is goods market disequilibrium is one
type may be excess supply, but money market may be excess demand. In another case,
where the goods market has excess demand and money market has excess supply, so you
have a whole lot of combination of disequilibrium. So, with what we call a phase
diagram, I was trying to find out that given the assumption that whenever there is a
goods market disequilibrium output will adjust y.
Whenever there is a money market disequilibrium, the rate of interest will adjust to clear
the money market. If you make that assumption that rate of interest response to any
disequilibrium in the money market and output responds to any disequilibrium in the
goods market. Then we get those arrows horizontal arrows were showing y adjustments
vertical arrows were showing rate of interest adjustments.
3. Now, when two variables are adjusting suppose there is a disequilibrium in both the
markets, then that combination of the two will be the final impact on the economy. So, I
had an oscillating path assuming it reaches equilibrium over time alright, but the
economy really does not go through an oscillation like that. Economy usually goes
through a disequilibrium adjustment as I was trying to tell you on kind of a one line non
linear line may be passing through the equilibrium point. It goes and cashes that line and
comes down the ladder or goes up the ladder, it does not keep on oscillating.
It remains within one zone, after it gets hold of that equilibrium path and then goes up
and down to reach the point intersecting point. Now, algebraically we can also talk about
this stability these stability issues, so stability of the model we can also talk about
algebraically. Now, in microeconomics what we do as opposed to macroeconomics in
microeconomics, we say a company is maximizing profit goods, but we obtain
algebraically the first order conditions for an optimum the tangent will be zero slope. It is
a curve is reached an optimum the tangent there will be zero slope, so that tangent is
called in algebraic term.
This is first derivate say equal to 0, but whether it has reached the maximum or it has
reached a minimum, we put the second order condition the second order conditions for a
maximum goods. If you have reached a maximum, beyond that point the curve should be
coming down and for a minimum. If you have reached a minimum, then beyond that
point, the curve should be climbing up. So, in terms of second derivatives, you have
negative second derivate less than 0 for a maximum and for a minimum, you have
positive.
Now, this second order condition’s parallel issues, these are also called stability issues in
microeconomics. The parallel issues in macroeconomics are these stability conditions
that if you reach an equilibrium whether it is stable or not. You know if you are dislodged
from the equilibrium whether you can come back to it or not like I have a toy which has
a spring attached to it, I shoot it, but then I want it to become, I want that to return to me.
Then I call it equilibrium, if disequilibrium, I shoot it and it keeps on flying out like in
space if you throw something, it goes into some other orbit.
So, that is disequilibrium in differential equation systems if you have done mathematics
what you have is you have three kinds of paths. You can get from differential equations
4. when they talk about stability issues one is an oscillating path keeps on going up and
down around the equilibrium point never reaches. The oscillating path continuous, it is
same amplitude mathematics differential equation to talk about the equilibriums. One can
be an oscillating path, one can be a converging path that means the differences go down
and down and reaches equilibrium point.
One can be a diverging path, which is an exploding the cycles if you talk about kind of a
cycles or whatever path to equilibrium, one can be converging. One can be diverging and
one can be oscillating on and the diverging are ruled out for stability purposes only the
converging path. So, the question is as soon as you have in the LM model a
disequilibrium what will happen.
(Refer Slide Time: 09:59)
The Point is if there is a shock to the system, you are thrown out do you come back or
you reach a new equilibrium point there are the two issues. Suppose, the IS curve shifts
graphically I know the intersecting point is there that is the equilibrium point that is very
easy to say. It is like a first order condition, but do we reach that, so there is a path to
reach that, now suppose I say there is a shock to the system, say you are at a point A.
Now, at point A, you have disequilibrium, you have some output in the economy say A
demand y, but output is at some equilibrium value say y e.
Now, if the demand shifts for some reason, there is an economy which can say that you
have reached a point where you have some sort of a disequilibrium. So, whether you
5. return to the equilibrium point or not, so the companies would say suppose the
companies are saying this is the point we actually are producing, but the IS curve has the
demand in it. The demand is here not here, so what the companies would do companies
would reduce output. So, what you have here is that you require a movement in this
direction, alternatively I can say suppose the IS curve has shifted.
So, output is here, but demand has gone there or somewhere for overall equilibrium, you
need the intersecting point. So, does the economy travel from this point to this point
either way if the IS curve shifts because of increase in demand. I was talking of g
increases, then suppose the IS curve shifts to some point and you know graphically this
is the equilibrium point what has happened is the demand has shifted there that is why IS
has shifted. So, the companies are producing at y e, but the demand is somewhere in
between suppose not in between somewhere here.
So, the question is whether the companies would produce more number one and whether
you would reach here which requires a rate or interest adjustment, where the rate of
interest also climbs up to this point two adjustments are required. Then you reach the
equilibrium point if you do not if there is any shock the economy goes out to somewhere
here. Then here it is far away from the equilibrium point that is an unstable situation,
now this kind of stability issues are like second order conditions in macroeconomics.
Similar to microeconomics in simple terms, suppose you have one variable y forget
about rate of interest.
Now, suppose one variable y what will happen if demand curve shifts or the economy
was here which I was trying to explain earlier. So, it is more they are producing, then
what the demand is now the demand is here, but economy is producing here, it will
reduce supply or if IS shifts because of demand increases. Then output should increase to
a new equilibrium point here and the rate of interest also will increase. Now, in case of
one variable, if you look at one variable you are saying if there is a disequilibrium as
soon as y is not equal to d, there is a y dot.
