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IS–LM model

IS–LM model, or Hicks–Hansen model, is a two-dimensional macroeconomic tool that shows the relationship between interest rates and assets market (also known as real output in goods and services market plus money market). The intersection of the "investmentsaving" (IS) and "liquidity preferencemoney supply" (LM) curves models "general equilibrium" where supposed simultaneous equilibria occur in both the goods and the asset markets.[1] Yet two equivalent interpretations are possible: first, the IS–LM model explains changes in national income when the price level is fixed in the short-run; second, the IS–LM model shows why an aggregate demand curve can shift.[2] Hence, this tool is sometimes used not only to analyse economic fluctuations but also to suggest potential levels for appropriate stabilisation policies.[3]

The IS curve moves to the right, causing higher interest rates (i) and expansion in the "real" economy (real GDP, or Y)

The model was developed by John Hicks in 1937[4] and was later extended by Alvin Hansen,[5] as a mathematical representation of Keynesian macroeconomic theory. Between the 1940s and mid-1970s, it was the leading framework of macroeconomic analysis.[6] While it has been largely absent from macroeconomic research ever since, it is still a backbone conceptual introductory tool in many macroeconomics textbooks.[7] By itself, the IS–LM model is used to study the short run when prices are fixed or sticky and no inflation is taken into consideration. But in practice the main role of the model is as a path to explain the AD–AS model.[2]

History

The IS–LM model was introduced at a conference of the Econometric Society held in Oxford during September 1936. Roy Harrod, John R. Hicks, and James Meade all presented papers describing mathematical models attempting to summarize John Maynard Keynes' General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money.[4][8] Hicks, who had seen a draft of Harrod's paper, invented the IS–LM model (originally using the abbreviation "LL", not "LM"). He later presented it in "Mr. Keynes and the Classics: A Suggested Interpretation".[4]

Although generally accepted as being imperfect, the model is seen as a useful pedagogical tool for imparting an understanding of the questions that macroeconomists today attempt to answer through more nuanced approaches. As such, it is included in most undergraduate macroeconomics textbooks, but omitted from most graduate texts due to the current dominance of real business cycle and new Keynesian theories.[9] For a contemporary and alternative reinvention of the IS-LM approach that uses Keynesian Search Theory, see Roger Farmer's work on the IS-LM-NAC model, part of his broader research agenda which studies how beliefs independently influence macroeconomic outcomes.[10][11]

Formation

The point where the IS and LM schedules intersect represents a short-run equilibrium in the real and monetary sectors (though not necessarily in other sectors, such as labor markets): both the product market and the money market are in equilibrium. This equilibrium yields a unique combination of the interest rate and real GDP.

IS (investment–saving) curve

 
IS curve represented by equilibrium in the money market and Keynesian cross diagram.

The IS curve shows the causation from interest rates to planned investment to national income and output.

For the investment–saving curve, the independent variable is the interest rate and the dependent variable is the level of income. The IS curve is drawn as downward-sloping with the interest rate r on the vertical axis and GDP (gross domestic product: Y) on the horizontal axis. The IS curve represents the locus where total spending (consumer spending + planned private investment + government purchases + net exports) equals total output (real income, Y, or GDP).

The IS curve also represents the equilibria where total private investment equals total saving, with saving equal to consumer saving plus government saving (the budget surplus) plus foreign saving (the trade surplus). The level of real GDP (Y) is determined along this line for each interest rate. Every level of the real interest rate will generate a certain level of investment and spending: lower interest rates encourage higher investment and more spending. The multiplier effect of an increase in fixed investment resulting from a lower interest rate raises real GDP. This explains the downward slope of the IS curve. In summary, the IS curve shows the causation from interest rates to planned fixed investment to rising national income and output.

The IS curve is defined by the equation

 

where Y represents income,   represents consumer spending increasing as a function of disposable income (income, Y, minus taxes, T(Y), which themselves depend positively on income),   represents business investment decreasing as a function of the real interest rate, G represents government spending, and NX(Y) represents net exports (exports minus imports) decreasing as a function of income (decreasing because imports are an increasing function of income).

LM (liquidity-money) curve

 
The money market equilibrium diagram.

The LM curve shows the combinations of interest rates and levels of real income for which the money market is in equilibrium. It shows where money demand equals money supply. For the LM curve, the independent variable is income and the dependent variable is the interest rate.

