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New Notation
                  Introduction
Steady State Solutions in REG
       Experiments with REG




             EC6012 Lecture 8
                The Open Economy


                   Stephen Kinsella

                   Dept. Economics,
                  University of Limerick


                   March 11, 2008




             Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                  Introduction
                Steady State Solutions in REG
                       Experiments with REG


Objectives today


  1   New Notation

  2   Introduction

  3   Steady State Solutions in REG

  4   Experiments with REG
        Increasing µS
        Increasing GTS

        Increasing (1 − µS )
        Changing Liquidity Preferences



                             Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                   Introduction
                 Steady State Solutions in REG
                        Experiments with REG


New Notation


  All the notation you’re no doubt familiar with (C , G , Y ), etc is still
  in use, but for space and sanity, I’m only including the newer
  variables and parameters to be used in this model.


   Symbol      Meaning
    N, S       North and South Holdings, respectively. µ                  Propen
      X        Exports
     IM        Imports
     GTN       Total Government expenditures injected in a period.




                              Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                 Introduction
               Steady State Solutions in REG
                      Experiments with REG


Introduction




  PC and PCEX are extended here to show the interactions and
  feedbacks from a two region economy with trade. We partition PC
  into a North (N) and a South (S) and allow imports and exports
  to and from these regions.




                            Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                   Introduction
                 Steady State Solutions in REG
                        Experiments with REG


Balance Sheet Matrix for REG

                                                           Introducing the Open Economy   171


         Table 6.1   Balance sheet of two-region economy (Model REG)

                                     North          South                       Central
                                   households     households    Government       bank

         Cash money                     N
                                      +Hh              S
                                                     +Hh                          −H       0
         Bills                         +BN
                                         h
                                                     +BS
                                                       h
                                                                     −B          +Bcb      0
         Wealth (balancing item)        N
                                      −Vh              S
                                                     −Vh            −Vg            0       0

                                        0             0                0           0       0



         temic approach, methodologically identical with the closed economy models
                     Figure: Balance Sheet Matrix for REG
         already presented.2
           Our open-economy models will evolve organically in stages from model
         PC in Chapter 4. We start off with the very same (closed) economy described
         by model PC, and then imagine how the economies of two component
         regions, which together make up the total, interact with one another and
         with the government. This will be Model REG. In subsequent sections we deal
         with a two-country system, each with its own currency. This will be Model
         OPEN.


         6.2     The matrices of a two-region economy
                              Stephen Kinsella        EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                              Introduction
            Steady State Solutions in REG
                   Experiments with REG


National Income Equations




                 YN       = C N + G N + X N − IM N ,                (1)
                     N             N         N
               IM         = µ ·Y ,                                  (2)
                     N                 S
                 X        = IM .                                    (3)
                                                                    (4)




                         Stephen Kinsella        EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                    Introduction
                  Steady State Solutions in REG
                         Experiments with REG


Other Key Equations
  The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable
  income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we
  call them bonds) demand functions.


         YD N      = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1
                                        N
                                                                                 (5)
          TN       = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 )
                                       N
                                                             0<θ<1               (6)
              N
          V        =      V−1 + (YD N − C N )
                            N
                                                                                 (7)
              N
          C        =                   N    N
                          α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1
                           N
                                                              0 < α1 < α2 < 1    (8)
            N
          Hh       =      V N − BhN
                                                                                 (9)
           N
          Bh                                             YD N
                   = λN + λ N · r − λN ·
                      0     1        2                                          (10)
          VN                                              VN

                               Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                 Introduction
               Steady State Solutions in REG
                      Experiments with REG


Steady State Solutions


  A region reaches their steady state when the change in household
  wealth from period to period is zero, so ∆V = 0. The condition
  where this holds is

                            GT + X N = T N + IM N
                             N
                                                                     (11)
  In the stationary state, GDP in the North will depend on the
  following condition:

                                                GT + X N
                                                 N
                                Y N∗ =                               (12)
                                                 θ + µN



                            Stephen Kinsella      EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation
                                 Introduction
               Steady State Solutions in REG
                      Experiments with REG


Harrod’s Foreign Trade Multiplier



  Discussion
  Equation 12 shows the Harrod foreign trade multiplier, which
  shows how the North’s output is dependent on the North’s
  government expenditure and their exports, divided by the tax and
  import propensities.
  What does this imply for policies to get the economy to the steady
  state?




