Aggregate Demand and Supply
Aggregate Demand and Supply
Aggregate Demand and Supply
Overview
Three key factors about economic fluctuations. The aggregate demand and aggregate supply model. The aggregate demand curve. The aggregate supply curve. Equilibrium in the long-run.
Together. Most macroeconomic variables are closely related and move together. As Output Falls, Unemployment Rises.
Changes in real GDP and the unemployment rate are inversely related.
Economic Fluctuations
Although there remains some debate about how to analyze short-run fluctuations, most economists use the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply.
PE
Y = C + I + G + NX
Why is the aggregate demand curve downward sloping?
1. Pigous Wealth Effect 2. Keynes Interest Rate Effect 3. Real Exchange Rate Effect
A decrease in the price level makes consumers feel more wealthy, which in turn encourages them to spend more. The increase in consumer spending means a larger quantity of goods and services demanded.
A lower price level reduces the interest rate, encourages greater spending on investment goods, and thereby increases the quantity of goods and services demanded.
When a fall in the Canadian price level causes the real exchange rate to depreciate, this stimulates Canadian net exports, thereby increasing the quantity of goods and services demanded.
Anything that causes buyers to want to purchase more or less than before will cause the aggregate demand schedule to shift.
AD
AD
Aggregate Demand
Quantity of Output
Quantity of Output
Quantity of Output
An event that reduces potential output shifts the schedule to the left. Any change that increases the economys potential output will shift the curve to the right.
New Classical Misperceptions Theory The Keynesian Sticky-Wage Theory The New Keynesian Sticky-Price Theory
Changes in the overall price level can temporarily mislead suppliers about what is happening in the markets in which they sell their output.
Nominal wages are slow to adjust, or are sticky in the short-run, thus a lower price level makes employment and production less profitable, which induces firms to reduce production.
Prices of some goods and services adjust sluggishly in response to changing economic conditions. Remember Menu Costs.
Changes in Factor (input) Prices Changes in Natural Resources Changes in Productivity Changes in Legal-Institutional Environment Changes in Technological Knowledge
AS
Aggregate Supply
AS
Aggregate Demand
Quantity of Output
An increase in input prices will shift the supply curve to the left. A decrease in input prices will shift the supply curve to the right.
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
Sources of Recession
Two sources from which a recession in the economy may occur:
A
Source of Recession
A Decrease in Aggregate Demand
A decrease in one or more components of the total spending function will cause the aggregate demand schedule to shift leftward.
Output will fall below the full employment output Unemployment will rise
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
An increase in unemployment
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
PE
Aggregate Demand
QE
Quantity of Output
Do nothing, assuming that perceptions will adjust prices and wages. Take action to increase aggregate demand (implement monetary and fiscal policy).