Category Nick Rowe

Upward-sloping IS curves: simple version

My last post was not a success, judging by the (lack of) reader response (brave and smart John Handley aside). Too complicated. Let me make it simpler, and shorter. 1. Suppose, by magic, the capital stock increases by 10%. New machines just fall from the sky, like manna from heaven. And suppose the central bank […]

Upward-sloping IS curves after Miles Kimball

I hadn't realised until last week that Miles Kimball is way ahead of me on upward-sloping IS curves. (Miles doesn't want to call it an "IS" curve if it slopes up, but that's a pedagogical point.) I also hadn't realised how close Miles is to being One of Us (he calls himself a "new monetarist […]

Monetary business cycles and counter-cyclical human capital investment

I happened to be chatting with an Earth Science prof this morning. He mentioned that enrolment in Earth Science graduate degrees was strongly counter-cyclical (with a short lag). When the job market weakened, more students decided to get a graduate degree. When the job market strengthened, applications for graduate programs dropped. There seems to be […]

Money demand and supply in a red/green world

Because it's Sunday. "Green" money has positive value; "red" money has negative value. (An overdraft in your chequing account is red money.) We live in a red/green world with both types of money, so we ought to start thinking about money supply and demand in a red/green world. The red/green world is the real world. […]

Switzerland as a closed-end mutual fund with a country attached

You can't say much beyond a snappy title in 140 characters, so I thought I should write a short post explaining what I meant. You can, if you want, think of (central bank) money as shares in a closed-end mutual fund. The mutual fund has assets, that are mostly financial assets. The returns from those […]

What is a “cashless” economy anyway?

I was reading Josh Hendrickson's (good but difficult) paper about Jurg Niehans on the cashless economy (which predated Michael Woodford by a couple of decades). But I can't get this question out of my head. Tell me exactly where it is on my slippery slope that this economy becomes "cashless", and tell me why it […]

PPFs and Supply curves (why PPFs are bowed out and supply curves slope up)

This is a simple "teaching" post. As a public service, and because I'm a teacher. I am just trying the get the presentation right. [The bit at the end is harder, and I'm not sure I'm happy with it.] What determines the curvature of the Production Possibilities Frontier, and how is it related to the […]

Just a little bit of Macro First

I don't have any easy answers to the "Micro first" vs "Macro first" debate when teaching Introduction to Economics. But this is what I do, and it seems to work a bit. And I have probably taught Intro about 30 times in my life. That experience should count for something. 1. We (Carleton University) are […]

Questions for Money/Macro Historians of Thought about “doing nothing”

First I need a long Preamble, to try to explain better what my questions are, and why they matter. I was reading Simon Wren-Lewis' good post on the centrality of monetary (and fiscal) policy (as opposed to price flexibility) on how long recessions last. (As I have said before, "Is the macroeconomy self-correcting?" is a […]

Is Two the new Zero? Why Divine Coincidence failed

Speculative, as Tyler Cowen would say. When people play the Dictator Game Ultimatum Game [thanks Alex] they don't play the way economists would predict. The Nash Equilibrium is for the first player to propose a 99:1 division of the pie take-it-or-leave-it offer, and the second player to accept. Because 1% is better than nothing, so […]