In its basic structure, the FRB/US model follows a standard macroeconomic assumption that firms cannot instantaneously adjust nominal prices and wages. While wages in the model adjust slowly, they do not exhibit downward nominal rigidity. Nevertheless, because of nominal price and wage stickiness, changes in household demand and spending affect the amount firms produce for a given level of prices. As a result,monetary policy, which affects demand, can cause changes in employment and output before prices have time to fully adjust. Thus, sluggish nominal adjustment creates a channel through which monetary policy has temporary real effects on the economy. In the long run, however,when prices fully adjust, monetary policy induces changes only to the level of prices. In other words, monetary policy determines the long run inflation rate.