There exists a y dot y would change there exists a y dot output would change companies
would start revising their production plans unintended inventory changes, which I was
talking about which would signal them change output level. So, they would change
output the question is if that y dot the change in output y dot is what d y over d t that is y
6. dot if output changes. If you find over time, it is becoming smaller and smaller that
means the companies are realizing that and making the extra output smaller and smaller
means what, they are reaching an equilibrium point.
They can see that market is getting happy saturated satisfied, but if companies have a
reaction where output changes are becoming larger and larger, they are getting the wrong
signal market cannot be an ever expanding market. If the output changes over time, if
you find becoming larger and larger you have some sort of a disequilibrium in this
situation why it is there we do not know, but the companies are responding by increasing
output bigger and bigger, but I know I have to go there. What happens in a car to start the
car, you start at a slow speed, then you go to the second gear, third gear, when the road is
smooth the traffic is not big go to fourth gear.
You travel as you see, you are approaching the destination, then what happens from the
steady speed, and you start lowering it to third gear. Then second gear, finally you reach
the destination, one gear the speed slows down mean you are reaching the destination,
but if some lunatic is there who wants to go from distance a to b cannot see b. Instead of
slowing it down or reaching a steady speed at some point, it keeps on increasing the
speed does not come down from the fourth gear. So, from 80 kilometer goes to 100
kilometers 120 kilometers, it will overshoot the equilibrium and go out.
If he does not see more, if there is some barrier he may just crash have an accident that is
unstable path in case of a stable path the change in output, of course will be there
because there is a shock to the system. Either demand has gone up or they were
producing more as like a, so they should come down, this equilibrium output they were
producing. So, they should lower it or if demand shifts like IS shift, then they would
increase output, but if the increase in output becomes through knowledge through
learning how market adjusts.
If you see firms are getting more confident in increasing, but slowing it down increase no
need to panic. We can see the destination how much we have to increase for the market
to remain satisfied that means the market has a stable path to an equilibrium, you
understand what I am saying. So, the y dot term will be there non zero, but the question
is whether d y dot is less than 0 or change in y dot becomes smaller and smaller or not,
7. you see what I am saying y dot will be non zero as soon as y is not equal to g this y dot
will be non zero not equal to 0.
Then, when y dot becomes 0, means d y dot has to become negative smaller and smaller
and smaller and smaller. Then finally y dot is 0, no change in output, further out change
in output is required because it has reached the equilibrium. So, y is at the new
equilibrium value matches the demand, no more requirement to change the output, so y
dot is 0, no more change in output, do you understand. So, if in case of one variable, I
can talk about the stability issue simply in terms of these y dot and d y dot variable is the
intuition, anybody has a problem, no problem.
The problem is in the module, you just do not have one variable which would respond or
react to this equilibrium, you have r also, now we will have two dynamic variables and
the equilibrium point r dot will also be 0. It has reached equilibrium, no more changes
required y dot is also 0, but at some point r dot or y dot both may be non zero like phase
1, phase 2, phase 3, phase 4 with those arrows. I was showing r is changing, y is
changing, so both can change in this case the algebra becomes a little bit more
complicated.
I do not want to give you an algebraic proof, but I want you to accept if you want
references where to get the proof of this kind of a thing. I can also keep something at
copy point, if any of you interested in the mathematics of it what happens. Then I need
A, I need to work with two dynamic variables y dot r dot, where I will get a matrix and
the stability conditions are the properties of that matrix.
So, I use some, I impose some conditions on that matrix, now just not y dot when you
have two variables. So, can I just explain that to you how that matrix is used a little bit,
whereas please do not ask me where is the theoretical proof. This is the stability
condition in case of two variables adjusting, I can show that to you, I have some
algebraic proof, I can keep that in copy point, I can give you references, but it will
unnecessarily take up time. In fact, I forgot to prove it, I have to open the book and prove
the theorem, and it is like a theorem.
So, I want to use the theorem in case of two variables, it is simple you have 2 by 2 matrix
you will have and in case of 2 by 2 matrix, what you have the determinant will be
positive. The trace will be negative that is all in case of one variable, it will be one
8. element, one component of the matrix which has to be negative d y dot d y has to be
negative. Essentially, in case of two variables, you will understood d y dot negative, why
did I say that the change in y dot becomes smaller and smaller. You are approaching
equilibrium converging path and in case of 2 by 2 matrix, 2 by 2 because of two
variables.
It will have 2 by 2 matrix, it will be the determinant of the matrix is positive the trace is
negative, what it will be there. So, what I would do, now I would use the IS LM model, I
am talking about the IS LM model. I have used the assumptions that we already have and
try to find out whether the IS LM model ensures that a matrix like that is has a
determinant positive and trace negative or not. Even if it is true, do not ask me why the
determinant positive and trace negative required, I require the mathematic the theorem to
be proved, please do not ask me. I can give you some reference to that where it is
available, it is not very difficult, you require differential equations to solve it.
So, let me go back to the hypothesis we have by decreasing y not r not are we creating a
case of recession. The change is not reducing y change in y dot can be positive or
negative depending upon where you are in that phase diagram. If you go back to
yesterday’s diagram in some zones y was required to come down to reach equilibrium in
some zones y was required to go up. So, the y dot can be negative or positive the
question is when you are reaching equilibrium the d y dot becomes smaller and smaller
or not. You are reaching equilibrium number, when you reach equilibrium y dot is 0, no
more change in y because y dot is d y d t change in y over time.
I am going to run to your place, so I start running and then when I am reaching the
destination. Essentially, I am slowing down that is what I am saying, otherwise I will
overshoot do you understand what i am saying, so I start at a large at higher speed. Then
I slow down now what is the assumption that I am making output would adjust to
inventory signals that firms get. Whenever there is a disequilibrium in the goods market
rate of interest would adjust God knows why do not ask me.
