Explanatory Power of WS-PS and Phillips Curve Models for Oil Price Shocks
The integrated framework of the WS-PS model and the Phillips curve is used to analyze and explain the combined effects on an economy that stem from a one-off increase in the world price of oil.
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Related
Graphical Derivation of the Phillips Curve from the WS-PS Model
Definition of the Real Wage
Figure 4.8: Phillips's Original Data and Curve for British Wage Inflation and Unemployment (1861–1913)
Explanatory Power of WS-PS and Phillips Curve Models for Oil Price Shocks
Cost of Job Loss and its Relation to Unemployment
In an economy with a very low unemployment rate, a persistent increase in the general price level is observed. Based on the theoretical framework of wage and price setting, what is the primary causal chain that explains this phenomenon?
A sustained period of very low unemployment can lead to a continuous increase in the general price level. Arrange the following events in the correct causal order that describes this process according to a wage-setting and price-setting framework.
Labor Market Dynamics and Price Stability
Firms' Pricing Behavior and Inflation
The Role of the Bargaining Gap in Generating Inflation
According to the wage-setting and price-setting framework, when unemployment is low, the resulting cycle of nominal wage and price increases leads to a sustained rise in the real wage for workers.
Match each labor market condition or action with its most direct consequence within a wage-setting and price-setting framework that links unemployment to inflation.
In a wage-setting and price-setting framework, the discrepancy between the real wage that workers can secure due to their bargaining power and the real wage that firms are willing to offer to maintain their profit margins is known as the __________. This discrepancy is the direct driver of inflation.
Evaluating a Policy of Low Unemployment with Price Controls
An economy is operating at an unemployment level where workers' wage demands are consistent with firms' profit margins, resulting in stable prices. A sudden surge in aggregate demand causes unemployment to fall significantly below this level. What is the most likely immediate outcome according to a wage-setting and price-setting framework?
The Wage-Setting Process and the 'No-Shirking' Wage
Structural Unemployment as the Inflation-Stabilizing Rate
WS-PS and Phillips Curve Explanation for Oil Price Shocks
Learn After
The Role of High Unemployment in Reducing Inflation After the 1970s Oil Shocks
Economic Impact of an Energy Price Surge
Consider an economy described by a wage-setting (WS) and price-setting (PS) framework, which in turn determines the relationship between inflation and unemployment. If this economy experiences a sudden and permanent increase in the world price of oil, what is the most accurate description of the resulting changes within this framework?
An economy, initially in a stable equilibrium, experiences a sudden, one-off increase in the world price of oil. According to the integrated wage-setting/price-setting and Phillips curve framework, arrange the following events in the correct chronological order to describe the economy's adjustment process.
Analyzing an Oil Price Shock
According to the standard wage-setting and price-setting framework, a one-off increase in the world price of oil leads to higher inflation primarily because it shifts the wage-setting curve upwards, reflecting workers' demands for higher real wages to cover increased energy costs.
Mechanism of an Oil Price Shock
An economy experiences a one-off, permanent increase in the world price of oil. Match each economic event or cause with its direct consequence within the wage-setting/price-setting (WS-PS) and Phillips curve framework.
In an economic framework where firms set prices as a markup over their costs, a sudden increase in the world price of oil reduces the real wage that firms can profitably offer. At the initial level of unemployment, this creates a positive __________ between the wage workers demand and the wage firms offer, triggering an upward shift in the economy's inflation-unemployment trade-off.
An economy is in a medium-run equilibrium with stable inflation. It then experiences a significant and permanent increase in the global price of a key imported input, like oil. Within a framework where firms set prices as a markup over costs and wages are determined by bargaining, which statement best explains why this shock can lead to a period of rising inflation combined with rising unemployment?
An economy, where inflation arises from the interplay between wage-setting by workers and price-setting by firms, is hit by a large, permanent increase in the global price of oil. A policy advisor argues, 'To prevent a rise in unemployment, the central bank should use expansionary policy to maintain the current level of aggregate demand and employment.' Which of the following statements provides the most accurate evaluation of this policy recommendation based on this economic framework?
Restoring Stable Inflation Post-Supply Shock via Higher Unemployment
Immediate Effects of an Oil Price Shock: PS Curve Shift and Output Share Redistribution
Application and Implications of WS-PS and Phillips Curve Models for UK's 2022-2023 Inflation