In the money market equilibrium diagram, the liquidity preference function is the willingness to hold cash. The liquidity preference function is downward sloping (i.e. the willingness to hold cash increases as the interest rate decreases). Two basic elements determine the quantity of cash balances demanded:

  1. Transactions demand for money: this includes both (a) the willingness to hold cash for everyday transactions and (b) a precautionary measure (money demand in case of emergencies). Transactions demand is positively related to real GDP. As GDP is considered exogenous to the liquidity preference function, changes in GDP shift the curve.
  2. Speculative demand for money: this is the willingness to hold cash instead of securities as an asset for investment purposes. Speculative demand is inversely related to the interest rate. As the interest rate rises, the opportunity cost of holding money rather than investing in securities increases. So, as interest rates rise, speculative demand for money falls.

Money supply is determined by central bank decisions and willingness of commercial banks to loan money. Money supply in effect is perfectly inelastic with respect to nominal interest rates. Thus the money supply function is represented as a vertical line – money supply is a constant, independent of the interest rate, GDP, and other factors. Mathematically, the LM curve is defined by the equation  , where the supply of money is represented as the real amount M/P (as opposed to the nominal amount M), with P representing the price level, and L being the real demand for money, which is some function of the interest rate and the level of real income.

An increase in GDP shifts the liquidity preference function rightward and hence increases the interest rate. Thus the LM function is positively sloped.

Shifts

One hypothesis is that a government's deficit spending ("fiscal policy") has an effect similar to that of a lower saving rate or increased private fixed investment, increasing the amount of demand for goods at each individual interest rate. An increased deficit by the national government shifts the IS curve to the right. This raises the equilibrium interest rate (from i1 to i2) and national income (from Y1 to Y2), as shown in the graph above. The equilibrium level of national income in the IS–LM diagram is referred to as aggregate demand.

Keynesians argue spending may actually "crowd in" (encourage) private fixed investment via the accelerator effect, which helps long-term growth. Further, if government deficits are spent on productive public investment (e.g., infrastructure or public health) that spending directly and eventually raises potential output, although not necessarily more (or less) than the lost private investment might have. The extent of any crowding out depends on the shape of the LM curve. A shift in the IS curve along a relatively flat LM curve can increase output substantially with little change in the interest rate. On the other hand, an rightward shift in the IS curve along a vertical LM curve will lead to higher interest rates, but no change in output (this case represents the "Treasury view").

Rightward shifts of the IS curve also result from exogenous increases in investment spending (i.e., for reasons other than interest rates or income), in consumer spending, and in export spending by people outside the economy being modelled, as well as by exogenous decreases in spending on imports. Thus these too raise both equilibrium income and the equilibrium interest rate. Of course, changes in these variables in the opposite direction shift the IS curve in the opposite direction.

The IS–LM model also allows for the role of monetary policy. If the money supply is increased, that shifts the LM curve downward or to the right, lowering interest rates and raising equilibrium national income. Further, exogenous decreases in liquidity preference, perhaps due to improved transactions technologies, lead to downward shifts of the LM curve and thus increases in income and decreases in interest rates. Changes in these variables in the opposite direction shift the LM curve in the opposite direction.

Incorporation into larger models

By itself, the IS–LM model is used to study the short run when prices are fixed or sticky and no inflation is taken into consideration. But in practice the main role of the model is as a sub-model of larger models (especially the Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply model – the AD–AS model) which allow for a flexible price level. In the aggregate demand-aggregate supply model, each point on the aggregate demand curve is an outcome of the IS–LM model for aggregate demand Y based on a particular price level. Starting from one point on the aggregate demand curve, at a particular price level and a quantity of aggregate demand implied by the IS–LM model for that price level, if one considers a higher potential price level, in the IS–LM model the real money supply M/P will be lower and hence the LM curve will be shifted higher, leading to lower aggregate demand as measured by the horizontal location of the IS–LM intersection; hence at the higher price level the level of aggregate demand is lower, so the aggregate demand curve is negatively sloped.

Introduction of the new full equilibrium (FE) component: The IS–LM–FE model

Sir John Hicks, a Nobel laureate, created the model in 1937 as a graphical representation of the ideas introduced by John Maynard Keynes in his influential 1936 book, The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. [12] In his original IS–LM model, Hicks assumed that the price level was fixed, reflecting John Maynard Keynes' belief that wages and prices do not adapt quickly to clear markets.

