ZeePedia

JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK

<< MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY (CONTINUED…….)
AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCE >>
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
UNIT - 14
Lesson 14
JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK
So far we have talked about macroeconomic equilibrium either in the context of the goods
market (AS-AD), the labour market, or the loan able funds market. We now enrich our notion
of equilibrium with the money market and see what the conditions are for an economy to strike
joint equilibrium in the goods and money markets. The framework within which this is done is
called the IS-LM framework. The exact meaning of the letters is perhaps not so important as
their meaning. IS actually refers to a curve drawn in i-Y space capturing all the points at which
the goods market is in equilibrium. LM is similarly, a curve also drawn in i-Y space, but
capturing all the points at which the money market is in equilibrium. We look at how these
curves are derived, in reverse order, i.e. staring with the LM curve.
MONEY MARKET EQUILIBRIUM: THE LM CURVE
We start from where we left our discussion of the monetary sector. We noted that money
demand increased with income and decreased with interest rates. Now plotting the money
demand function (we'll call it L) in i-M space (where M denotes real money), we get a
downward sloping line. The slope of L depends on the sensitivity of money demand to
changes in the interest rate, or the interest elasticity of money demand (iєL).
An increase in real income (Y) causes a rightward shift in the L curve while a fall in income
causes a leftward shift. The amount by which L shifts in response to a given change in income
depends on the sensitivity of money demand to income changes, or the income elasticity of
money demand (YєL).
By introducing money supply at this stage, we can develop a notion of money market
equilibrium. As mentioned earlier, the nominal money supply is controlled (directly or
indirectly) by the central bank. Given a certain level of prices (P), and sticking with the i-M
space, real money supply (i.e Ms/P) will plot as a vertical line intersecting the M axis at a finite
point determined by Ms (determined by the central bank) and the price level. Given constant
prices, an increase in Ms will cause Ms/P to shift to the right, and a decrease in Ms will cause
Ms/P to shift to the left. Similarly, given a constant Ms, an increase in P will shift Ms/P to the
left, while a decrease will have the opposite effect.
The intersection point of the L and Ms/P lines delivers money market. To see how this
equilibrium responds to changes in income (Y), we can see that with a fixed Ms/P, increases in
income will cause L to shift to the right, causing the equilibrium interest rate to rise. It is
obvious that if we were plotting the equilibrium relationship in the money market in i-Y space,
we would get an upward sloping line, since a rise in income causes a rise in interest rates.
Again, the slope of this line would depend on the two elasticize mentioned above. If YєL is
small then even a large change in Y will cause only a small change in money demand. Now if
iєL is large, only a small change in i will be required to bring money demand back to
equilibrium levels (i.e. equal to the fixed Ms/P). In this case, the LM curve will be relatively flat
(large changes in Y associated with small changes in i). LM will be steeper the bigger is YєL
and the smaller is iєL.
Shifts in the LM Curve:
It is also useful to think about factors that will cause shifts in the LM curve. Ms/P is one such
factor. How? Simulate the effect of an increase in Ms/P in i-M space. The vertical Ms/P curve
shifts to the right causing the equilibrium interest rate to fall. Thus for an unchanged income
level (since we have not assumed anything about income changes causing shifts in the L
curve), the interest rate falls. The way this translates in i-Y space is simple. Every point on the
LM curve will shift vertically downwards. Why vertically downwards, because income has not
changed. Thus, it is clear: an increase in real money supply (Ms/P) will cause LM to shift down
(or the right), while an decrease in Ms/P will cause in LM to shift up (or to the left).
151
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
GOODS MARKET EQUILIBRIUM: THE IS CURVE
This is much simpler. We start with the loan able funds or (saving-investment) market (with i
on the vertical axis and S & I on the horizontal axis) where the investment schedule plots as a
downward sloping curve. Now consider what happens to investment demand (I) when there is
a fall in i (due, say to a rightward shift in the saving function). I will increase, as it is now
cheaper for firms to borrow money and invest. How would a higher I affect income Y in the
context of the 45 degree line diagram introduced earlier in the course. Clearly, the AD curve
would shift upwards by +ΔI (the increase in I induced by a fall in i). This would cause a
multiplied rise in income, raising the latter by k*ΔI, where k is the Keynesian multiplier.
Clearly then, a fall in interest rates is associated with a rise in equilibrium national income
Thus the IS curve, which captures goods market equilibrium is downward sloping in i-Y space.
The lower the interest rate, the higher the income; the higher is interest rate, the lower the
income.
