Title: The World Economy
1The World Economy
- Gavin Cameron
- Oxford University
- April 2005
2plan of the session
- 16.30 Short-run Macroeconomics
- 17.30 Discussion in groups of short-run issues
- 18.00 Long-run Macroeconomics
- 19.00 Discussion in groups of long-run issues
- 19.20 Presentations
- 19.50 Summary
3short-run macroeconomics
- What determines aggregate demand?
- The unemployment-inflation trade-off
- Monetary Policy
- Fiscal Policy
- The Open Economy
- Global Macroeconomic Imbalances
4what determines aggregate demand?
- Aggregate demand comprises five components
- consumption
- investment
- primary government spending (i.e. net of
transfers) - net exports (i.e. exports minus imports)
- inventories (i.e. changes in stocks held by
businesses) - The level of income (both current and expected)
is a major determinant of consumption, government
spending and net exports. - The real exchange rate is a major influence on
net exports. - The interest rate is also an influence on
consumption and investment (with the latter being
also dependent upon output expectations and
animal spirits).
5the circular flow of income
6recent performance
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
7the Phillips Curve
- In 1958, A.W. Phillips of the LSE found relation
an empirical relationship between unemployment
and inflation in the UK the Phillips curve. - Original interpretation
- There is a permanent trade-off between inflation
and unemployment. - Problem
- After sustained inflation, the empirical
relationship broke down. - New interpretation
- There is a trade-off between unemployment and
unexpected inflation. - But in the long-run, there is no such trade-off.
8the unemployment-inflation tradeoff
- In the short-run, there is no reason to expect
actual output to equal its equilibrium rate. - Here are four reasons why output can deviate from
its equilibrium rate - sticky-wages
- worker-misperception
- imperfect information
- sticky-prices.
- All of these lead to a surprise-supply
function, where - output equilibrium output b(unexpected
inflation) - Therefore output deviates from its equilibrium
level by the extent to which inflation deviates
from its expected level.
9inflationary pressure
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
10monetary policy
- Monetary policy can be implemented through either
changes in the money supply or interest rate, or
through direct controls on lending. - Changes in the interest rate will affect the
interest-sensitive components of aggregate
demand. The exact size and timing of these
effects will differ from country to country. - If economy is at equilibrium output, interest
rate cuts will lead to an inflationary boom,
which eventually will lead only to higher prices. - If economy is below equilibrium output, interest
rate cuts will tend to raise output (as well as
prices) and shift the economy back towards
equilibrium.
11Taylor rules and inflation targeting
- After the inflationary difficulties of the 1970s
and 1980s, many countries moved towards having
independent central banks and the use of
inflation targets. - This form of constrained discretion seems to
work because it takes control of monetary policy
out of the hands of politicians! - In practice, most monetary authorities operate
something called a Taylor rule. That is, they
raise the real interest rate (the nominal rate
minus expected inflation) whenever inflation is
above target or when capacity constraints appear
in the economy (since these may predict future
inflation).
12recent loose monetary policy
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
13even on a real basis
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
14fiscal policy
- Changes in the governments fiscal stance (that
is, the difference between government spending
and taxation) will change the level of aggregate
demand. - If economy is at equilibrium output, increases in
spending (or tax cuts) will lead to an
inflationary boom, which eventually will lead
only to higher prices. - If economy is below equilibrium output, increases
in spending (or tax cuts) will tend to raise
output (as well as prices) and shift the economy
back to equilibrium.
15the limits to fiscal policy
- But there are problems with the use of fiscal
policy - Measurement of output where are we? where are
we going? how fast? will we know when we get
there? - Lags in the fiscal policy process implementation
(recognition administrative lags) and
operational - What kind of fiscal policy? Spending (on what?)
or tax cuts (for whom?) - Will spending crowd-out other spending, either
directly or indirectly? - Will consumers attempt to offset the actions of
the government (Ricardian Equivalence) if they
recognise that higher current deficits imply
higher future taxes?
16fiscal rules
- Even now that most monetary policy is conducted
by independent monetary authorities, there is
still the problem that politicians may pursue
fiscal policies that are incompatible with stable
inflation. - Consequently, some countries have adopted fiscal
rules. The two most famous are - The Stability and Growth Pact (revised!)
countries should aim to run no more than a 1
deficit over the business cycle cannot borrow
more than 3 of GDP (cf. France and Germany!) in
any one year government debt should be kept
below 60 of GDP. - Gordon Browns Golden Rule over the business
cycle borrowing should equal net government
investment government debt should be kept below
40 of GDP.