The introduction of an adjustment to Hicks' loose assumption of a fixed price level requires allowing the price level to change. Allowing the price level to change necessitates the addition of a third component, the full equilibrium (FE) condition.[12] When this component is added to the IS–LM model, a new model called IS–LM–FE emerges. The IS–LM–FE model is widely used in cyclical fluctuations analysis, forecasting, and macroeconomic policymaking.[12] There are many advantages to using the IS–LM–FE model as a framework for both classical and Keynesian analyses: First, rather than learning two different models for classical and Keynesian analyses, a single model can be used for both.[12] Second, using a single framework highlights the many areas of agreement between the Keynesian and classical approaches while also emphasizing the differences between them. Furthermore, since various versions of the IS–LM–FE model (along with its ideas and terminology) are frequently used in economic and macroeconomic policy analyses, studying this framework will help to understand and engage in contemporary economic debates. Three approaches are used when analyzing this economic model: graphical, numerical, and algebraic.

Reinventing IS-LM: the IS-LM-NAC model

In the IS-LM-NAC model, the long-run effect of monetary policy depends on the way people form beliefs.[13] Roger Farmer and Konstantin Platonov study a case they call 'persistent adaptive beliefs' in which people believe, correctly, that shocks to asset values are permanent. The important innovation in this work is a model of the labor market in which there can be a continuum of long-run steady state equilibria.

See also

References

  1. ^ Gordon, Robert J. (2009). Macroeconomics (Eleventh ed.). Boston: Pearson Addison Wesley. ISBN 9780321552075.
  2. ^ a b Mankiw, N. Gregory (2012). Macroeconomics (Eighth ed.). New York: Worth Publishers. ISBN 9781429240024.
  3. ^ Sloman, John; Wride, Alison (2009). Economics (Seventh ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 9780273715627.
  4. ^ a b c Hicks, J. R. (1937). "Mr. Keynes and the 'Classics': A Suggested Interpretation". Econometrica. 5 (2): 147–159. doi:10.2307/1907242. JSTOR 1907242.
  5. ^ Hansen, A. H. (1953). A Guide to Keynes. New York: McGraw Hill. ISBN 9780070260467.
  6. ^ Bentolila, Samuel (2005). "Hicks–Hansen model". An Eponymous Dictionary of Economics: A Guide to Laws and Theorems Named after Economists. Edward Elgar. ISBN 978-1-84376-029-0.
  7. ^ Colander, David (2004). "The Strange Persistence of the IS-LM Model" (PDF). History of Political Economy. 36 (Annual Supplement): 305–322. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.692.6446. doi:10.1215/00182702-36-suppl_1-305. S2CID 6705939.
  8. ^ Meade, J. E. (1937). "A Simplified Model of Mr. Keynes' System". Review of Economic Studies. 4 (2): 98–107. doi:10.2307/2967607. JSTOR 2967607.
  9. ^ Mankiw, N. Gregory (May 2006). "The Macroeconomist as Scientist and Engineer" (PDF). p. 19. Retrieved 2014-11-17.
  10. ^ Farmer, Roger E. A.; Platonov, Konstantin (2019). "Animal spirits in a monetary model" (PDF). European Economic Review. 115: 60–77. doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2019.02.005. S2CID 55928575.
  11. ^ Farmer, Roger E. A. (2016-09-02). "Reinventing IS-LM: The IS-LM-NAC model and how to use it". Vox EU. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  12. ^ a b c d Acemoglu, Daron; David I. Laibson; John A. List (2018). Macroeconomics (Second ed.). New York. ISBN 978-0-13-449205-6. OCLC 956396690.
  13. ^ Farmer, Roger E. A. (2012). "Confidence, crashes, and animal spirits" (PDF). The Economic Journal. 122 (559): 155–172. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0297.2011.02474.x. S2CID 16986435.

