Markets
Labor market
Money market
Goods market
Var | Equilibrium | Market |
---|---|---|
Real Wage equilibrium | Labor Market | |
Price equilibrium | Money Market | |
Rate of Interest equilibrium | Goods Market |
Outcome / Inferences / Implications of Classical Model
- Full employment
- Crowding out phenomena Fiscal policy is ineffective.
- Neutrality of money Monetary Policy is ineffective
- Classical Dichotomydoubt
- To solve real, we don’t need nominal
- To solve nominal, we don’t need real
- Aggregate supply curve is vertical
- All the variables are analyzed from real magnitude
- Economy as a whole is self-regulative
- Labor supply curve is backward bending
- Supply side economics - Ignores demand
Differences Classical Model and Keynesian Model
Classical Model | Keynesian Model |
---|---|
Full Employment | Full employment is rare |
Equilibrium is attained | Dis-equilibrium |
Supply driven | Demand driven |
Due to great depression
1929
unemployment rates1933
unemployment rates
This is why Keynesian Model came into picture. was high. Demand was low.
Savings is the reason for less demand.
Equilibrium is like a pendulum (dynamic).