Lecture 10 - Keynesian Economics and the ISLM Model Claude

1. Contextual Note and Scope

Before proceeding, it is worth acknowledging the pedagogical position of the IS-LM model within this course. The model serves as a foundational framework for understanding short-run macroeconomic equilibrium, and whilst the subsequent lecture will derive the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve through the AD-AS framework rather than directly through IS-LM, the model remains intellectually indispensable. A great many practising economists, policymakers, and central bankers continue to reason in IS-LM terms, making fluency with it a prerequisite for engaging with macroeconomic discourse at any serious level.

Exam Insight

The IS-LM model may not be the primary analytical tool in this course, but examiners frequently test whether students understand its mechanics, its assumptions, and how it connects to the AD curve. Do not neglect it on the grounds that it is described as "not crucial."


2. Key Blocks and Assumptions of the IS-LM Model

The IS-LM model is a short-run macroeconomic framework that simultaneously characterises equilibrium in two markets: the goods market and the money market. Its central purpose is to jointly determine two endogenous variables: the interest rate () and the level of national income ().

The model is composed of two curves:

  • The Investment-Saving (IS) curve: the locus of all combinations that ensure equilibrium in the goods market, where planned expenditure equals actual output.
  • The Liquidity-Money (LM) curve: the locus of all combinations that ensure equilibrium in the money market, where money demand equals money supply.

When plotted together, the intersection of IS and LM identifies the unique pair that clears both markets simultaneously — what may be termed a general equilibrium of the short-run economy.

2.1 The Price Rigidity Assumption

Theoretical Interpretation

The IS-LM model operates under the assumption that the general price level is fixed. This is the canonical New Keynesian justification for demand-side policy effectiveness: because prices do not immediately adjust, output and interest rates bear the full burden of adjustment. This is analytically consistent with the existence of nominal rigidities such as menu costs, wage contracts, and pricing frictions documented extensively in the empirical literature.

The key assumption of the IS-LM model is that the general price level is held constant. This transforms the model into a purely quantity-and-interest-rate framework: neither firms nor households can adjust prices to restore equilibrium. Instead, only real quantities (output ) and the nominal interest rate () adjust.

This assumption is most defensible over very short time horizons. In the very short run, many prices are sticky: firms face costs of changing price lists (menu costs), wages are set by contracts, and expectations may be anchored. As the time horizon lengthens, the price rigidity assumption becomes less tenable, which is why the IS-LM model is explicitly a short-run tool.

Common Mistake

Students sometimes treat IS-LM as a model of the long run, or confuse the fixed price level assumption with a fixed inflation rate. The model assumes is constant (not merely stable), meaning changes in the price level are only introduced when explicitly relaxing this assumption, as in the derivation of the AD curve.


3. The Goods Market and the Keynesian Cross

3.1 National Income Identity and Planned Expenditure

The starting point for the goods market block is the familiar national income identity:

In the IS-LM framework, the left-hand side () represents actual production — the volume of output that firms produce and wish to sell. The right-hand side () is reinterpreted as planned expenditure — the total spending that households, firms, the government, and the foreign sector intend to undertake.

Equilibrium in the goods market requires that these two quantities be equal: firms produce exactly what agents plan to buy. If planned expenditure exceeds actual production, firms will unintentionally run down their inventories and subsequently increase output; the reverse holds if production exceeds planned spending. This self-correcting inventory mechanism is the Keynesian adjustment process.

A central concept here is the marginal propensity to consume (MPC): the fraction of each additional unit of income that households spend on consumption. Because planned expenditure is increasing in income (via the MPC), the planned expenditure schedule is upward-sloping when plotted against .

Economic Intuition

Think of the Keynesian cross as capturing a simple feedback loop: higher income leads to higher spending, which leads firms to produce more, which raises income further. The MPC governs how strong this feedback is. An MPC close to 1 implies a steep expenditure schedule and a large multiplier; an MPC close to 0 implies a flat schedule and a small multiplier.

3.2 The Role of the Interest Rate in the Goods Market

Planned expenditure is not determined solely by income; it also depends on the interest rate . The interest rate enters through two principal channels:

Consumption (): Households face an intertemporal trade-off between spending today and saving for tomorrow. A higher interest rate raises the return to saving, inducing households to defer consumption, thereby reducing current planned expenditure. This is the classical substitution effect in intertemporal consumption choice.

Investment (): Firms evaluate investment projects by comparing the expected return on capital with the cost of borrowing. A higher interest rate raises the hurdle rate of return required for a project to be profitable. Marginal investment projects that were previously viable become unprofitable, so aggregate investment falls. This is the standard neoclassical investment mechanism, formalised in the concept of the marginal efficiency of capital.

Both channels thus imply a negative relationship between the interest rate and planned expenditure. For a given level of income, a rise in shifts the planned expenditure schedule downward, reducing the equilibrium level of output in the goods market.

Definition

Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC): The increase in consumption expenditure resulting from a one-unit increase in disposable income. Mathematically, , where .