                            Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation         Increasing µS
                                                                       S
                                       Introduction       Increasing GT
                     Steady State Solutions in REG        Increasing (1 − µS )
                            Experiments with REG          Changing Liquidity Preferences


Experiments: Evolution of Balances North and South
                                                             Introducing the Open Economy   181




                                                  North region GDP
             109.5


             108.0


             106.5


             105.0


             103.5
                                                      South region GDP

             102.0
                 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

    Figure 6.1 Evolution of GDP in the North and the South regions, following an increase
    in the propensity to import of the South region
                Figure: Evolution of Balances North and South

      The evolution of output in each region, as described in the preceding
                           Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation          Increasing µS
                                                                            S
                                           Introduction        Increasing GT
                         Steady State Solutions in REG         Increasing (1 − µS )
                                Experiments with REG           Changing Liquidity Preferences


Evolution of GDP in North-South Regions following an
increase in µS
          182    Monetary Economics



                 0.00
                                                  Change in household wealth
                                                  of the South region
                –0.25


                –0.50
                                            Government balance with the South region
                –0.75


                –1.00
                                           Trade balance of the South region

                –1.25

                    1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001

          Figure 6.2    Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial
  Figure:assets by the household sector, in North-South Regions following an increase
           Evolution of GDP government budget balance, trade balance – following
  in µS an increase in the propensity to import of the South region
          which exists between two parts of a single country which has a unitary fiscal
                                 Stephen Kinsella      EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation          Increasing µS
                                                                         S
                                        Introduction        Increasing GT
                      Steady State Solutions in REG         Increasing (1 − µS )
                             Experiments with REG           Changing Liquidity Preferences

            S
Increasing GT
        184


                    128.0


                    124.0

                                                       South region GDP
                    120.0


                    116.0                              North region GDP


                    112.0


                    108.0


                        1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

        Figure 6.3 Evolution of GDP in the South and the North regions, following an increase
  Figure: Evolution of GDP in North-South Regions following an increase
        in the government expenditures in the South region
      S
  in GT

              2.0
                                   Stephen Kinsella         EC6012 Lecture 8
108.0
                                     New Notation     Increasing µS
                                                                   S
                                       Introduction   Increasing GT
                     Steady State Solutions in REG    Increasing (1 − µS )
                       1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
                            Experiments with REG      Changing Liquidity Preferences

                                                S
       Figure 6.3 Evolution of GDP in the South and the North regions, following an increase
Evolution of Balances following an increase in GT
       in the government expenditures in the South region




             2.0


             1.0                            Change in household wealth
                                            of the South region

             0.0


            –1.0
                                         Trade balance of the South region

            –2.0
                                             Government balance
                                             with the South region
            –3.0


               1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001

       Figure 6.4 Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial
       assets by the household sector, government budget balance, trade balance – following
                                                                S
        Figure: Evolution of Balances following an increase in GT
       an increase in the government expenditures in the South region




                                  Stephen Kinsella       EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation       Increasing µS
                                                                     S
                                       Introduction     Increasing GT
                     Steady State Solutions in REG      Increasing (1 − µS )
                            Experiments with REG        Changing Liquidity Preferences


Evolution of GDP following an increase in Southern
Propensities to Save
                                                        Introducing the Open Economy   185


                107.50


                106.25                                  North region GDP


                105.00


                103.75
                                          South region GDP

                102.50


                101.25


                      1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

        Figure 6.5 Evolution of GDP in the North and South regions, following an increase
  Figure: Evolution of GDP following an increase in Southern Propensities
        in the propensity to save of South region households

  to Save
        to a higher steady-state level of output. What happensLecture 8our two-region
                                   Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 now in
New Notation       Increasing µS
                                                                    S
                                      Introduction     Increasing GT
                    Steady State Solutions in REG      Increasing (1 − µS )
                           Experiments with REG        Changing Liquidity Preferences