Further reading

  • Ackley, Gardner (1978). "The 'IS–LM' Form of the Model". Macroeconomics: Theory and Policy. New York: Macmillan. pp. 358–383. ISBN 978-0-02-300290-8.
  • Barro, Robert J. (1984). "The Keynesian Theory of Business Fluctuations". Macroeconomics. New York: John Wiley. pp. 487–513. ISBN 978-0-471-87407-2.
  • Darby, Michael R. (1976). "The Complete Keynesian Model". Macroeconomics. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 285–304. ISBN 978-0-07-015346-2.
  • Farmer, Roger E. A. (2012). "Confidence, crashes, and animal spirits" (PDF). The Economic Journal. 122 (559): 155–172. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0297.2011.02474.x. S2CID 16986435.
  • Farmer, Roger E. A.; Platonov, Konstantin (2019). "Animal spirits in a monetary model" (PDF). European Economic Review. 115: 60–77. doi:10.1016/j.euroecorev.2019.02.005. S2CID 55928575.
  • Farmer, Roger E. A. (2016-09-02). "Reinventing IS-LM: The IS-LM-NAC model and how to use it". Vox EU. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  • Dernburg, Thomas F.; McDougall, Duncan M. (1980). "Macroeconomic Equilibrium: The Level of Economic Activity". Macroeconomics (Sixth ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 53–229. ISBN 978-0-07-016534-2.
  • Keiser, Norman F. (1975). "The Real-Goods and Monetary Spheres". Macroeconomics (Second ed.). New York: Random House. pp. 231–260. ISBN 978-0-394-31922-3.
  • Krugman, Paul (2011-10-09). "IS-LMentary". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
  • Leijonhufvud, Axel (1983). "What is Wrong with IS/LM?". In Fitoussi, Jean-Paul (ed.). Modern Macroeconomic Theory. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 49–90. ISBN 978-0-631-13158-8.
  • Mankiw, N. Gregory (2013). "Aggregate Demand I+II". Macroeconomics (Eighth international ed.). London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 301–352. ISBN 978-1-4641-2167-8.
  • Sawyer, John A. (1989). "A Model from Keynes's General Theory". Macroeconomic Theory. New York: Harvester Wheatsheaf. pp. 62–95. ISBN 978-0-7450-0555-3.
  • Smith, Warren L. (1956). "A Graphical Exposition of the Complete Keynesian System". Southern Economic Journal. 23 (2): 115–125. doi:10.2307/1053551. JSTOR 1053551.
  • Vroey, Michel de; Hoover, Kevin D., eds. (2004). The IS-LM model: Its Rise, Fall, and Strange Persistence. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-6631-7.
  • Young, Warren; Zilberfarb, Ben-Zion, eds. (2000). IS-LM and Modern Macroeconomics. Recent Economic Thought. Vol. 73. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-7923-7966-9.

External links

  • Krugman, Paul. There's something about macro – An explanation of the model and its role in understanding macroeconomics.
  • Krugman, Paul. IS-LMentary – A basic explanation of the model and its uses.
  • Wiens, Elmer G. IS–LM model – An online, interactive IS–LM model of the Canadian economy.