4. The IS Curve: Derivation and Properties

4.1 Deriving the IS Curve

ECON1002_IntroToMacroeconomics/ECON1002_images/Week_6_set1(ISLM)/Slide10.png

This diagram illustrates the derivation of the IS curve from the Keynesian cross. The left panel shows the goods market: for a given high interest rate , planned expenditure is , yielding equilibrium income (point ). When the interest rate falls to , investment and consumption rise, shifting planned expenditure upward to and equilibrium income rises to (point ). The right panel maps these two pairs onto a new diagram. Connecting points and traces out the IS curve, which slopes downward from left to right.

The negative slope of the IS curve embodies the following causal chain: a lower interest rate raises planned expenditure via increased investment and consumption, which — through the Keynesian multiplier — raises equilibrium output by more than the initial increase in spending.

Theoretical Interpretation

The slope of the IS curve depends on two factors: (1) the interest sensitivity of investment and consumption (how much and respond to a change in ), and (2) the size of the fiscal multiplier (which itself depends on the MPC). A highly interest-sensitive economy with a large multiplier will have a flat IS curve; a less responsive economy will have a steep IS curve. This has direct implications for the relative effectiveness of fiscal versus monetary policy.

Definition

IS Curve: The locus of all combinations of the interest rate () and national income () at which the goods market is in equilibrium (i.e., planned expenditure equals actual output). It slopes downward in space.


5. The Money Market and Liquidity Preference

5.1 Money Demand

The money market block is built upon Keynes's theory of liquidity preference. Money demand depends on two distinct motives:

  • Transactions demand: Households and firms require money to facilitate everyday purchases. Higher income () is associated with a greater volume of transactions, hence a higher demand for money. This creates a positive relationship between and money demand.
  • Portfolio/speculative demand: Holding money is costly insofar as it forgoes the interest that could be earned on alternative assets (bonds, equities). A higher interest rate () therefore makes money holding less attractive; agents shift their portfolios away from liquid money and towards interest-bearing assets, reducing money demand.

The money demand curve thus slopes downward in space: for a given level of income, higher interest rates reduce the quantity of real money balances demanded.

Money supply () is treated as exogenous — it is set by the central bank and does not depend on or . In the standard IS-LM framework, money supply is represented as a vertical line.

Common Mistake

Do not confuse a movement along the money demand curve with a shift of the curve. A change in the interest rate causes a movement along a given money demand curve. A change in income causes the entire money demand curve to shift (right if rises, left if falls). The LM curve is built precisely by tracing these shifts.

5.2 Money Market Equilibrium

Money market equilibrium requires that the quantity of real money balances demanded equals the exogenous real money supply:

where is the liquidity preference (money demand) function, increasing in and decreasing in . Because is held fixed, changes in the nominal money supply translate one-for-one into changes in real balances.


6. The LM Curve: Derivation and Properties

ECON1002_IntroToMacroeconomics/ECON1002_images/Week_6_set1(ISLM)/Slide12.png

This diagram shows the derivation of the LM curve. Panel (a) depicts the money market: the vertical line is the fixed money supply , and and are money demand curves corresponding to income levels respectively. A higher income level raises money demand, shifting rightward; with a fixed supply, equilibrium in the money market requires a higher interest rate to dampen demand back to the level of supply. Points (at ) and (at ) in panel (a) map onto points and in panel (b), tracing the upward-sloping LM curve.

The positive slope of the LM curve reflects a straightforward mechanism: as income rises, the transactions demand for money increases; with a fixed supply, the interest rate must rise to clear the money market by reducing the speculative demand for money.

Definition

LM Curve: The locus of all combinations of the interest rate () and national income () at which the money market is in equilibrium (i.e., money demand equals the exogenous money supply). It slopes upward in space.

Economic Intuition

The LM curve is steeper when money demand is less sensitive to the interest rate (because a large rise in is needed to re-equilibrate the market after an increase in ). It is flatter when money demand is highly interest-sensitive. At the extreme, a perfectly flat LM corresponds to the liquidity trap, in which interest rates cannot fall further and monetary policy becomes ineffective.


7. IS-LM Equilibrium

ECON1002_IntroToMacroeconomics/ECON1002_images/Week_6_set1(ISLM)/Slide13.png

This diagram combines the IS and LM curves in a single space. The downward-sloping IS curve and the upward-sloping LM curve intersect at the unique point , which represents the simultaneous equilibrium of both the goods market and the money market. At this point, planned expenditure equals actual output and money demand equals money supply.

The analytical power of IS-LM lies precisely in this simultaneity. The goods market alone (the IS curve) cannot determine and independently — it only tells us that for any given , there is a corresponding equilibrium . Similarly, the money market alone (the LM curve) cannot determine both variables. Only the joint solution pins down the economy's short-run position.

Theoretical Interpretation

The IS-LM intersection represents a Walrasian-style simultaneous clearing of two interconnected markets. Critically, because the price level is fixed, any shock to either market must be absorbed through changes in and , not through price adjustment. This is the analytical foundation for the Keynesian argument that demand management policy can raise output in the short run.

