ECON 2000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 34: Nominal Interest Rate, Real Interest Rate, Classical Dichotomy

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ECON 2000
Lecture 34
The Causes of Hyperinflation
Hyperinflations caused by excessive growth in the supply of money
When central bank prints money, price levels rise
If it prints money rapidly enough, the result is hyperinflation
When gov’t cannot raise taxes or sell bonds, it finances spending
increases by printing money, which causes hyperinflation
In theory, solution to hyperinflation is simple: stop printing money
o In real world, this requires drastic and painful fiscal restraint
Real variables are all variables measured in physical units
o Real GDP = quantity of G&S produced in given year
o Real wage = quantity of output a worker earns for each hour of work
o Real interest rate = quantity of output earned in future by lending 1
unit of output today
Nominal variables are variables expressed in terms of money
o Price level = number of dollars needed to buy representative basket
of goods
o Nominal wage = dollars per hour of work
o Nominal interest rate = dollars earned in future by lending one dollar
today
Classical dichotomy theoretical separation of real and nominal
variables in classic model, which implies that nominal variables do not
affect real variables
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Document Summary

Hyperinflations caused by excessive growth in the supply of money. When central bank prints money, price levels rise. If it prints money rapidly enough, the result is hyperinflation. When gov"t cannot raise taxes or sell bonds, it finances spending increases by printing money, which causes hyperinflation. In theory, solution to hyperinflation is simple: stop printing money: in real world, this requires drastic and painful fiscal restraint. Classical dichotomy theoretical separation of real and nominal variables in classic model, which implies that nominal variables do not affect real variables. Monetary neutrality changes in money supply do not affect real variables. In real world, money is approximately neutral in the long run. Canada"s gdp growth averages around 3. 1% per year over long run, but has large fluctuations in the short run. When there is falling output and rising unemployment, economy said to be in recession. Okun"s law the negative relationship between gdp and unemployment: as gdp falls, unemployment rises (and vice versa)

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