model, hicks, hansen, model, dimensional, macroeconomic, tool, that, shows, relationship, between, interest, rates, assets, market, also, known, real, output, goods, services, market, plus, money, market, intersection, investment, saving, liquidity, preference. IS LM model or Hicks Hansen model is a two dimensional macroeconomic tool that shows the relationship between interest rates and assets market also known as real output in goods and services market plus money market The intersection of the investment saving IS and liquidity preference money supply LM curves models general equilibrium where supposed simultaneous equilibria occur in both the goods and the asset markets 1 Yet two equivalent interpretations are possible first the IS LM model explains changes in national income when the price level is fixed in the short run second the IS LM model shows why an aggregate demand curve can shift 2 Hence this tool is sometimes used not only to analyse economic fluctuations but also to suggest potential levels for appropriate stabilisation policies 3 The IS curve moves to the right causing higher interest rates i and expansion in the real economy real GDP or Y The model was developed by John Hicks in 1937 4 and was later extended by Alvin Hansen 5 as a mathematical representation of Keynesian macroeconomic theory Between the 1940s and mid 1970s it was the leading framework of macroeconomic analysis 6 While it has been largely absent from macroeconomic research ever since it is still a backbone conceptual introductory tool in many macroeconomics textbooks 7 By itself the IS LM model is used to study the short run when prices are fixed or sticky and no inflation is taken into consideration But in practice the main role of the model is as a path to explain the AD AS model 2 Contents 1 History 2 Formation 2 1 IS investment saving curve 2 2 LM liquidity money curve 3 Shifts 4 Incorporation into larger models 5 Introduction of the new full equilibrium FE component The IS LM FE model 6 Reinventing IS LM the IS LM NAC model 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditThe IS LM model was introduced at a conference of the Econometric Society held in Oxford during September 1936 Roy Harrod John R Hicks and James Meade all presented papers describing mathematical models attempting to summarize John Maynard Keynes General Theory of Employment Interest and Money 4 8 Hicks who had seen a draft of Harrod s paper invented the IS LM model originally using the abbreviation LL not LM He later presented it in Mr Keynes and the Classics A Suggested Interpretation 4 Although generally accepted as being imperfect the model is seen as a useful pedagogical tool for imparting an understanding of the questions that macroeconomists today attempt to answer through more nuanced approaches As such it is included in most undergraduate macroeconomics textbooks but omitted from most graduate texts due to the current dominance of real business cycle and new Keynesian theories 9 For a contemporary and alternative reinvention of the IS LM approach that uses Keynesian Search Theory see Roger Farmer s work on the IS LM NAC model part of his broader research agenda which studies how beliefs independently influence macroeconomic outcomes 10 11 Formation EditThe point where the IS and LM schedules intersect represents a short run equilibrium in the real and monetary sectors though not necessarily in other sectors such as labor markets both the product market and the money market are in equilibrium This equilibrium yields a unique combination of the interest rate and real GDP IS investment saving curve Edit IS curve represented by equilibrium in the money market and Keynesian cross diagram The IS curve shows the causation from interest rates to planned investment to national income and output For the investment saving curve the independent variable is the interest rate and the dependent variable is the level of income The IS curve is drawn as downward sloping with the interest rate r on the vertical axis and GDP gross domestic product Y on the horizontal axis The IS curve represents the locus where total spending consumer spending planned private investment government purchases net exports equals total output real income Y or GDP The IS curve also represents the equilibria where total private investment equals total saving with saving equal to consumer saving plus government saving the budget surplus plus foreign saving the trade surplus The level of real GDP Y is determined along this line for each interest rate Every level of the real interest rate will generate a certain level of investment and spending lower interest rates encourage higher investment and more spending The multiplier effect of an increase in fixed investment resulting from a lower interest rate raises real GDP This explains the downward slope of the IS curve In summary the IS curve shows the causation from interest rates to planned fixed investment to rising national income and output The IS curve is defined by the equation Y C Y T Y I r G N X Y displaystyle Y C left Y T Y right I left r right G NX Y where Y represents income C Y T Y displaystyle C Y T Y represents consumer spending increasing as a function of disposable income income Y minus taxes T Y which themselves depend positively on income I r displaystyle I r represents business investment decreasing as a function of the real interest rate G represents government spending and NX Y represents net exports exports minus imports decreasing as a function of income decreasing because imports are an increasing function of income LM liquidity money curve Edit The money market equilibrium diagram The LM curve shows the combinations of interest rates and levels of real income for which the money market is in equilibrium It shows where money demand equals money supply For the LM curve the independent variable is income and the dependent variable is the interest