Two alternative theories of aggregate supply,
both with a New Keynesian “flavor,” are compared. The
first assumes that prices are rigid due to the
existence of menu costs. The second derives price stickiness
endogenously as one equilibrium in an economy with multiple equilibria. In
both cases I show that the Ball–Romer concept of real
rigidities is essential to explain why monetary policy has real persistent
effects. I argue that dynamic menu cost models are determinate because they
make special assumptions about the way that money enters the economy. For
example, most authors assume either a cash-in-advance constraint or that
money enters separably into utility or production functions. Once one moves
beyond these special cases, menu cost models that display real rigidity are
also likely to display indeterminacy.