The Slope of the IS Curve:
The slope of the IS curve, as you may have already guessed, depends on two factors:
a. The sensitivity of investment demand to the interest rate (i.e. how flat the investment
curve is in i-S,I space) or the interest elasticity of investment (iєI). The higher the iєI ,
the greater the increase in I for any given -Δi.
b. The Keynesian multiplier (k): the higher is k, the greater the increase in Y given a
certain increase in I.
Combining the two then, we can say, the higher is k and the higher is iєI, the flatter will be the
IS curve. Intuitively it makes sense as well. A flat IS curve relates a small decrease in i with a
large increase in Y. Now with a high iєI, a small -Δi will cause a large +ΔI, which, given a large
k, will cause a very high +ΔY. Conversely, the IS curve is steep when iєI and k are small.
Shifts in the IS Curve:
Shifts in the IS curve are also easy to understand. Any injection into the circular flow: e.g.
autonomous changes in C, G or X-M, which are not caused by an interest rate change, but
which do cause an increase in AD and Y, will cause the IS curve to shift to the right. Similarly,
IS shifts the left when there is a decrease in these injections.
THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK AND FISCAL-MONETARY POLICY INTERACTIONS
An upward sloping LM curve and a downward sloping IS curve are bound to provide an
intersection point which represents joint equilibrium in the money and goods markets. Since
the advent of the IS-LM framework in the 1940s, as an extension of Keynesian ideas,
macroeconomists have been interested in studying how this joint equilibrium can be affected
and brought in line with the full-employment equilibrium (remember the two may not
necessarily be the same in a Keynesian world). In particular, their interest has lay in what the
government can do, by way of fiscal and monetary policies to guide the economy towards
such equilibrium.
Expansionary monetary policy:
As mentioned earlier, a real money expansion [i.e. +Δ(Ms/P)] can be produced by either a
reduction in P or an increase in Ms (the nominal money supply). Let's assume for the time
being that P is fixed and the central bank increase Ms. Ms/P rises. This will cause the LM
curve to shift to the right with the effect that interest rates fall and equilibrium income or output
will rise. Should the economy operating below the full-employment level, such a policy can
clearly help. The reverse process would apply if the central bank reduced money supply in a
bid to relieve inflationary of excess demand pressures.
152
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
Expansionary fiscal policy:
Similarly, an increase in government spending (G), will cause a rightward shift in the IS curve
causing both equilibrium interest rate and income to rise. There is an important intuition as well
behind why interest rates would rise in this case (apart from the fact that it is graphically the
case). The intuition is related the crowding out effect of government spending.
a. Crowding out of investment demand: When the government spends and finances
that spending through borrowing from banks or the general public (i.e. does not resort
to money-supply expanding means of financing the fiscal deficit), the demand for loan
able funds is driven up, causing interest rates to rise and private sector ability to borrow
funds to fall. This acts as a drag on AD and Y which consequently do not rise as much
as they would have in the absence of crowding out.
b. Crowding out of net exports demand: Given that higher government spending
causes interest rates to rise one can also see why net exports demand would suffer
from such high interest rates as well. As we discussed earlier, higher interest rates
would cause the exchange rate to appreciate (interest-parity condition), which in turn
would cause competitiveness to fall ­ thus the negative effect on net exports. As such,
high interest rates induced by higher government spending can crowd out both net
exports and investment, thus preventing AD and Y to rise as much as they would have
had interest rates remained the same.
This takes us to the natural question: what if the government financed higher spending by
either asking the central bank to print more money for it, or by borrowing from abroad? This is
just another way of stating the question: "what if a government fiscal expansion and a
monetary expansion were implemented simultaneously, i.e. the IS and LM curves both shifted
to the right?" It is clear that in this case, the negative effects of higher interest rates can be
eliminated. Thus, if the economy is in deep recession, the policy prescription should naturally
be to simultaneously effectuate both fiscal and monetary expansions.
Fiscal ­ Monetary Policy Interaction:
However, if the economy is not in recession and does not, per se, have excess capacity or
slack, the above prescribed simultaneous fiscal and monetary expansions cannot succeed in
increasing income or output. Why? The reason is prices, which we have so far assumed as
constant. However, in reality prices respond readily to demand pressures and as the economy
approaches the full employment level, expansionary monetary and fiscal policies will
increasingly put pressure on prices to rise (recall the AD-AD diagram).
