Chapter 22: The Short Run Trade Off Between Inflation and Unemployment
Supply Shock
An event that directly alters firms' costs and prices, shifting the economy's aggregate-supply curve and thus the Phillips curve.
Phillips Curve
A curve that shows the short run trade off between inflation and unemployment. A curve that shows the combinations of inflation and unemployment that arise in the short run as shifts in the aggregate-demand curve move the economy along the short-run aggregate-supply curve.
Long Run Phillips Curve
According to Friedman and Phelps, there is no trade-off between inflation and unemployment in the long run. Growth in the money supply determines the inflation rate. Regardless of the inflation rate, the unemployment rate gravitates toward its natural rate. As a result, the long-run Phillips curve is vertical.
Natural Rate Hypothesis
The claim that unemployment eventually returns to its normal, or natural, rate, regardless of the rate of inflation.
What is the difference between the short-run and long-run Phillips curve?
The long-run Phillips curve is negatively sloped, indicating an inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation, whereas the short-run curve is vertical.
Sacrifice Ratio
The number of percentage points of annual output lost in the process of reducing inflation by 1 percentage point.
Misery Index
The sum of the unemployment and inflation rates.
Rational Expectations
The theory that people optimally use all the information they have, including information about government policies, when forecasting the future.