17breaking the rules?
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
18the open economy
- The Balance Of Payments is a record of all the
transactions between residents of one country and
another. - The Current Account comprises the visibles
account (the balance of trade in goods) and the
invisibles account (trade in services plus net
external investment income plus net transfer
payments). - The Capital Account comprises international
transactions in assets (physical and financial). - Official Financing comprises intervention in the
foreign exchange market. - Current Account Capital Account Official
Financing ? 0 - A Current Account deficit must be financed by a
Capital Account surplus.
19the exchange rate
- When the exchange rate floats freely, what
determines its level? - Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
- Baskets of goods in the USA and euro area should
cost the same - PPP is the cost of the euro area basket divided
by the cost of the US basket (/) - Interest Parity
- Expected returns should be equal on foreign and
domestic assets. - The interest rate differential between two
countries is equal to the expected rate of
depreciation. - The Terms of Trade
- Relative supply and demand for tradeables.
20the dollar weakens
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
21global imbalances
- Euroland growth has been slow since 2000
- US recovery from recession has been good,
although employment has not recovered as much as
output - The UK has grown steadily
- Japan continues to grow slowly China and India
continue to grow rapidly.
22not much sign of a European recovery
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
23cheap money is on the way out
- World monetary policy has been extraordinarily
relaxed since 2000, with interest rates of around
0 in Japan, 1 in the USA and 2 in Euroland. - But short-term interest rates are now rising in
the UK, USA, Australia and Canada, with the
markets predicting further monetary tightening
over the next two years. - Meanwhile, in Japan and Europe, limited signs of
economic recovery have not yet led to any
decisive moves in monetary policy.
24house prices will decline
- A recent paper by the BIS argues that a 1
percentage point rise in the short-term real
interest rate reduces prices over a five-year
period by more than 1.25 in German-style
markets, 1.8 in US-style markets and 2.6 in
UK-style markets. However, this likely
understates the risks in those countries that are
currently overvalued, for two reasons - Expectations In overvalued markets, there is the
possibility of a major change in perceptions of
future house price appreciation and a consequent
correction. - Credit Conditions In US- and UK-style markets,
there are strong links between bank credit
expansion and house prices, so there is a risk
that falling house prices and shrinking bank
credit will be mutually reinforcing.
25a worst case scenario
- What might a house price crash mean for real
consumption in the UK and the USA? - UK scenario 30 real fall in house prices over
two years with a 100 basis point monetary
tightening might knock ½-¾ of a percentage point
off growth during that period. - US scenario 10 real fall in house prices over
two years with a 200 basis point monetary
tightening might achieve about the same in the
USA. - However, there is scope for monetary easing in
both countries, but central banks should beware
creating expectations that they are underwriting
asset prices indefinitely.
26a Japan style meltdown?
- One possibility is the risk that the bursting of
housing bubbles will lead to a repeat of the
economic meltdown experienced by Japan in the
1990s. - Fortunately for the slow-growing euro area
economies, given their general lack of housing
bubbles, the ECB should not face too many
problems. - US-style markets are rather more risky since the
housing bubble has allowed households to become
highly geared. When house prices fall, it is
likely that households will want to rebuild their
balance sheets and that real consumption will be
affected. However, mortgage-backed securities
(MBS) tend to spread the risk of house price
falls throughout the financial system, although
in the USA there are question marks about the
roles played by the two federal institutions
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. - The most exposed markets are those, like the UK,
where households typically hold a great deal of
floating rate debt. The joint consequences of
rising mortgage payments and falling house prices
could be severe, especially if the financial
system itself comes under stress due to the link
between falling house prices and shrinking bank
credit.
27global policy
- According to the IMF, between 2001q3 and 2003q4,
US real domestic demand rose 8.9, UK 6.9, Japan
2.7, the euro area 2.0, Germany -0.7. GDP has
been rising rapidly recently in the US (over 5
at an annualized rate) - this is being driven by
higher domestic demand and is being reflected in
higher profits but not higher wages. - US needs a lower real exchange rate, higher real
interest rates, and a lower government deficit -
this would help to correct the trade deficit and
crowd investment and exports back in. The UK
needs this to a lesser extent. - The counterpart of the US situation is that the
euro area and Japan will have to accept higher
real exchange rates. To some extent they also
need lower real interest rates and larger
government deficits, although these may be
difficult to achieve. It is possible that euro
area domestic demand could rise enough to boost
euro area output and stabilize world output. - China would also benefit from a higher real
exchange rate to help combat inflationary
pressures.