Now assuming we are in such a situation, i.e. the economy is at its full-employment equilibrium
level and the government implements a joint fiscal- monetary expansion, we can trace the
effect of rising prices on equilibrium. An increase in P will cause real money supply (Ms/P) to
fall, which means the LM curve will shift back. In the goods market, on the other hand, rising
prices cause aggregate demand to fall due to wealth, interest-rate, and the international
purchasing power effects, we studied earlier. Thus, the effects of expansionary fiscal policy will
be reversed as well. The net result is that there is no positive impact on equilibrium income; in
fact there might even be a negative impact if inflation becomes very high and starts hurting
long-run business confidence and hence investment.
A final point about the comparison between the effectiveness of fiscal policy vs.
monetary policy is: Which is better and when?
Drawing the IS-LM curves, it is easy to see that when the LM curve is relatively flat, any given
fiscal expansion will cause a large effect on income and a relatively small effect on i. Thus,
fiscal policy is more effective (desirable) in this setting. On the other hand, when the IS curve
is relatively flat, any given monetary expansion will produce a larger impact on income.
Monetary policy is more effective in this situation.
153
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
END OF UNIT 14 - EXERCISES
What would be the effect on interest rates of a contractionary monetary policy combined
with a contractionary fiscal policy (lower spending, lower borrowing from the central
bank)..
Both IS and LM would shift to the left. The impact on equilibrium income is obvious (it will fall),
but nothing immediately can be said about interest rates, as the two policy changes have
opposite effects on the interest rate. However, it should be ntoed that since the fiscal policy
contraction is also causing the monetary base (and henc emoney supply) to contract ­ "credit to
government" and "M0" both fall on the central bank balance sheet due to the government
reducing its borrowing therefrom. There will be thus be an additional monetary contraction,
which makes a rise in interest rates more likely.
On an IS-LM diagram, trace through the effects of (a) a fall in investment and (b) a fall in
the money supply. On what does the size of the fall in national income depend?
a) The IS curve will shift to the left. There will be a resulting fall in the rate of interest and
a fall in national income. The fall in national income will be greater, (i) the flatter the LM
curve ­ i.e. the less the rate of interest has to fall to bring equilibrium in the money
market; (ii) the steeper the IS curve ­ i.e. the less will any fall in the rate of interest help
to boost investment again (after its initial fall).
b) The LM curve will shift to the left. There will be a resulting rise in the rate of interest
and fall in national income. The fall in national income will be greater,(i) the flatter the
IS curve ­ i.e. the more investment is reduced by the rise in interest rates; (ii) the
steeper the LM curve ­ i.e. the more interest rates will have to rise (and hence the
more investment and national income will fall) in order to restore equilibrium in the
money market..
Explain what could cause a downward shift in the LM curve and how this would affect
the AD curve.
The LM curve would shift downwards if either of the following occurred: (a) an increase in the
supply of money; (b) a fall in the demand for money, other than as a result of a rise in interest
rates (this could occur, for example, if people relied more on credit and less on cash).
The effect of the downward shift in the LM curve is a fall in the real rate of interest and a rise
in national income. The rise in national income causes an increase in aggregate demand at
any given price level: i.e. the AD curve shifts to the right. (Whether the price level will rise and
hence nominal interest rates, will depend on the shape of the AS curve.)
Why do `ever more rapid financial flows across the world that are unpredictable and
uncertain' make Keynesian discretionary fiscal (and monetary policy) less suitable?
Because the interest-rate and exchange-rate effects of fiscal policy changes will cause crowding
out. Also, the unpredictability of international financial flows makes the effects of fiscal (and
monetary policy) changes less predictable.
Show what will happen if there is (a) a rise in business confidence and a resulting
increase in investment; (b) a rise in the demand for money balances (say for
precautionary purposes).
a) The IS curve will shift to the right. The effect is the same as with an expansionary fiscal
policy.
b) A rise in the demand for money will shift the LM curve to the left. The effect will be the
same as with a contractionary monetary policy.
Compare the relative effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policies as means of
expanding aggregate demand under a system of floating exchange rates.
154
img
Introduction to Economics ­ECO401
VU
Monetary policy would be relatively effective. An expansion of the money supply will reduce
interest rates.  This will increase aggregate demand directly; lead to a depreciation in the
exchange rate, which will increase exports and reduce imports, thereby further stimulating
aggregate demand; cause initial exchange rate overshooting, reinforcing the boost to demand
from increased exports and reduced imports.