rate In the money market equilibrium diagram the liquidity preference function is the willingness to hold cash The liquidity preference function is downward sloping i e the willingness to hold cash increases as the interest rate decreases Two basic elements determine the quantity of cash balances demanded Transactions demand for money this includes both a the willingness to hold cash for everyday transactions and b a precautionary measure money demand in case of emergencies Transactions demand is positively related to real GDP As GDP is considered exogenous to the liquidity preference function changes in GDP shift the curve Speculative demand for money this is the willingness to hold cash instead of securities as an asset for investment purposes Speculative demand is inversely related to the interest rate As the interest rate rises the opportunity cost of holding money rather than investing in securities increases So as interest rates rise speculative demand for money falls Money supply is determined by central bank decisions and willingness of commercial banks to loan money Money supply in effect is perfectly inelastic with respect to nominal interest rates Thus the money supply function is represented as a vertical line money supply is a constant independent of the interest rate GDP and other factors Mathematically the LM curve is defined by the equation M P L i Y displaystyle M P L i Y where the supply of money is represented as the real amount M P as opposed to the nominal amount M with P representing the price level and L being the real demand for money which is some function of the interest rate and the level of real income An increase in GDP shifts the liquidity preference function rightward and hence increases the interest rate Thus the LM function is positively sloped Shifts EditOne hypothesis is that a government s deficit spending fiscal policy has an effect similar to that of a lower saving rate or increased private fixed investment increasing the amount of demand for goods at each individual interest rate An increased deficit by the national government shifts the IS curve to the right This raises the equilibrium interest rate from i1 to i2 and national income from Y1 to Y2 as shown in the graph above The equilibrium level of national income in the IS LM diagram is referred to as aggregate demand Keynesians argue spending may actually crowd in encourage private fixed investment via the accelerator effect which helps long term growth Further if government deficits are spent on productive public investment e g infrastructure or public health that spending directly and eventually raises potential output although not necessarily more or less than the lost private investment might have The extent of any crowding out depends on the shape of the LM curve A shift in the IS curve along a relatively flat LM curve can increase output substantially with little change in the interest rate On the other hand an rightward shift in the IS curve along a vertical LM curve will lead to higher interest rates but no change in output this case represents the Treasury view Rightward shifts of the IS curve also result from exogenous increases in investment spending i e for reasons other than interest rates or income in consumer spending and in export spending by people outside the economy being modelled as well as by exogenous decreases in spending on imports Thus these too raise both equilibrium income and the equilibrium interest rate Of course changes in these variables in the opposite direction shift the IS curve in the opposite direction The IS LM model also allows for the role of monetary policy If the money supply is increased that shifts the LM curve downward or to the right lowering interest rates and raising equilibrium national income Further exogenous decreases in liquidity preference perhaps due to improved transactions technologies lead to downward shifts of the LM curve and thus increases in income and decreases in interest rates Changes in these variables in the opposite direction shift the LM curve in the opposite direction Incorporation into larger models EditBy itself the IS LM model is used to study the short run when prices are fixed or sticky and no inflation is taken into consideration But in practice the main role of the model is as a sub model of larger models especially the Aggregate Demand Aggregate Supply model the AD AS model which allow for a flexible price level In the aggregate demand aggregate supply model each point on the aggregate demand curve is an outcome of the IS LM model for aggregate demand Y based on a particular price level Starting from one point on the aggregate demand curve at a particular price level and a quantity of aggregate demand implied by the IS LM model for that price level if one considers a higher potential price level in the IS LM model the real money supply M P will be lower and hence the LM curve will be shifted higher leading to lower aggregate demand as measured by the horizontal location of the IS LM intersection hence at the higher price level the level of aggregate demand is lower so the aggregate demand curve is negatively sloped Introduction of the new full equilibrium FE component The IS LM FE model EditSir John Hicks a Nobel laureate created the model in 1937 as a graphical representation of the ideas introduced by John Maynard Keynes in his influential 1936 book The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money 12 In his original IS LM model Hicks assumed that the price level was fixed reflecting John Maynard Keynes belief that wages and prices do not adapt quickly to clear markets The introduction of an adjustment to Hicks loose assumption of a fixed price level requires allowing the price level to change Allowing the price level to change necessitates the addition of a third component the full equilibrium FE condition 12 When this component is added to the IS LM model a