28the worlds biggest hedge fund
- The US trade deficit is around 600bn, with net
foreign investment income of around 60bn,
leaving a current account deficit of around
540bn. - The US finances this deficit by selling domestic
assets, a mix of government bonds (around 450bn
a year), corporate bonds, equities, and real
assets. - Amazingly, the USA runs a surplus on foreign
direct investment of around 150bn - that is, US
firms buy more foreign firms than vice-versa. - Furthermore, the US runs an investment income
surplus despite having net foreign liabilities of
24 of GDP. As pointed out by the chief
economists of both Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley, this is because the cost of finance is
so low in the US, that the US acts like a giant
hedge fund, borrowing cheaply at home to invest
in higher yielding foreign assets (this is
sometimes called the carry-trade). - When interest rates go up, the investment income
surplus will fall sharply since the US Treasury
will be paying more to foreigners to hold its
debt.
29oil shocks I
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
30oil shocks II
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
31unemployment to remain high
Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
32Source CESifo Report on the European Economy 2005
33global risks
- Over-valued housing markets pose substantial
risks in a number of countries, especially
Australia, Canada, Ireland, Spain, Sweden, the
United Kingdom and the United States. - As interest rates rise over the cycle, there will
be downward pressure on house prices and there is
a risk that a number of housing bubbles will
burst. - This in turn will pose risks to the financial
system and to macroeconomic policy, although
given that the inflation outlook is still fairly
benign there is scope for appropriate policy
responses. - There are also risks to financial markets. A
fall in US asset prices could lead to a credit
contraction elsewhere, and a big rise in US bond
yields might raise bond yields across the whole
world. - Given the likelihood of a flight to quality,
this would be especially marked for developing
countries and other low grade debt (q.v. the Peso
crisis of 1994), even if the effect on the US is
only transitory.
34euro area risks
- In addition, there are a number of other risks to
euro area growth - Continued high and volatile oil prices
- Inflationary pressure and possible slowdown in
China - Failure of the reformed Stability and Growth
pact - Failure of German labour market reforms
- Failure of the Lisbon agenda talks.
35discussion
- Each group has been allocated a country to
analyse. - Have a look at the materials provided and think
about the short-run macroeconomic position of the
country. - Some suggested important issues inflation,
unemployment, growth, monetary and fiscal policy,
foreign trade.
36long-run economic performance
- Is there some action a government of India could
take that would lead the Indian economy to grow
like Indonesias or Egypts? If so, what,
exactly? If not, what is it about the nature of
India that makes it so? The consequences for
human welfare involved in questions like these
are simply staggering Once one starts to think
about them, it is hard to think about anything
else, Robert Lucas, 1988.
37OECD macroeconomic performance
38equilibrium unemployment
labour supply
workforce
real wage
equilibrium wage
labour demand
natural rate
equilibrium employment
employment
39the natural rate and the NAIRU
- The natural rate model assumes that markets clear
and that there is competition in all markets. - In fact, the labour market may be dominated by
unions. - If so, there is bargaining between unions and
firms. - Other things being equal, this will raise the
level of unemployment for any given real wage. - Also, goods markets may be dominated by a few
large sellers (imperfect competition) in which
case the labour demand curve may be less steep,
possibly even horizontal.
40wage bargaining
- Unemployment is the means by which the competing
claims of employers and unions are reconciled. - Unions bargain over wages relative to prices (the
target real wage) and reduce their demands when
unemployment is high. - Unions care about the employed (insiders) without
caring too much about the unemployed (outsiders). - Employers set prices relative to wages (the
feasible real wage) this leads to a relatively
flat labour demand schedule.
41the target real wage
target real wage
labour supply
real wage
workforce
feasible real wage
employment
42the NRU and the NAIRU
target real wage
labour supply
real wage
workforce
feasible real wage
natural rate
employment
NAIRU
43two views of the labour market
- The natural rate model suggests that most
equilibrium unemployment is voluntary in the
sense that workers could find jobs at the current
real wage, but choose not to. - The NAIRU model suggests that some equilibrium
unemployment is involuntary in the sense that
workers would like to work at the current real
wage but cannot find jobs.