Evolution of Balances following an increase in µS
                                                       Introducing the Open Economy   185


               107.50


               106.25                                  North region GDP


               105.00


               103.75
                                         South region GDP

               102.50


               101.25


                     1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

       Figure 6.5 Evolution of GDP in the North and South regions, following an increase
         Figure: Evolution of Balances following an increase in µS
       in the propensity to save of South region households




       to a higher steady-state level of output. What happens now in our two-region
       economy if the households in one region decide to increase their propensity
                                  Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation             Increasing µS
                                                                           S
                                       Introduction           Increasing GT
                     Steady State Solutions in REG            Increasing (1 − µS )
                            Experiments with REG              Changing Liquidity Preferences


Evolution of Balances following a change in Southern
liquidity preferences.
                                                              Introducing the Open Economy   187



                0.120


                0.080
                                         Increase in household wealth
                                              of the South region
                0.040


                0.000
                                            Trade deficit of the South region
               –0.040

                                            Government deficit with the South region
               –0.080

                     1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001

          Figure 6.7 Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial
          assets by the household sector, government budget balance, trade balance – following
  Figure: Evolution of Balances following a change in Southern liquidity
          a decrease in the liquidity preference of South region households
  preferences.
          in liquidity preference by Southern households has some positive economic
          repercussions on the South, as it now benefits from higher total government
          expenditures. But all these effects are of a second-order magnitude.
                                  Stephen Kinsella        EC6012 Lecture 8
New Notation     Increasing µS
                                                          S
                              Introduction   Increasing GT
            Steady State Solutions in REG    Increasing (1 − µS )
                   Experiments with REG      Changing Liquidity Preferences


Next Time




     The Open Economy. Read GL, pages 187–211.




                         Stephen Kinsella    EC6012 Lecture 8

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The Evolution of a Regional Economy