I will try to explain whenever there is a money market disequilibrium primarily banks
would respond to that that is a bank’s behavior rate of interest of interest is primarily the
banks domain and money supply demand for money someway in the monetary system.
So, may be Central Bank does it or whoever does it, so now we will write two equations
9. find out whether it makes sense or not y dot means change in output is in response to
disequilibrium in the goods market.
(Refer Slide Time: 24:11)
So, I can write an equation y dot is equal to a y minus d where a is the speed of
adjustment is like less than 0, why because if y is greater than d, here a positive number.
Here, what does it mean, excess supply y greater than d means more output produced
than demand, excess supply firms get unintended inventory changes is positive, they
cannot sell it, so what they would do they would reduce output. So, y dot will be
negative, so I make the coefficient a less than 0, when there is a positive number inside
the bracket with a negative coefficient outside y dot becomes a negative number less than
0 firms respond by lowering output level.
They reach the equilibrium again what will happen to y dot when y is equal to d what is
y dot 0, no more y changes are required it is not a question of recession this is not a
question of expansion. This is a question of correction in the market, when you are off
the equilibrium point, you are in a disequilibrium area whether you reach equilibrium or
not it is not a question of recession or expansion or anything like that. Similarly, I am
saying that the rate of interest will adjust to disequilibrium in the money market, so my
m say m not over p not is the supply of money. I have the supply in here supply of output
minus demand for money which you can put what is the demand for that.
10. I put an m d, so it is m d over p not which is the demand for money function again b is
less than 0, when supply is greater than demand, rate of interest falls when supply is
greater than demand rate of interest falls when banks have enough cash. For instance, the
demand for money is not so high, why would banks pay a high interest rate to you, one
explanation I am trying to give they have enough cash. They do not have to attract your
money through deposits etcetera by paying higher interest rate. So, that acts as an
incentive so rate of interest is like the price of money, so if the money is enough there
supply of money more rate of interest will be can come down to adjust.
So, here again r not is negative when you have b less than 0 and supply of money is
greater than demand for money. Now, the problem is you have two differential equations,
now I will set up the matrix all I do is very simple, I have to this y dot is equal to a here y
minus d what is d not minus c into 1 minus t y minus i function of r. This is the function
you have and you r not is equal to b is m not over p not and what is a demand for money
the demand for minus h y minus l r. This theorem is not very complicated, if you want
reference I can give it to you, I will keep some copy. If you are interested, write a mail to
me at copy point, I will keep a proof of this theorem, it is not very difficult at all.
So, now what I do, I totally differentiate this totally differentiate what you have is d y dot
is equal to A. Now, b y and here is a d y, so it will be 1 minus c into 1 minus t b y and d a
not is 0, I am assuming for stability purposes r and y to change to change only. I do not
want continuous shocks in the system, you will never reach equilibrium, so d a not is 0
no extra variables are changing, so you have minus, then you have minus I r d r, this is
the first equation you have.
Then, you have d dot which is equal to b here m not over p naught, supply of money is
constant is 0, so what you have here is minus h d y minus l r d r. Now, what you see here
in the right hand side, you have d y in both the equations d r in both the equations, the
simultaneous equation system is here you have a coefficient.
11. (Refer Slide Time: 29:35)
So, if you arrange them in matrix format, so in matrix format what it will be in matrix
format what it will be a into 1 minus c and then A into minus I r. In the second equation,
it will be minus b h and minus b l r and it will be multiplied by this rector d y d r. Now,
what I was trying to tell you about this example, here with one variable essential in case
of one variable what you have the second component is not there. The second line is not
there only this element is there, so what you get as a second order condition is d y dot
over d y is equal to this whether that is negative or not. As d y changes, d y dot becomes
smaller and smaller or not as y changes d y dot becomes smaller and smaller or not that
is the coefficient for one variable.
For one variable, what you have is d y dot over d y negative or not you can see A is a
negative term, in the bracket you have a positive term. So, it is negative, so model is
stable, but for two variable, I need that matrix, it can be easily shown mathematically.
For two variable, you need that matrix and what the stability conditions are twofold,
there are two stability conditions. The stability conditions two one determinant which we
often write as delta or something should be positive and b trace of the matrix should be
negative. Now, you check whether determinant is positive and trace negative or not what
is the determinant of that.
12. (Refer Slide Time: 32:18)
Matrix determinant is how much det or capital D capital d a b minus a b l r, second
bracket 1 minus c into 1 minus t. Then you have minus plus minus a b again h I r or
something like that, this is what you have as the determinant. This is positive, it is very
good news, look I have not assumed anything, only thing I have assumed that output
would adjust which I have been saying right from the beginning. When firms see unsold
stocks piling in the go down, they will lower output unintended inventory changes are
positive increasing that is the simple logic. Rate of interest is the one I added when
supply is more than demand, it is a simple demand and supply assumption rate of interest
would fall.
Rate of interest is like a price in the money market, it is like a price in the money market
like price of money. If anybody asks you what the price of money is, you can say it is
rate of interest because if you hold money and do not put it in the bank, you lose that
interest. So, that is why in that in negative inverse sense, it is price, it is like opportunity
cost of holding money. So, price of money is interest rate, you want to take a loan from
the bank money, so price of money is like interest rate. So, excess supply excess demand
we already know if there is a excess supply cannot sell their goods.
So, they will lower their price simple and if it is too much demand like the housing
sector i was talking about there is too much demand then what do the builders, do they
increase and increase the owners of the houses. The rent the price excess demand price
13. goes up, so that is the thing I am saying, no big deal nothing all common sense from
algebra it looks like my goodness, so much of things we are doing. It is not actually, it is
very simple, so this determinant is positive you is the trace negative trace is how much
the diagonal elements some of the diagonal elements.