Fiscal policy will be relatively ineffective. A cut in taxes and/or an increase in government
expenditure will increase the transactions demand for money and thus increase interest rates.
The exchange rate will appreciate. This will have the effect of dampening the rise in aggregate
demand.
Under what circumstances would an expansionary fiscal policy have no effect at all on
national income?
(i) The greater the degree of capital mobility, the bigger will be the balance of payments surplus
resulting from the expansionary fiscal policy (and the higher interest rates it produces), and the
more the exchange rate will appreciate, and hence the more aggregate demand will be reduced
again through exports. (ii) The greater the price elasticity of demand for imports and exports, the
more the appreciation will reduce aggregate demand again. The bigger these two effects, the
more likely it is that fiscal policy will have no effect on national income under floating exchange
rates.
How would a monetarist answer the Keynesian criticisms given below?
1. `The time lag with monetary policy could be very long.' Monetarists do not claim that
monetary policy can be used to fine tune the economy. It is simply important to maintain
a stable growth in the money supply in line with long-term growth in output.
2. `Monetary and fiscal policy can work together.' onetarists would argue that it is the
monetary effects of fiscal policy that cause aggregate demand to change. Pure fiscal
policy will be ineffective, leading merely to crowding out.
3. `The velocity of money is not stable, thus making the predictions of the quantity theory of
money ­ i.e. that monetary growth must necessarily lead to inflation ­ is unreliable.'
Monetarists would accept that the velocity of money circulation fluctuates in the short
term, but they will argue that there is still a strong correlation between monetary growth
and inflation over the longer term.
4. `Changes in aggregate demand cause changes in money supply and not vice versa.'
Monetarists would argue that if governments respond to a rise in aggregate demand by
allowing money supply to increase, then that is their choice to expand money supply. If
they had chosen not to and had pursued a policy of higher interest rates, then money
supply would have thereby been controlled and aggregate demand would soon have
fallen back again.
155
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS:Economic Systems
  2. INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS (CONTINUED………):Opportunity Cost
  3. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM:Goods Market and Factors Market
  4. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..)
  5. DEMAND, SUPPLY AND EQUILIBRIUM (CONTINUED……..):Equilibrium
  6. ELASTICITIES:Price Elasticity of Demand, Point Elasticity, Arc Elasticity
  7. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Total revenue and Elasticity
  8. ELASTICITIES (CONTINUED………….):Short Run and Long Run, Incidence of Taxation
  9. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION:CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
  10. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)
  11. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….)The Indifference Curve Approach
  12. BACKGROUND TO DEMAND/CONSUMPTION (CONTINUED…………….):Normal Goods and Giffen Good
  13. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS:PRODUCTIVE THEORY
  14. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):The Scale of Production
  15. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):Isoquant
  16. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):COSTS
  17. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):REVENUES
  18. BACKGROUND TO SUPPLY/COSTS (CONTINUED…………..):PROFIT MAXIMISATION
  19. MARKET STRUCTURES:PERFECT COMPETITION, Allocative efficiency
  20. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):MONOPOLY
  21. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):PRICE DISCRIMINATION
  22. MARKET STRUCTURES (CONTINUED………..):OLIGOPOLY
  23. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS:WELFARE ECONOMICS
  24. SELECTED ISSUES IN MICROECONOMICS (CONTINUED……………)
  25. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS:Price Level and its Effects:
  26. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..)
  27. INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS (CONTINUED………..):The Monetarist School
  28. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME
  29. THE USE OF MACROECONOMIC DATA, AND THE DEFINITION AND ACCOUNTING OF NATIONAL INCOME (CONTINUED……………..)
  30. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME
  31. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..)
  32. MACROECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM & VARIABLES; THE DETERMINATION OF EQUILIBRIUM INCOME (CONTINUED………..):The Accelerator
  33. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
  34. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….)
  35. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Causes of Inflation
  36. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  37. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):GROWTH
  38. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Land
  39. THE FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC ISSUES AND THEIR INTER-RELATIONSHIPS (CONTINUED…….):Growth-inflation
  40. FISCAL POLICY AND TAXATION:Budget Deficit, Budget Surplus and Balanced Budget
  41. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY
  42. MONEY, CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY (CONTINUED…….)
  43. JOINT EQUILIBRIUM IN THE MONEY AND GOODS MARKETS: THE IS-LM FRAMEWORK
  44. AN INTRODUCTION TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FINANCE
  45. PROBLEMS OF LOWER INCOME COUNTRIES:Poverty trap theories: