Macroeconomic
THE IS-LM MODEL CHAPTER 2 DR/ AHMED SAID
ELBOKL
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
IN THIS CHAPTER, YOU WILL LEARN:
• the IS curve and its relation to:
• the Keynesian cross
• the loanable funds model
• the LM curve and its relation to:
• the theory of liquidity preference
• how the IS-LM model determines income and the
interest rate in the short run when P is fixed
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 2
Context
• This chapter develops the IS-LM model,
the basis of the aggregate demand curve.
• We focus on the short run and assume the price level is fixed (so the
SRAS curve is horizontal).
• Chapters 11 and 12 focus on the closed-economy case. Chapter 13
presents the open-economy case.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The Keynesian cross
• A simple closed-economy model in which income is
determined by expenditure.
(due to J. M. Keynes)
• Notation:
I = planned investment
PE = C + I + G = planned expenditure
Y = real GDP = actual expenditure
• Difference between actual & planned expenditure =
unplanned inventory investment
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Elements of the Keynesian cross
consumption function: C C (Y T )
govt policy variables: G G , T T
for now, planned
investment is exogenous: I I
planned expenditure: PE C (Y T ) I G
equilibrium condition:
actual expenditure = planned expenditure
Y PE
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Graphing planned expenditure
PE
planned
expenditure
PE =C +I
+G
MPC
1
income, output, Y
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Graphing the equilibrium condition
PE
planned PE
expenditure =Y
45º
income, output, Y
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The equilibrium value of income
PE
planned PE
expenditure =Y
PE =C +I
+G
income, output, Y
Equilibrium
income
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
An increase in government purchases
PE
Y
=
E
At Y1,
P
PE =C +I
there is now an +G2
unplanned drop PE =C +I
in inventory… +G1
Δ
G
…so firms
increase output,
and income Y
rises toward a
new equilibrium. PE1 = ΔY PE2 =
Y1 Y2
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Solving for ΔY
Y C I G equilibrium condition
Y C I G in changes
C G because I exogenous
MPC Y G because ΔC = MPC
ΔY
Collect terms with ΔY Solve for ΔY :
on the left side of the
equals sign: 1
Y G
(1 MPC) Y G 1 MPC
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The government purchases multiplier
Definition: the increase in income resulting from a $1
increase in G.
In this model, the govt
purchases multiplier equals Y 1
G 1 MPC
Example: If MPC = 0.8, then
Y 1 An increase in G
5 causes income to
G 1 0.8
increase 5 times
as much!
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Why the multiplier is greater than 1
• Initially, the increase in G causes an equal increase in Y: ΔY = ΔG.
• But #Y g #C
g further #Y
g further #C
g further #Y
• So the final impact on income is much bigger than the initial ΔG.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
An increase in taxes
PE
Initially, the tax
= E
P
PE =C1 +I
Y
increase reduces
consumption and +G
PE =C2 +I
therefore PE: +G
ΔC = At Y1, there is now
−MPC×ΔT an unplanned
…so firms inventory buildup…
reduce output,
and income falls Y
toward a new PE2 = ΔY PE1 =
equilibrium
Y2 Y1
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Solving for ΔY
eq’m condition in
Y C I G
changes
C I and G exogenous
MPC Y T
Solving for ΔY : (1 MPC) Y MPC T
Final result:
MPC
Y T
1 MPC
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The tax multiplier
def: the change in income resulting from
a $1 increase in T :
Y MPC
T 1 MPC
If MPC = 0.8, then the tax multiplier equals
Y 0.8 0.8
4
T 1 0.8 0.2
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The tax multiplier
…is negative:
A tax increase reduces C,
which reduces income.
…is greater than one
(in absolute value):
A change in taxes has a
multiplier effect on income.
…is smaller than the govt spending multiplier:
Consumers save the fraction (1 – MPC) of a tax cut,
so the initial boost in spending from a tax cut is
smaller than from an equal increase in G.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
NOW YOU TRY
Practice with the Keynesian cross
• Use a graph of the Keynesian cross
to show the effects of an increase in planned
investment on the equilibrium level of
income/output.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 17
ANSWERS
Practice with the Keynesian cross
PE
Y
=
E
P
At Y1, PE =C +I2
there is now an +G
PE =C +I1
unplanned drop
in inventory… +G
ΔI
…so firms
increase output,
and income Y
rises toward a
new equilibrium. PE1 = ΔY PE2 =
Y1 Y2
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 18
The IS curve
def: a graph of all combinations of r and Y that result in
goods market equilibrium
i.e. actual expenditure (output)
= planned expenditure
The equation for the IS curve is:
Y C (Y T ) I (r ) G
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Deriving the IS curve
P PE =Y
PE =C +I (r2 )
E +G
ir g hI PE =C +I (r1 )
+G
g hPE ΔI
g hY Y1 Y2 Y
r
r1
r2
IS
Y1 Y2 Y
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Why the IS curve is negatively sloped
• A fall in the interest rate motivates firms to increase investment
spending, which drives up total planned spending (PE ).
• To restore equilibrium in the goods market, output (a.k.a. actual
expenditure, Y )
must increase.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Fiscal Policy and the IS curve
• We can use the IS-LM model to see
how fiscal policy (G and T ) affects
aggregate demand and output.