So, it will be A 1 minus c into 1 minus p and then plus minus b l r is this negative it is
negative given the assumptions of the model. So, having done all this, I sit quietly here
saying we have a stable model in our hand to deal with the famous IS LM model when
IS LM the paper was written, probably these conditions were not obtained. They were
obtained later, I found them later and I just make it a complete thing here by saying this
is a stable model. Now, there are dynamic kind of in the static framework kind of a
dynamism is there in the background the shifts can taking place two variables changing.
We do not know in which direction economy would go well from the algebra, it is like a
pathological test that doctors ask you, it fever looks like you have a typhoid, but let us do
a blood test typhoid confirmed. This world looks like stable from the phase diagrams, but
there is a possibility that the oscillation can get bigger and bigger and diverge away that
is also possible. It did not does not say everything that is going to hit the center the
intersection, so algebraically it test that like a laboratory test and I say second order
conditions are satisfied. The model is stable it is a theoretical thing we do in economic
theory in models, we check the second order conditions.
As I was giving the example of optimum can be maximum or minimum, but if you want
to reach maximum and the rule of that you have to reach minimum, you check the
second order condition that is all. So, the model is stable, I give you one example you
just think about it what happens before I start the next part. Suppose, I make a small
change in the assumption, you will see how this model is vulnerable, also to a small
change. Suppose, I make a small change this model looks very nice, but suppose I make
investment a function of rate of interest and output, I can do that or income as company
see more output is more income is there.
More demand is there, companies can produce more, why not it is just not the cost of
borrowing money from the bank that determines how much investment, but investment
can depend upon how much income the economy has generated. I am going on a
recovery path more and more income is generated not recession going on a recovery
14. path. More and more output and income inspires the company to produce more because
the demand is going up. That means similarly in a recession as the output is falling, the
company gets a disincentive to invest when y falls because they go by news in the
market and demand the demand for goods are going down investment.
All this excess capacity and then then they cannot sell it this is true this is how
businessman know, they do not live like on a IIT campus and after teaching a course
goes back to the residential office does some work and goes back. It has no touch in
reality, businessman are the real economists and this is how they do they plan things, so
investments there is a valid reason for investment to be a function of output now and a
positive function.
So, what you have here is that I r is negative and I y is positive, now when you work on
the stability conditions here minus I r and this differentiation will have minus I r d r
minus I y d y. Another term will come, I will give you a homework, suppose you have
this I y greater than 0 as an extra thing, you will see the second order conditions are
violated immediately. So, this model is very vulnerable to even a small change which is
quite realistic like I y greater than 0, a small change and the model is very vulnerable to
that. Immediately, you will see the stability conditions are disturbed you do not know
whether they are theoretically speaking model is stable or not.
It may not be you can do that as an exercise either in class or when you go back
immediately. So, the model is restrictive, but is very popular this IS LM model and we
often use the IS LM model to talk about various things you understand what I am saying
in this condition. Here, when you work out you just add that minus I y d y because I is a
function of r and y and you get the matrix and then you get the stability conditions
determinant and trace you will see my goodness.
In real life, our investment is a function of y and in certain phases of the economy
investment is more a function of y say in the upswing, but then the problem is an IS LM
model like you know says it may or may not be stable in real life. That is also the issue
the theoretical model may say, it may become unstable, but in real life, these are very
difficult questions to ask. I do not think the economy is that unstable though
algebraically theoretically speaking the model can become unstable. You can check that
15. yourself, it is a simple arithmetic you have to do there, I have the formula everything
written there.
So, all you have to make i is a function of y again in addition to r and you will get a new
result you will get. We need to do some comparative static exercises which are
comparing two equilibrium points, when does it arrive? It arrives when these shocks are
there to the system say government expenditure has increased, tax rates have changed
because government decided to change tax rate RBI decided to pump in more money
supply increase. So, this kind of situations we have a disturbance, so in simple words
either the IS curve is disturbed or the LM curve is disturbed.
So, you require a new equilibrium the question is how far is an equilibrium, so you get in
two multipliers, so we are going into multipliers. So, let me do one by one, there are
quite a few and there is a new multiplier that will come the money, monetary policy
multiplier m changes which was not there. Earlier, there was no money market in
Keynesian cross model, now we have a money market. So, money supply can change
and the earlier multipliers the two important ones, one was g change, the other one was
tax rate change, two multipliers we did t g, now we will add m and a few things.
(Refer Slide Time: 43:50)
So, we would talk about these multipliers, we will talk about the multipliers, the first
multiplier I would focus upon will be d y d g, so it is government expenditure changes,
what will happen? This is the first multiplier, now algebraically speaking, we have y is
16. equal to a not plus c into 1 minus t y plus I r. Then m not over p not h y plus l r, these two
equations, so how do I get d y d g, I totally differentiate this, then substitutes for d r from
this equation then I d r is eliminated and then I can get d y d g.
So, you totally differentiate this, what you have is d y in a not, I am going to make one
variable change, g nothing else. So, I will have d g plus c into 1 minus t d y plus I r d r
from the second equation m not over p not is 0, it is a constant. So, I have 0 is equal to h
d y plus l r d r, now you can see from d r from this second equation, you can solve d r, d r
will be minus h d y over l r which you can substitute here for d r, d r. Then I can solve for
d y d g, it is d y d g, you can see from the second equation, you can get d r is equal to
minus h d y over l r to substitute here.