Exam Insight

When asked to analyse a policy shock in IS-LM, always identify which curve shifts, in which direction, and by how much, before stating the new equilibrium values of and . Fiscal policy (changes in or ) shifts the IS curve; monetary policy (changes in ) shifts the LM curve.

Summary
  • The IS curve slopes downward: higher reduces investment and consumption, lowering equilibrium .
  • The LM curve slopes upward: higher raises money demand, requiring higher to clear the money market.
  • Equilibrium is where IS and LM intersect, jointly determining .
  • The price level is assumed constant throughout.

8. From IS-LM to Aggregate Demand

The IS-LM model can be used to derive the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve, which maps the relationship between the general price level and the equilibrium level of national output .

The derivation proceeds as follows. For a given initial price level , the IS-LM model delivers an equilibrium . Now consider a rise in the price level to . Because the nominal money supply is fixed by the central bank, a higher price level reduces the real money supply :

This reduction in real money balances shifts the LM curve to the left: at every level of income, a higher interest rate is now required to equate the reduced real supply with money demand. The new equilibrium has a higher interest rate and lower output: where .

Plotting against and against in space yields two points on the AD curve. The AD curve slopes downward because a higher price level reduces real money balances, tightens financial conditions via a higher interest rate, crowds out investment and consumption, and therefore lowers equilibrium output. This monetary transmission channel (sometimes called the Keynes effect) is the IS-LM explanation for the negative slope of the AD curve.

Economic Intuition

The mechanism is: LM shifts left and . Each arrow is a causal link. Trace it carefully in both the IS-LM diagram and the AD diagram.

Common Mistake

When deriving the AD curve from IS-LM, remember that a change in the price level shifts the LM curve (because it affects real money balances), whilst a change in fiscal or monetary policy shifts the AD curve itself. A movement along the AD curve is caused by a price level change; a shift of the AD curve is caused by an autonomous policy or demand shock.

Summary
  • A higher price level reduces real money supply, shifting LM left and raising whilst lowering .
  • This gives the downward slope of the AD curve: .
  • The IS-LM framework provides a microeconomically grounded rationale for the negative slope of AD via the interest rate channel.

9. The Keynesian Heritage and Broader Significance

The IS-LM model, formalised by Hicks (1937) as an interpretation of Keynes's General Theory (1936), captures the essence of Keynesian macroeconomics in a tractable two-equation framework. Its enduring relevance lies in the central proposition that prices are rigid in the short run. This rigidity means that the economy need not automatically self-correct following a negative demand shock; output and employment can remain below their natural levels for a sustained period, providing the theoretical case for discretionary stabilisation policy.

The model also formalises a key distinction between fiscal and monetary policy transmission. Fiscal expansion (higher government spending or lower taxes ) shifts the IS curve rightward, raising both and . The rise in partially offsets the fiscal stimulus by crowding out private investment — the extent of this crowding-out effect depends on the slopes of both curves. Monetary expansion (a rise in ) shifts the LM curve rightward, lowering and raising — the classic mechanism of monetary stimulus.

Theoretical Interpretation

The crowding-out effect is central to debates about fiscal multipliers. If the LM curve is vertical (classical case, perfectly interest-inelastic money demand), a fiscal expansion raises by enough to fully crowd out private investment, leaving unchanged. If the LM curve is horizontal (liquidity trap), there is no crowding out and the fiscal multiplier is at its maximum. Most empirical economies lie between these extremes.

Exam Insight

For essay questions on the effectiveness of fiscal versus monetary policy, always invoke IS-LM slopes. Fiscal policy is most effective when IS is steep and LM is flat; monetary policy is most effective when IS is flat (interest-sensitive investment) and LM is steep. The liquidity trap — where LM is flat — is a frequently examined special case in which monetary policy becomes impotent.


10. Summary of Key Takeaways

Summary
  • The IS-LM model is a short-run general equilibrium framework jointly determining the interest rate and national income .
  • The IS curve is downward-sloping: lower interest rates raise investment and consumption, increasing equilibrium output via the multiplier.
  • The LM curve is upward-sloping: higher income raises transactions demand for money, requiring a higher interest rate to clear the money market with a fixed money supply.
  • The key assumption is that the price level is fixed, making this a model of nominal rigidities and Keynesian demand management.
  • The IS-LM equilibrium simultaneously clears both the goods market and the money market.
  • The AD curve can be derived by varying within the IS-LM model: higher prices reduce real money supply, shift LM left, raise , and reduce .
  • The model encodes the two core channels of macroeconomic policy: fiscal policy shifts IS; monetary policy shifts LM.
  • Price rigidity is the philosophical heart of Keynesian economics — without it, markets self-correct and policy is redundant.

Bibliography

Hicks, J.R. (1937) 'Mr. Keynes and the Classics: A Suggested Interpretation', Econometrica, 5(2), pp. 147–159.
Keynes, J.M. (1936) The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. London: Macmillan.
Mankiw, N.G. (2019) Macroeconomics. 10th edn. New York: Worth Publishers.
Blanchard, O. (2021) Macroeconomics. 8th edn. Harlow: Pearson Education.
Carlin, W. and Soskice, D. (2015) Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability, and the Financial System. Oxford: Oxford University Press.