Difference between revisions of "Phillips curve"

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The Phillips curve is a model for unemployment whereby increasing inflation supposedly reduces unemployment.  The model of an inverse relation between the two is plotted with inflation on the y-axis and unemployment on the x-axis.
 
The Phillips curve is a model for unemployment whereby increasing inflation supposedly reduces unemployment.  The model of an inverse relation between the two is plotted with inflation on the y-axis and unemployment on the x-axis.
  
Liberal (Keynesian) economists promoted the Phillips curve as a way of justifying increased inflation, or more money printed by the government.  Milton Friedman, a critic of Keynesian economics, rejected this model.  He persuasively argued that only when inflation exceeded expectations might it help reduce inflation.   
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Keynesian economists promoted the Phillips curve as a way of justifying increased inflation, or more money printed by the government.  Milton Friedman, a critic of Keynesian economics, rejected this model.  He persuasively argued that only when inflation exceeded expectations might it help reduce inflation.  
 
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Even liberals abandoned the Phillips curve by the late 1970s, when inflation and unemployment were very high at the same time in the United States.
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The Phillips curve was abandoned by the late 1970s, when inflation and unemployment were very high at the same time in the United States.
  
 
Here is an algebraic formulation of the Phillips curve:
 
Here is an algebraic formulation of the Phillips curve:

Revision as of 23:20, April 5, 2007

The Phillips curve is a model for unemployment whereby increasing inflation supposedly reduces unemployment. The model of an inverse relation between the two is plotted with inflation on the y-axis and unemployment on the x-axis.

Keynesian economists promoted the Phillips curve as a way of justifying increased inflation, or more money printed by the government. Milton Friedman, a critic of Keynesian economics, rejected this model. He persuasively argued that only when inflation exceeded expectations might it help reduce inflation.

The Phillips curve was abandoned by the late 1970s, when inflation and unemployment were very high at the same time in the United States.

Here is an algebraic formulation of the Phillips curve:

Plotting the inflation rate Π against unemployment U provides a downward-sloping Phillips curve.