(Refer Slide Time: 46:17)
So, what you get if you do that then d y becomes d g plus c into 1 minus t d y plus I r
into here I r it will be minus h over l r d y I r into minus h over l r into d y. Then if you
arrange terms d y into i minus c plus h a whole bunch of terms will d y will come on left
hand side and d g there. So, this will give you this multiplier d y over d g, 1 over 1 minus
c into 1 minus t plus 1 minus c into 1 minus t plus I r h over l r this is the multiplier you
will get.
Now, this is the multiplier and what was the earlier multiplier, you did not have this
bunch of terms. It was 1 over 1 minus c into 1 minus t, but this bunch have come you can
see what other parameters investment functions I r liquidity preference curve or
17. speculative demand for money l r h was there. So, this is the multiplier, now you can see
one thing I r is negative a l r is negative sign, so this becomes positive into h. So,
essentially this is a plus term this term is a plus term this term is a plus term greater than
0. This is greater than 0, this one, so has the multiplier become stronger or weaker, my
goodness weaker plus term in the denominator the strength has fallen.
So, what you notice is the government expenditure multiplier is becoming weaker and
weaker. The more realistic we are making the macro model, in the first macro model
when government multiplier came as autonomous expenditure multiplier or government
expenditure multiplier in the Keynesian cross model without taxes. It was simple 1 over
1 minus c, when taxes came proportional tax system, it become 1 over 1 minus c into 1
minus t.
Now, I bring in the money market and the investment function two things in the k IS LM
model, it has even it has become even more weak. So, it is a huge problem, the
expenditure multiplier is becoming weaker and weaker, now let me talk about why is it
weaker. Then we will go over to various prospects of this multiplier at A, you understand
what is happening? Let us look over the diagram.
(Refer Slide Time: 49:50)
Now, this is the IS LM diagram rate of interest this is IS curve, this is LM curve, this is
the initial equilibrium point, say these are the initial equilibrium points y not r not. Now,
what you are saying government expenditures increased, so IS curve will be shifting to
18. the right. So, the IS curve has become this yellow line call that is 1 and call these initial
lines is not and LM naught. So, the economy has moved from one equilibrium point to
another equilibrium point, economy has moved from one equilibrium point to another
equilibrium point.
The output has increased to Y 1, but rate of interest has also increased to r 1, output has
increased to Y 1 and rate of interest has also increased to Y 1. You are saying the
multiplier has become weaker, you can see a bunch of terms here. Now, I can see one
thing if I r is 0, investment does not respond to r, this whole bunch of term would
disappear, but if I r is 0. Then I have the old multiplier 1 over 1 minus c into 1 minus t,
but I r 0 means what if I r is 0, it implies that the IS slope, slope of IS has also changed
which was how much, 1 minus c into 1 minus t over I r, slope of IS if you check.
So, if I r is 0, what happens to the slope IS becomes vertical IS curve becomes vertical
and vertical it shifts. So, the IS curve, when it vertically shifts, you have a multiplier
which is ignoring this part which entered through the money market etcetera. The IS LM
model and you had the old multiplier this is number 1, so the multiplier becomes
stronger. So, the thing is I r, this seems to be a very critical parameter, which makes
investment expenditure multiplier government expenditure multiplier weaker, what is the
weakness, the weakness is as follows, why it has become weaker as output increase.
As output increases slowly, this increases, you are off the money market LM curve, let us
assume the money market adjusts quickly rate of interest adjustments are quick. So, a
little bit of increase in output increases the transaction demand for money and when the
transaction demand for money increases demand for money increases. So, demand for
money is more than supply of money, so rate of interest would increase when demand is
more than supply price rises. So, rate of interest would increase, so the rate of interest
would increase and you climb up to the LM curve, again since the demand is more again
output increases a little bit companies are adjusting demand has gone up to there.
So, happens and the rate of interest again increase to clear the money market, so LM
equilibrium, but as rate of interest is going up, what is happening here as r increases. I
can put it here as r increase to clear the money market as r increases to clear the money
market private investment, I falls in the economy r and I are inversely related. So,
demand for goods are also falling from I r side, although there has been an initial
19. increase in demand for goods from g has pulled up. Demand for goods companies are
producing more because there is more demand, but there is a negative thing going on in
the economy.
Slowly, it starts happening that the rate of interest starts increasing which affects
according to our assumptions private investment. So, one component of demand starts
falling private investment, whereas the government component of expenditure goes up.
So, this step y, step y may be reaching the equilibrium to the new equilibrium through
clearance of the money market. You keep on clearing the money market via rate of
interest adjustments, when output in economy starts slowing increasing in response to
extra demand, but the extra demand from g that has come through this variable. It is now
countered by shrinkage in demand through falling I, why this falling I happens because
rate of interest increases, so I falls.
So, what you notice, therefore as g increases, government starts increasing more
expenditure, pumps in more money, infrastructure projects, roads, highways, bridges
etcetera, if rate of interest starts increasing, private investments starts shrinking. So, it is
like government is increasing its expenditure and trying to improve the economy at the
cost of private investment. So, there is a battle going on between you, government and
me for private investment, it is a tussle going on because of this negative impact, the
multiplier. The meaning of the multiplier is because of the negative impact on private
investment that the multiplier has become weaker.
The net effect of increase in output is becoming smaller, it is not that much [FL] output
income private investment expenditure shrinkages reductions are lowering it. This is
what is coming out as a message from the model and therefore, what you see here the
multiplier in the algebraic terms. It has become weaker which I told you in the beginning
when I drew, when I obtained the multiplier for you on board that this has become
weaker. It means that why it is weak, now this weakness will go as soon as investment is
not a function of interest rate, you can see that if I r is 0, r changes do not effect I.
