Lecture 17
FISCAL POLICY
1. Floating Exchange Rates
1.1 Goods market
- In the income-expenditure diagram, the AE-line shifts up
- Eqbm GNP rises
1.2 Money market
- Money demand increases (why?)
- Interest rate goes up
This will cause a decline in C and I leading to a...
... slight decrease in AE
1.3 Forex market
- The increase in R leads to...
... greater capital inflows leading to...
... an appreciation of the domestic currency
- This is captured by a rightward shift of the "Return on Dollar Deposits" line...
... causing E to decrease
1.4 Further effects
- The stronger dollar (lower E) will cause net exports to fall...
... and thus the AE-line to shift down yet again
1.5 Results of the expansionary fiscal policy
- The increase in GDP is somewhat muted (why?)
- Higher interest rates
- A stronger currency
- Larger capital account surplus and current account deficit
- Bigger budget deficit
- Lower investment
2. Fixed Exchange Rates
- Increase in G leads to higher Y and R
- Increase in R leads to capital inflows
- Domestic currency will tend to appreciate ...
But since the exchange rate is fixed ...
... the central bank must prevent the incipient appreciation by ...
... buying foreign-exchange reserves
- Domestic money supply rises
- Interest rate falls back (to original level)
- Results:
- Large increase in GDP
- No change in interest rates
- Increase in current account deficit (why?)
- Increase in central bank's holdings of foreign reserve assets
Conclusion: Fiscal policy is more potent under fixed exchange rates.
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