new model called IS LM FE emerges The IS LM FE model is widely used in cyclical fluctuations analysis forecasting and macroeconomic policymaking 12 There are many advantages to using the IS LM FE model as a framework for both classical and Keynesian analyses First rather than learning two different models for classical and Keynesian analyses a single model can be used for both 12 Second using a single framework highlights the many areas of agreement between the Keynesian and classical approaches while also emphasizing the differences between them Furthermore since various versions of the IS LM FE model along with its ideas and terminology are frequently used in economic and macroeconomic policy analyses studying this framework will help to understand and engage in contemporary economic debates Three approaches are used when analyzing this economic model graphical numerical and algebraic Reinventing IS LM the IS LM NAC model EditIn the IS LM NAC model the long run effect of monetary policy depends on the way people form beliefs 13 Roger Farmer and Konstantin Platonov study a case they call persistent adaptive beliefs in which people believe correctly that shocks to asset values are permanent The important innovation in this work is a model of the labor market in which there can be a continuum of long run steady state equilibria See also EditKeynesian cross AD IA model IS MP model Mundell Fleming model National savings Policy mixReferences Edit Gordon Robert J 2009 Macroeconomics Eleventh ed Boston Pearson Addison Wesley ISBN 9780321552075 a b Mankiw N Gregory 2012 Macroeconomics Eighth ed New York Worth Publishers ISBN 9781429240024 Sloman John Wride Alison 2009 Economics Seventh ed Prentice Hall ISBN 9780273715627 a b c Hicks J R 1937 Mr Keynes and the Classics A Suggested Interpretation Econometrica 5 2 147 159 doi 10 2307 1907242 JSTOR 1907242 Hansen A H 1953 A Guide to Keynes New York McGraw Hill ISBN 9780070260467 Bentolila Samuel 2005 Hicks Hansen model An Eponymous Dictionary of Economics A Guide to Laws and Theorems Named after Economists Edward Elgar ISBN 978 1 84376 029 0 Colander David 2004 The Strange Persistence of the IS LM Model PDF History of Political Economy 36 Annual Supplement 305 322 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 692 6446 doi 10 1215 00182702 36 suppl 1 305 S2CID 6705939 Meade J E 1937 A Simplified Model of Mr Keynes System Review of Economic Studies 4 2 98 107 doi 10 2307 2967607 JSTOR 2967607 Mankiw N Gregory May 2006 The Macroeconomist as Scientist and Engineer PDF p 19 Retrieved 2014 11 17 Farmer Roger E A Platonov Konstantin 2019 Animal spirits in a monetary model PDF European Economic Review 115 60 77 doi 10 1016 j euroecorev 2019 02 005 S2CID 55928575 Farmer Roger E A 2016 09 02 Reinventing IS LM The IS LM NAC model and how to use it Vox EU Retrieved 2020 10 01 a b c d Acemoglu Daron David I Laibson John A List 2018 Macroeconomics Second ed New York ISBN 978 0 13 449205 6 OCLC 956396690 Farmer Roger E A 2012 Confidence crashes and animal spirits PDF The Economic Journal 122 559 155 172 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0297 2011 02474 x S2CID 16986435 Further reading EditAckley Gardner 1978 The IS LM Form of the Model Macroeconomics Theory and Policy New York Macmillan pp 358 383 ISBN 978 0 02 300290 8 Barro Robert J 1984 The Keynesian Theory of Business Fluctuations Macroeconomics New York John Wiley pp 487 513 ISBN 978 0 471 87407 2 Darby Michael R 1976 The Complete Keynesian Model Macroeconomics New York McGraw Hill pp 285 304 ISBN 978 0 07 015346 2 Farmer Roger E A 2012 Confidence crashes and animal spirits PDF The Economic Journal 122 559 155 172 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0297 2011 02474 x S2CID 16986435 Farmer Roger E A Platonov Konstantin 2019 Animal spirits in a monetary model PDF European Economic Review 115 60 77 doi 10 1016 j euroecorev 2019 02 005 S2CID 55928575 Farmer Roger E A 2016 09 02 Reinventing IS LM The IS LM NAC model and how to use it Vox EU Retrieved 2020 10 01 Dernburg Thomas F McDougall Duncan M 1980 Macroeconomic Equilibrium The Level of Economic Activity Macroeconomics Sixth ed New York McGraw Hill pp 53 229 ISBN 978 0 07 016534 2 Keiser Norman F 1975 The Real Goods and Monetary Spheres Macroeconomics Second ed New York Random House pp 231 260 ISBN 978 0 394 31922 3 Krugman Paul 2011 10 09 IS LMentary The New York Times Retrieved 2020 10 01 Leijonhufvud Axel 1983 What is Wrong with IS LM In Fitoussi Jean Paul ed Modern Macroeconomic Theory Oxford Blackwell pp 49 90 ISBN 978 0 631 13158 8 Mankiw N Gregory 2013 Aggregate Demand I II Macroeconomics Eighth international ed London Palgrave Macmillan pp 301 352 ISBN 978 1 4641 2167 8 Sawyer John A 1989 A Model from Keynes s General Theory Macroeconomic Theory New York Harvester Wheatsheaf pp 62 95 ISBN 978 0 7450 0555 3 Smith Warren L 1956 A Graphical Exposition of the Complete Keynesian System Southern Economic Journal 23 2 115 125 doi 10 2307 1053551 JSTOR 1053551 Vroey Michel de Hoover Kevin D eds 2004 The IS LM model Its Rise Fall and Strange Persistence Durham Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 6631 7 Young Warren Zilberfarb Ben Zion eds 2000 IS LM and Modern Macroeconomics Recent Economic Thought Vol 73 Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 0 7923 7966 9 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to IS LM model Wikimedia Commons has media related to IS LM model diagrams Krugman Paul There s something about macro An explanation of the model and its role in understanding macroeconomics Krugman Paul IS LMentary A basic explanation of the model and its uses Wiens Elmer G IS LM model An online interactive IS LM model of the Canadian economy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title IS LM model amp oldid 1134968214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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