You can see that from the algebra here if I r is 0, what happens to the multiplier, it
becomes the older multiplier. Then there is no negative impact on private investment,
only government expenditure I r is 0, essentially means it is vertical. So, the IS curve
would be vertical here and when IS increases you get a new level of output whatever that
20. increase in IS is this much if you go. It will be somewhere here, which is a same way of
saying if rate of interest does not change if r does not change d r is equal to 0. What
happens if d r is equal to 0, if d r is equal to 0, d y is equal to d y, d g is 1 over 1 minus c
into 1 minus t and here d r is equal to 0.
Essentially, you have a d y value which is solved from the first equation, d r is equal to 0,
if rate of interest does not change, you get the same result which I am trying to talk
about. Earlier, result d r is equal to 0 means the multiplier will not have these
components, it will be 1 over 1 minus c into 1 minus t which is essentially what I am
saying is if d r is equal to 0. If I use a colored chalk, then r does not change means I go
up from here to here, economy moves from here to here and you get a output level which
is y time 1. This output level y time 1, the d y this d y or delta y whatever you call that
this d y is essentially 1 minus c into 1 minus t into d g that means d y over d g is 1 over 1
minus c into 1 minus t.
This fellow here, this little bit of increase is our multiplier, this fellow here, it will be d y
over 1 I r h l r into d g smaller impact for output the larger impact on output would be
this. If rate of interest does not change, this is the same thing as I am saying that
investment does not respond to rate of interest change same thing. So, the disturbing
story here, therefore message coming out that with taxes you have created leakages in the
system, where increase in output and income cannot be enjoyed by the households. So,
much because government takes away tax revenue, now with the money market and
investment being sensitive to rate of interest changes.
We have created another very negative thing, which is realistic may be government any
time wants to increase output or expenditure by spending more g increase does not have
a good impact. It is dampened by private investment reduction the reason is rate of
interest would increase. So, if private investment does not reduce, it is alright it does not
fall this private investment reduction this private investment reduction that I r falls as g
increases I falls. This famous message is known as crowding out effect, crowding out
effect of expansionary government expenditure expansionary government expenditure
policy this crowding out effect is very important thing that the private investment is
crowded out.
21. So, what I am saying, suppose this room is full of students, now if I invite Kanpur
university students, there will be a crowding out effect as that those people come some of
IIT Kanpur students will have to leave the room because there is no space for them. So,
crowding out effect of inviting Kanpur university students to my macro course on IIT
Kanpur students as government is trying to push in into the economy and start doing
things the private investments gets a dampener it discouraged, it falls. This is very
important result, the crowding out effect which in parametric terms is essentially is I r.
If you make I r 0 somehow, either investment not respond to the interest rate or interest
rate does not change r is constant as I have done with the pink line here. Then no
crowding out effect even if I r is not 0, d r is 0, two ways you can do it, I r is 0 or d r is 0
if d r is 0, government restricts in interest rate. There would not be any crowding out
because interest rate is not changing, how investment respond or investment can is not
responsive. The rate of interest changes even if government allows rate of interest to be
free interest rate investment does not change. Therefore, you will have no leakages,
otherwise you have this thing coming out it is a very important risk, a little bit.
(Refer Slide Time: 01:04:38)
Now, I would like to talk about a few more things in this model, what would be the tax
rate multiplier, you tell me you people tell me what will be the tax rate multiplier d y d t,
d y d t what will it be the d y d t multiplier in this model. So, from the first equation IS
22. equation what you have is d y no d g terms 0 c into 1 minus t d y minus c y d t plus I r d r
from the second equation LM equation what you have is 0 is equal to h d y plus l r, d r.
Again, you get the d r value from you substitute it there what essentially you will have if
you club terms is that you will get d y over d t is equal to minus c y divided by 1 minus c
into 1 minus t plus I r h over l r I r h over l r. The problem you remains what is the value
of y and what is the value of t here there are two y values two t values, now you
remember we did substitution method for the Keynesian cross model tax multiplier.
This y will be y not initial y and this t will be the later t post change t, so this multiplier if
you write with the proper notations will be minus c into y not divided by 1 minus c into 1
minus t 1 1 I r l over l r this the multiplier. Now, if a tax rate cut is there, how would the
equilibrium diagram show can anybody have any idea if taxes are cut IS LM diagram,
how will it look like if taxes are cut what, will be the effect in IS LM diagram, slope
changes are there. So, which curve LM or IS, so it will become steeper or flatter taxes
are cut reduced cut means reduced look at the slope of the IS, the IS curve will become
steeper or flatter if taxes are cut if taxes are cut will IS curve become steeper or flatter.
(Refer Slide Time: 01:07:56)
So, the diagram will be, I can draw small diagram here, what you have here is the
following this is the IS, say IS not this is the LM naught and then if there is a tax cut,
then the IS curve will become flatter to IS 1. So, you reach a new equilibrium point
where higher output is there and you can have the higher output y not and the tax cut
23. here will be Y 1. In this case, also we can see that the rate of interest will increase from r
not to r 1, there will be some crowding out effect.
There will be some crowding out effect because rate of interest increases without
increase because the tax cut multiplier in the Keynesian cross model did not have I r h
over l r. So, you can see the multiplier has become weaker, both ways it has become
weaker, tax increased, tax cut. So, it was only c y naught over 1 minus c into 1 minus c 1,
now plus I r h over l r is there, so there is a some crowding out also here in case of a tax
cut policy. Now, before I go further, let me tell you because you are new students of
economics and you do not pay attention to economics just the way I do not pay attention
to all that is happening in physics, chemistry and mathematics. Who knows all these
engineering disciplines, we are very popular, we are very used to with these terms.
