The Phillips Curve and the Tyranny of an Assumed Unique Macro Equilibrium
Richard Lipsey ()
Discussion Papers from Department of Economics, Simon Fraser University
Abstract:
To make the argument that the behaviour of modern industrial economies since the 1990s is inconsistent with theories in which there is a unique ergodic macro equilibrium, the paper starts by reviewing both the early Keynesian theory in which there was no unique level of income to which the economy was inevitably drawn and the debate about the amount of demand pressure at which it was best of maintain the economy: high aggregate demand and some inflationary pressure or lower aggregate demand and a stable price level. It then covers the rise of the simple Phillips curve and its expectations-augmented version, which introduced into current macro theory a natural rate of unemployment (and its associated equilibrium level of national income). This rate was also a NAIRU, the only rate consistent with stable inflation. It is then argued that the current behaviour of many modern economies in which there is a credible policy to maintain a low and steady inflation rate is inconsistent with the existence of either a unique natural rate or a NAIRU but is consistent with evolutionary theory in which there is perpetual change driven by endogenous technological advance. Instead of a NAIRU evolutionary economies have a noninflationary band of unemployment (a NAIBU) indicating a range of unemployment and income over with the inflation rate is stable. The paper concludes with the observation that the great pre- Phillips curve debates of the 1950s that assumed that there was a range within which the economy could be run with varying pressures of demand, and varying amounts of unemployment and inflationary pressure, were not as silly as they were made to seem when both Keynesian and New Classical economists accepted the assumption of a perfectly
Keywords: Natural rate of unemployment; NAIRU; NAIBU; inflation targeting; Phillips curve; evolutionary theory; equilibrium theory (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: B22 E12 E31 E58 E61 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 19
Date: 2013-10
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his, nep-hpe, nep-mac and nep-pke
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