• Let’s start by using the Keynesian cross
to see how fiscal policy shifts the IS curve…
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Shifting the IS curve: ΔG
PE PE PE =C +I (r1 )
At any value of r, hG =Y
+G2=C +I (r )
PE
g hPE g hY 1
…so the IS curve shifts +G1
to the right.
The horizontal Y1 Y2 Y
r
distance of the
r1
IS shift equals
1
Y G ΔY
1 MPC IS1 IS2
Y1 Y2 Y
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
NOW YOU TRY
Shifting the IS curve: ΔT
• Use the diagram of the Keynesian cross or loanable
funds model to show how an increase in taxes shifts
the IS curve.
• If you can, determine the size of the shift.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 25
ANSWERS
Shifting the IS curve: ΔT
PE PE PE =C1 +I (r1 )
At any value of r, =Y
hT g iC g iPE +G =C +I (r )
PE 2 1
…so the IS curve shifts +G
to the left.
Y2 Y1 Y
The horizontal r
distance of the r1
IS shift equals
MPC ΔY
Y T
1 MPC IS2 IS1
Y2 Y1 Y
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 26
The theory of liquidity preference
• Due to John Maynard Keynes.
• A simple theory in which the interest rate
is determined by money supply and
money demand.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Money supply
r
M P
s
The supply of interest
real money rate
balances
is fixed:
M P M P
s
M/P
M P
real money
balances
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Money demand
r
M P
s
Demand for interest
real money rate
balances:
M P
d
L(r )
L (r )
M/P
M P
real money
balances
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Equilibrium
r
The interest interest M P
s
rate adjusts rate
to equate the
supply and
demand for
money:
r1
M P L(r ) L (r )
M/P
M P
real money
balances
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
How the Fed raises the interest rate
r
interest
To increase r, Fed rate
reduces M
r2
r1
L (r )
M/P
M2 M1
real money
P P balances
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
CASE STUDY:
Monetary Tightening & Interest Rates
• Late 1970s: π > 10%
• Oct 1979: Fed Chairman Paul Volcker announces
that monetary policy
would aim to reduce inflation
• Aug 1979–April 1980:
Fed reduces M/P 8.0%
• Jan 1983: π = 3.7%
How do you think this policy change
would affect nominal interest rates?
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Monetary Tightening & Interest Rates, cont.
The effects of a monetary tightening
on nominal interest rates
short run long run
Quantity theory, Fisher
liquidity preference
model effect
(Keynesian)
(Classical)
prices sticky flexible
prediction Δi > 0 Δi < 0
actual 8/1979: i = 10.4% 8/1979: i = 10.4%
outcome 4/1980: i = 15.8% 1/1983: i = 8.2%
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The LM curve
Now let’s put Y back into the money demand function:
M P
d
L(r ,Y )
The LM curve is a graph of all combinations of r and
Y that equate the supply and demand for real
money balances.
The equation for the LM curve is:
M P L(r ,Y )
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Deriving the LM curve
(a) The market for
(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM
r2 r
2
L (r ,
r1 Y2 ) r
L (r , 1
Y1 )
M1 M/P Y1 Y2 Y
P
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
Why the LM curve is upward sloping
• An increase in income raises money demand.
• Since the supply of real balances is fixed, there is now excess demand
in the money market at the initial interest rate.
• The interest rate must rise to restore equilibrium in the money
market.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
How ΔM shifts the LM curve
(a) The market for
(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM
2
LM1
r2 r2
r1 r1
L (r , Y1 )
M2 M1 M/P Y1 Y
P P
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
NOW YOU TRY
Shifting the LM curve
• Suppose a wave of credit card fraud causes
consumers to use cash more frequently in
transactions.
• Use the liquidity preference model to show how
these events shift the LM curve.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 38
ANSWERS
Shifting the LM curve
(a) The market for
(b) The LM curve
real money balances
r r
LM
2
LM1
r2 r2
L (r , Y1 )
r1 r1
L (r , Y1 )
M1 M/P Y1 Y
P
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 39
The short-run equilibrium
The short-run equilibrium is the r
combination of r and Y that LM
simultaneously satisfies the
equilibrium conditions in the
goods & money markets:
Y C (Y T ) I (r ) G IS
M P L(r ,Y ) Y
Equilibrium
interest Equilibrium
rate level of
income
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
The Big Picture
Keynesian IS
cross curve
IS-LM
model Explanation
Theory of LM of short-run
liquidity curve fluctuations
preference
Agg.
demand
curve Model of
Agg.
Demand
Agg.
and Agg.
supply
Supply
curve
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl
C H A P T E R S U M M A RY
1. Keynesian cross
• basic model of income determination
• takes fiscal policy & investment as exogenous
• fiscal policy has a multiplier effect on income
2. IS curve
• comes from Keynesian cross when planned investment
depends negatively on interest rate
• shows all combinations of r and Y
that equate planned expenditure with
actual expenditure on goods & services
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 42
C H A P T E R S U M M A RY
3. Theory of liquidity preference
• basic model of interest rate determination
• takes money supply & price level as exogenous
• an increase in the money supply lowers the interest rate
4. LM curve
• comes from liquidity preference theory when
money demand depends positively on income
• shows all combinations of r and Y that equate demand
for real money balances with supply
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 43
C H A P T E R S U M M A RY
5. IS-LM model
• Intersection of IS and LM curves shows the unique
point (Y, r ) that satisfies equilibrium in both the goods
and money markets.
Dr/ Ahmed said Elbokl 44