(Refer Slide Time: 01:09:40)
The discussions that I had so far come under something called fiscal policy of the
government. So, government’s fiscal policy is the finance ministry’s job and the finance
minister like Mr. Pranav Mukherjee will be doing while I have been busy with fiscal
policy finance ministry does that.
So, the fiscal policy I have talked about one, the g policy, the other one is the tax rate
policy, so two fiscal policy that I have talked about today which I did earlier also, but the
heading is called fiscal policy. Now, I have talked about d y, d g I have talked about d y,
d t, these are common two fiscal policy instruments g and t which are used for fiscal
24. policy purposes like suppose economy is going up earning a lot. So, it does not climb up
too quickly like a very over excited child who starts jumping on the bed does not realize
the ceiling is very low and hit the ceiling and has an injury, then hospitalized.
So, here business side of economy finance ministers have this job if economy is in a
recovery path if it is going up too quickly like a bubble etcetera, they were asking me in
the break. So, that there is no much bubble falls kind of a impression and the expectation
that the economy is doing too well. So, it can try to check that the movement through
what you can call contraction in fiscal policy the contraction in fiscal policy will be in
reduce g increases or increase taxes. So, people do not overspend they spend, but taxes
are also collected, so the multipliers are becoming weaker, you reduce the economy
counter cyclical policies.
So, fiscal policies can be used as counter cyclical policies as counter cyclical policy
counter trying to prevent it to run, so quickly countering the speed putting out barrier,
putting out hurdle. So, counter cyclical policy can be used with this fiscal policy, they
can all be used as a counter cyclical policy, so in case of a recovery what will be the case
g will reduced. So, the output shrinkage is there a little bit although the private sector
output is growing too quickly and taxes can be increased. So, IS can be made steeper and
restrict output increases, these are all counter cyclical policies that can be used that can
be used by the finance minister.
Now, in the recession, what counter cyclical policies finance minister should in a
recession today in India according to this kind of a fiscal issue. We are discussing what
should be the ideal counter policy prescription for the government based on this limited
knowledge that you have in recession reduced you need. Already, output is reducing, you
need expansion in government expenditure to boost demand and you require tax cuts. So,
the people spend more the counter cyclical policy in recession will be just the opposite
increase g reduce t in a boom time you require reduce g increase t.
So, the counter cyclical policy that one would require this has other consequences I am
not going to talk about that now. The common sense says in IS LM framework that the
counter cyclical policies that the finance minister should adopt in a current environment
is where there is a recession output is falling demand is falling is to increase g and lower
t. So, people spend more if you if the lower money taxes, the income I get from IIT when
25. I go home, I can spend more, I spend more means I buy goods and the company see
more demand is there for their goods.
So, they would produce more, there will be more income generated multiplier would
operate in a positive direction more employment etcetera, this kind of a counter cyclical
policy. So, fiscal policy is what the one I need to add which I will bring in today, but I
will conclude it tomorrow and that will be the last thing that is very important money
market and government can pump in more money, how it will pump in more money.
They have various ways one in a country like India, there is something called cash
reserve ratio, what is a cash reserve ratio CRR, I am going to talk about monetary policy.
Next, I am going to talk about monetary policy and I am going to talk about one
monetary policy there can be various kinds of monetary policies. Usually, there are two
fold, one is to effect m and another one is to effect r, I am going to talk about the
monetary policy m, how it can be increased if government wants to increase it. There is
something called CRR, the simplest example that I can give you something called CRR
something called CRR. This is called cash reserve ratio when banks accepts deposits
from us from the public they deposits go where they go into savings accounts, fixed
deposit accounts, current accounts, various accounts bank has.
Here, we open accounts and money goes there, these are called from banks point of view
commercial banks, I am talking about banks point of view. These are deposits public
money public deposits since it is public money government has made rules which started
in fact after 1930s that the central bank says you have to keep a cash reserve ratio with
us. What does it mean that these deposits, you do not have entire freedom to use them for
loan purposes for any other investment purposes. You do not have enough freedom a part
of that cash every week on Friday, you will have to tell us how much deposits you have.
Given the CRR percentage number 7 percent, 8 percent whatever 8 percent of that cash 7
percent of that cash. You will have to deposit with us literally cash from bank goes to
RBI office and in a locker, State Bank CRR, Bank of Baroda CRR, Canara Bank CRR,
Punjab National Bank CRR every Friday cash reserve ratio. That money stays there and
gets on adjusting on CRR and deposits, CRR is already there. Now, this CRR money is
essentially precautionary money in case banks mismanage the money that they collected
26. from the depositors by giving out too many loans where the money was not returned
called bad loan.
In formal language, banks call them nonperforming assets to banks loans are like assets
because of loans they make money. It is not important, so these assets are they have
become nonperforming assets means the loans have not been returned interest payments
they are called bad loans also. Now, money was given out of the deposits of you and me,
so tomorrow when we go and if the bank says, sorry it happens bank is closed or
something, so the central bank keeps CRR money, it can be used that cash to bail out the
banks. They start some monitoring, more serious sincere monitoring of the bank what the
bank is doing may be the bank manager is corrupt is a nephew of that or a friend.
So, these go on in India, I have once upon a time have heard that the largest defaulters,
defaulters means who did not took a loan did not return the money to banks are the big
companies. I felt extremely good, India is on the right path the largest defaulters are not
the small borrowers are the large borrowers who got the big companies who are the safer,
who make more money. That means that they have deliberately defaulted and
government even cannot do anything about the system. So, the corrupt government even
does not do anything about it, so these are that data available, there are not jokes, I am
saying is just not cooked up stories. I am telling you this is actual numbers I am talking
about the largest defaulters in Indian banks are the big companies.