44- how to reduce unemployment
- Retraining and work experience schemes for
long-term unemployed and unskilled - Reform of the benefit system
- Limitations on union power increased
coordination of bargaining - Tax reform (lower payroll taxes for the
unskilled) - Increased labour mobility.
- how not to reduce unemployment
- Cunning demand-side policies (unlikely to have
much effect in the long-run, plus very
expensive) - Job-sharing, cuts in working hours, or employment
protection - Increased investment by firms (although this will
raise wages) - Protectionism (any benefit to workers massively
outweighed by costs to consumers).
45is long-run aggregate supply stable?
- Lots of evidence that the idea of equilibrium
unemployment and equilibrium output are useful
concepts. - We can estimate the NAIRU from statistical
models. - However, three complications
- the NAIRU shifts over time and is hard to
estimate precisely - even when unemployment is above the NAIRU, very
rapid rises in demand could still lead to
increased inflation - if unemployment is high for a very long time, the
NAIRU may rise due to hysteresis.
46important elements of long-run growth
- Technical Change (q.v. Smiths pin factory)
- Over time, technology becomes more advanced, and
hence output per worker rises - Factor Accumulation (q.v. Ramsey on investment)
- Over time, with sensible property rights, people
accumulate capital assets (physical, human and
environmental), even though factors are typically
subject to diminishing returns - Factor Substitution (cf. Ricardo on land)
- Over time, factors cannot earn economic rents
unless their supply is restricted, even then,
other factors can be used as substitutes - Product Substitution (q.v. Schumpeter on creative
destruction) - Over time, new products are invented which
replace older versions and types.
47international labour productivity
48the sources of economic growth
- Growth of output weighted growth of inputs
growth of total factor productivity - Growth of labour productivity weighted growth
of capital per worker growth of total factor
productivity - Growth of inputs
- Capital and labour
- Materials and energy
- Growth of total factor productivity
- Higher quality products
- New products
- Better ways to use existing inputs
49productivity growth in business
Note Growth of total factor productivity Growth
of output minus weighted growth of inputs
50the Japanese TFP miracle
51total factor productivity
- A typical worker in US or Switzerland is 30 to 40
times more productive than a worker in Haiti or
Nigeria. - Between-country differences much greater than
within-country differences. - Some of this can be explained by natural
resources, oil. - Some can be explained by physical capital, but
investment rates surprisingly similar across
countries. - Nor can human capital explain differences, unless
investments in intangibles much bigger than we
think. - Therefore, differences in technology must matter.
- What are the barriers to efficient adoption and
use of technologies across the world?
52high productivity countries
- Private ownership and good quality institutions
- Institutions that favour production over
diversion - Openness to international trade
- Well-educated workforce
- Low rate of government consumption (i.e.
excluding investment or transfers) - International language
- Temperate latitude away from equator, with
river-fed irrigation - Easy access to coast and ports.
53summary
- The labour market is imperfectly competitive due
to the presence of trade unions and large
employers. - In the long-run, the labour market tends to
settle at an equilibrium where there is both
voluntary and involuntary unemployment. - Policies to tackle unemployment need to take into
account both of these types! - When the economy is at equilibrium unemployment,
the main source of growth is the accumulation of
capital, whether that capital is physical, human
or technological. - Successful countries tend to be ones that are
able to maintain high levels of investment for
long periods of time.
54discussion
- Each group has been allocated a country to
analyse. - Have a look at the materials provided and think
about the long-run macroeconomic position of the
country. - Some suggested important issues investment,
competition, entrepreneurship, innovation
skills.
55presentations
- After the discussion, each group is invited to
make a five minute presentation on the short and
long-run economic challenges facing its allocated
country.
56summary
- Productivity Growth isnt everything, but in the
long-run, it is almost everything, Paul Krugman,
1990. - Unemployment and business cycles are important in
explaining short and medium run growth, but play
almost no rôle in the long-run in the long-run,
national output is determined by supply. - In the long-run, the main source of rising living
standards is rising output per worker. - Rising output per worker is due to the
accumulation of capital and technological
progress.
57laggards can catch up
Source OECD (2005)
58Source OECD (2005)
59Source OECD (2005)
60Source OECD (2005)