  • 1. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG EC6012 Lecture 8 The Open Economy Stephen Kinsella Dept. Economics, University of Limerick March 11, 2008 Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 2. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Objectives today 1 New Notation 2 Introduction 3 Steady State Solutions in REG 4 Experiments with REG Increasing µS Increasing GTS Increasing (1 − µS ) Changing Liquidity Preferences Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 3. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG New Notation All the notation you’re no doubt familiar with (C , G , Y ), etc is still in use, but for space and sanity, I’m only including the newer variables and parameters to be used in this model. Symbol Meaning N, S North and South Holdings, respectively. µ Propen X Exports IM Imports GTN Total Government expenditures injected in a period. Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 4. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Introduction PC and PCEX are extended here to show the interactions and feedbacks from a two region economy with trade. We partition PC into a North (N) and a South (S) and allow imports and exports to and from these regions. Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 5. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Balance Sheet Matrix for REG Introducing the Open Economy 171 Table 6.1 Balance sheet of two-region economy (Model REG) North South Central households households Government bank Cash money N +Hh S +Hh −H 0 Bills +BN h +BS h −B +Bcb 0 Wealth (balancing item) N −Vh S −Vh −Vg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 temic approach, methodologically identical with the closed economy models Figure: Balance Sheet Matrix for REG already presented.2 Our open-economy models will evolve organically in stages from model PC in Chapter 4. We start off with the very same (closed) economy described by model PC, and then imagine how the economies of two component regions, which together make up the total, interact with one another and with the government. This will be Model REG. In subsequent sections we deal with a two-country system, each with its own currency. This will be Model OPEN. 6.2 The matrices of a two-region economy Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 6. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG National Income Equations YN = C N + G N + X N − IM N , (1) N N N IM = µ ·Y , (2) N S X = IM . (3) (4) Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 7. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 8. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 9. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 10. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 11. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 12. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Other Key Equations The next equations describe the evolution of regional disposable income, taxes, wealth, consumption, money demand and bills (we call them bonds) demand functions. YD N = Y N − T N + r−1 · Bh−1 N (5) TN = θ · (Y N + r−1 · Bh−1 ) N 0<θ<1 (6) N V = V−1 + (YD N − C N ) N (7) N C = N N α1 · YD N + α2 · V−1 N 0 < α1 < α2 < 1 (8) N Hh = V N − BhN (9) N Bh YD N = λN + λ N · r − λN · 0 1 2 (10) VN VN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 13. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Steady State Solutions A region reaches their steady state when the change in household wealth from period to period is zero, so ∆V = 0. The condition where this holds is GT + X N = T N + IM N N (11) In the stationary state, GDP in the North will depend on the following condition: GT + X N N Y N∗ = (12) θ + µN Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 14. New Notation Introduction Steady State Solutions in REG Experiments with REG Harrod’s Foreign Trade Multiplier Discussion Equation 12 shows the Harrod foreign trade multiplier, which shows how the North’s output is dependent on the North’s government expenditure and their exports, divided by the tax and import propensities. What does this imply for policies to get the economy to the steady state? Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 15. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Experiments: Evolution of Balances North and South Introducing the Open Economy 181 North region GDP 109.5 108.0 106.5 105.0 103.5 South region GDP 102.0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Figure 6.1 Evolution of GDP in the North and the South regions, following an increase in the propensity to import of the South region Figure: Evolution of Balances North and South The evolution of output in each region, as described in the preceding Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 16. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Evolution of GDP in North-South Regions following an increase in µS 182 Monetary Economics 0.00 Change in household wealth of the South region –0.25 –0.50 Government balance with the South region –0.75 –1.00 Trade balance of the South region –1.25 1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 Figure 6.2 Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial Figure:assets by the household sector, in North-South Regions following an increase Evolution of GDP government budget balance, trade balance – following in µS an increase in the propensity to import of the South region which exists between two parts of a single country which has a unitary fiscal Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 17. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences S Increasing GT 184 128.0 124.0 South region GDP 120.0 116.0 North region GDP 112.0 108.0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Figure 6.3 Evolution of GDP in the South and the North regions, following an increase Figure: Evolution of GDP in North-South Regions following an increase in the government expenditures in the South region S in GT 2.0 Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 18. 108.0 New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences S Figure 6.3 Evolution of GDP in the South and the North regions, following an increase Evolution of Balances following an increase in GT in the government expenditures in the South region 2.0 1.0 Change in household wealth of the South region 0.0 –1.0 Trade balance of the South region –2.0 Government balance with the South region –3.0 1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 Figure 6.4 Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial assets by the household sector, government budget balance, trade balance – following S Figure: Evolution of Balances following an increase in GT an increase in the government expenditures in the South region Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 19. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Evolution of GDP following an increase in Southern Propensities to Save Introducing the Open Economy 185 107.50 106.25 North region GDP 105.00 103.75 South region GDP 102.50 101.25 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Figure 6.5 Evolution of GDP in the North and South regions, following an increase Figure: Evolution of GDP following an increase in Southern Propensities in the propensity to save of South region households to Save to a higher steady-state level of output. What happensLecture 8our two-region Stephen Kinsella EC6012 now in
  • 20. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Evolution of Balances following an increase in µS Introducing the Open Economy 185 107.50 106.25 North region GDP 105.00 103.75 South region GDP 102.50 101.25 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Figure 6.5 Evolution of GDP in the North and South regions, following an increase Figure: Evolution of Balances following an increase in µS in the propensity to save of South region households to a higher steady-state level of output. What happens now in our two-region economy if the households in one region decide to increase their propensity Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 21. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Evolution of Balances following a change in Southern liquidity preferences. Introducing the Open Economy 187 0.120 0.080 Increase in household wealth of the South region 0.040 0.000 Trade deficit of the South region –0.040 Government deficit with the South region –0.080 1951 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 Figure 6.7 Evolution of the balances of the South region – net acquisition of financial assets by the household sector, government budget balance, trade balance – following Figure: Evolution of Balances following a change in Southern liquidity a decrease in the liquidity preference of South region households preferences. in liquidity preference by Southern households has some positive economic repercussions on the South, as it now benefits from higher total government expenditures. But all these effects are of a second-order magnitude. Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8
  • 22. New Notation Increasing µS S Introduction Increasing GT Steady State Solutions in REG Increasing (1 − µS ) Experiments with REG Changing Liquidity Preferences Next Time The Open Economy. Read GL, pages 187–211. Stephen Kinsella EC6012 Lecture 8