Now, then you have the farmers issues etcetera, you know that they borrow money, they
eat up their capital their there is no monsoon. They cannot produce anything and the
harvest goes and they lose everything, so what I am trying to say is that the monetary
policy can operate through CRR where money supply can increase. Now, if RBI reduced
the CRR number, what will happen with banks more money, they can give out more
loans more money will be inside the economy again pumped CRR.
So, this is one simple way I am talking about one simple route through which money
supply can affect the economy. So, suppose money supply increases we can talk about a
simple monetary policy in this multiplier what will happen, now to d y d m. So, we can
get the algebra done, this is the last thing we will do today d y, d m a little bit of
monetary policy.
27. (Refer Slide Time: 01:21:00)
Now, I am going to talk about monetary policy and it is a very simple Monetary policy, it
can be much more complex, the monetary policy that I am going to talk about is d y d m,
how much it is. Now, you can work that out IS function is I r and this is m not over p not
is equal to h y plus l r, now if you do the algebra here, the first equation will give you d y
is equal to d n naught is 0.
Now, I am talking about monetary policy no g increases is c into 1 minus t d y plus I r d r
the second equation will have d m over p not because monetary policy money supply is
increasing d m or decreasing. Whatever it is increasing or decreasing, d m means it can
positive or negative, so d m over p not is equal to h d y plus l r d r. Now, you need to
substitute for d r, so you can get the d r number from here which is d m over p not minus
h d y over l r.
28. (Refer Slide Time: 01:22:38)
The second equation is d r is equal to d m over p not minus h d y divided by l r that is
what you have d r, d r is d m over p not minus h d y over l r. Now, substitute that there
therefore, d y in the IS function will be c into 1 minus t d Y 1 minus t d y plus I r over l r
into this bracketed term. This entire bracketed term d m over p naught minus h d y which
means what you have there is the d y term that will come minus h d y put I r, l r, h t y
would go. What you have this term c into one minus t plus I r h over l r is equal to now
you have d m p not here into I r over l r. So, you have I r over l r d m over p naught, so
what you have d y over d m in the numerator.
You have I r over l r and into p naught, p naught can come downstairs, you have p naught
into 1 minus c into 1 minus t plus I r h over l r I r l r over p naught into 1 minus c into 1
minus c plus I r h over l r this one. Now, is can you sign is the positive multiplier or a
negative multiplier denominator is positive numerator is positive, so it is a positive
multiplier.
29. (Refer Slide Time: 01:25:28)
So, in very simple words what you have is this diagram that we required very simple
words what you have is you have an IS LM diagram y r you have IS curve IS naught you
have LM curve. Now, money supply is increased in the economy, so it will shift parallel
to the right, so you have LM 1, it will shift parallel to the right LM 1 and what you have
is output in the economy will increase y naught to Y 1. The rate of interest will also be
the rate of interest will fall rate of interest will fall, now the question is this I r over l r
into p not whether term this term is greater than 1 or not. If it is a greater than 1, then this
multiplier is stronger than the d y d g because d y d g you had only this bracket term,
third bracket.
Now, the terms are I r over l r into p naught, if this is strong, you can say that if I r over l
r into p not if this term is greater than 1, then you can conclude that d y d m greater than
d y or greater that d y d g this is easily this is important conclusion. The monetary policy
can be more effective than government expenditure policy monetary policy can be more
effective than government expenditure policy provided I r over l r p naught. This
parameter value is greater than 1 if it is equal to 1 too much it has the same if it is less
than 1. Then the monetary policy is less effective than government policy, so you can put
a few more properties here equal to or less than 1.
You can put it this way will be equal to less than d y d g I can do that, nobody stops me, I
can compare the expansion in fiscal, in fiscal with expansion in monetary policy
30. expansionary means increasing contractionary means decreasing fiscal policy. So, I can
compare them an expansion in fiscal policy course for India to do that to judge that I
need the parameter values whether to use g or whether to use m because one good thing
is happening here. We can see with m increased rate of interest falls no crowding out, so
there is no negative impact on government on private investment, but if you have
expansionary government expenditure policy where IS shifts upwards rightwards.
Rate of interest will go up because LM is upward sloping, so rate of interest will go up
and rate of interest going up means private investment is crowded out bad news, but with
expansionary monetary policy there is no crowding out. In fact, it helps private
investment more because rate of interest falls and more private investment activities. So,
the transmission channel of output increased from money supply increases, essentially
this because if money supply increases banks can lower the interest rates and give more
loans because bank has more cash more loans for companies. So, companies can come
can take more loans at the lower interest rate and invest more, more output is produced
opposite of crowding out.
This is how monetary policy is working why m increase increasing output is; you have to
ask this question diagrammatically m increase means LM shifting new equilibrium
output increase. What is the intuition because m increase means banks have more cash
government r b i has lowered the CRR, so banks wants to do something with the cash, so
they lower the interest rate and tell companies. Now, we are going to give you more
loans companies are attracted by lower interest costs, they take more loans more private
investments so more output.
So, some people may argue that expansionary monetary policy is perhaps the better
counter cyclical policy when you are coming out of recession than expansionary
government expenditure policy. So, you can tell the finance minister humbly you can tell
him he knows so much which one will be better. Now, you know this more government
expenditure policy or expansionary monetary policy economy is in recession which one
will be better because you have some model here which you can use.
I am doing this you learn some practical things; some of you will enjoy this at some
point most of you will forget. Now, you have other courses to do your department
courses your major subject’s civil engineering, chemical engineering, metrology, so
31. many things, but this has a practical side. What I am trying to say is that is that for today
enough for today, but I will continue this tomorrow.