Review of the Previous Lecture
• Output and Inflation in the Long Run
• Money growth, Inflation and Aggregate Demand
• Monetary Policy and Real Interest Rate
• Aggregate Demand and Real Interest Rate
• Long Run Real Interest Rate
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McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Money and
Banking
Lecture 41
Review of the Previous Lecture
• Output and Inflation in the Long Run
• Money growth, Inflation and Aggregate
Demand
• Monetary Policy and Real Interest Rate
• Aggregate Demand and Real Interest Rate
• Long Run Real Interest Rate
Deriving the Monetary Policy Reaction
Curve
• To ensure that deviations of inflation
from the target are only temporary,
monetary policymakers respond to
change in inflation by changing the real
interest rate in the same direction.
• The monetary policy reaction curve is set
so that when current inflation equals
target inflation, the real interest rate
equals the long-run real interest rate.
• The slope of the curve depends on
policymakers’ objectives;
• when central bankers decide how
aggressively to pursue their inflation target,
and how willing they are to tolerate temporary
changes in inflation, they determine the slope
of the curve
The Monetary Policy Reaction Curve
The Monetary Policy Reaction Curve
an economy
Central bank’s
Shifting the Monetary Policy Reaction
Curve
• Policymakers who are aggressive in
keeping current inflation near target will
have a steep curve, meaning that a small
change in inflation will be met with a
large change in the real interest rate
• A relatively flat curve means that central
bankers are less concerned than they
might be with keeping current inflation
near target over the short term.
• The monetary policy reaction curve is set
so that when current inflation equals target
inflation, the real interest rate equals the
long-run real interest rate.
• r = r* when = T.
• When policymakers adjust the real
interest rate they are either moving along
a fixed monetary policy reaction curve or
shifting the curve.
• A movement along the curve is a
reaction to a change in current inflation;
a shift in the curve represents a change
in the level of the real interest rate at
every level of inflation
• If either target inflation or the long-run real
interest rate change, then the entire curve
will shift
• With a higher inflation target, the central
bank will set a lower current real interest
rate at every level of current inflation,
shifting the monetary policy reaction curve
to the right (a reduction would have the
opposite effect).
• The long-run real interest rate is
determined by the structure of the
economy;
• If it were to rise as a result of an increase in
government purchases (or some other
component of aggregate demand that is not
sensitive to the real interest rate) then the
monetary policy reaction curve would shift left
• Any shift in the monetary policy reaction
curve can be characterized as either a
change in target inflation or a shift in the
long-run real interest rate
The Monetary Policy Reaction Curve
The Aggregate Demand Curve
• When current inflation rises
• Monetary policymakers raise the real interest
rate, moving upward along the monetary
policy reaction curve
• The higher real interest rate reduces
consumption, investment, and net exports
causing aggregate demand (output) to fall.
The Aggregate Demand Curve
• Changes in current inflation move the
economy along a downward-sloping
aggregate demand curve
• This is in addition to the effect of higher
inflation on real money balances noted
earlier
• The slope of the aggregate demand
curve tells us how sensitive current
output is to a given change in current
inflation.
• The aggregate demand curve will be
relatively
• flat if current output is very sensitive to
inflation (a change in current inflation causes
a large movement in current output)
• steep if current output is not very sensitive to
inflation
The Aggregate Demand Curve
The Aggregate Demand Curve
• Three factors influence the sensitivity of
current output to inflation:
• the strength of the effect of inflation on real
money balances,
• the extent to which monetary policymakers
react to a change in current inflation,
• the size of the response of aggregate demand
to changes in the interest rate
• The second factor relates to the slope of
the monetary policy reaction curve
• If policymakers react aggressively to a
movement of current inflation away from its
target level with a large change in the real
interest rate, the monetary policy reaction
curve will be steep and the aggregate
demand curve is flat
• If policymakers respond more cautiously, the
monetary policy reaction curve is flat and the
aggregate demand curve is steep
• The slope of the aggregate demand curve
depends in part on the preferences of the
central bank;
• how aggressive policymakers are in
responding to deviations of inflation from the
target level