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Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply and Inflation

Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve


Aggregate demand is the total demand for

goods and services in the economy. To derive the aggregate demand curve, we examine what happens to aggregate output (income) (Y) when the price level (P) changes, assuming no changes in government spending (G), net taxes (T), or the monetary policy variable (Ms).

Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve


The Impact of an Increase in the Price Level

on the Economy Assuming No Changes in G, T, and Ms

P M d r I AE Y

Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve


The aggregate demand (AD) curve is a curve that shows the negative relationship between aggregate output (income) and the price level.

The Aggregate Demand Curve:

At all points along the AD curve, both the goods market and the money market are in equilibrium.

Reasons for a Downward-Sloping Aggregate Demand Curve


The consumption link: The decrease in

consumption brought about by an increase in the interest rate contributes to the overall decrease in output. The real wealth effect, or real balance, effect is the change in consumption brought about by a change in real wealth that results from a change in the price level.

Aggregate Expenditure and Aggregate Demand


At every point along the aggregate demand

curve, the aggregate quantity of output demanded is exactly equal to planned aggregate expenditure.

Y=C+I+G

equilibrium condition

Shifts of the Aggregate Demand Curve


An increase in the quantity of money supplied at

a given price level shifts the aggregate demand curve to the right.

Shifts of the Aggregate Demand Curve

An increase in government purchases or a decrease in net taxes shifts the aggregate demand curve to the right.

The Aggregate Supply Curve


Aggregate supply is the total supply of all goods

and services in the economy. The aggregate supply (AS) curve is a graph that shows the relationship between the aggregate quantity of output supplied by all firms in an economy and the overall price level.

When we draw a firms supply curve, we assume

that input prices are constant. In macroeconomics, an increase in the overall price level means that at least some input prices will be rising as well. The outputs of some firms are the inputs of other firms.

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run


In the short run, the aggregate supply curve (the price/output response curve) has a positive slope.

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run


At low levels of aggregate output, the curve is fairly flat. As the economy approaches capacity, the curve becomes nearly vertical. At capacity, the curve is vertical.

Aggregate Supply in the Short Run


Macroeconomists focus on whether or not the

economy as a whole is operating at full capacity. As the economy approaches maximum capacity, firms respond to further increases in demand only by raising prices.

Output Levels and Price/Output Responses


When the economy is operating at low levels of

output, an increase in aggregate demand is likely to result in an increase in output with little or no increase in the overall price level. There must be a lag between changes in input prices and changes in output prices, otherwise the aggregate supply (price/output response) curve would be vertical.

Shifts of the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve


A cost shock, or supply shock, is a change in

costs that shifts the aggregate supply (AS) curve.

Factors That Shift the Aggregate Supply Curve


Increase in aggregate supply Shifts to the right Lower input price results in lower wage rate Economic growth is an outcome of more capital, technological change, more productive labor Supply side policies : tax reduction , deregulation good weather Decrease in aggregate supply Shifts to the left Higher input price results in higher wage rate Stagnation: capital deterioration

Waste, inefficiency and overregulation. Bad weather, natural disasters, destruction from wars

The Equilibrium Price Level


The equilibrium price level is the point at which the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves intersect.

The Equilibrium Price Level


P0 and Y0 correspond to equilibrium in the goods market and the money market and a set of price/output decisions on the part of all the firms in the economy.

The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve


Costs lag behind price-level changes in the short run, resulting in an upward-sloping AS curve. Costs and the price level move in tandem in the long run, and the AS curve is vertical.

The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve


Output can be pushed above potential GDP by higher aggregate demand. The aggregate price level also rises.

The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve


When output is pushed above potential, there is upward pressure on costs, and this causes the shortrun AS curve to the left. Costs ultimately increase by the same percentage as the price level, and the quantity supplied ends up back at Y0.

The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve


Y0 represents the level of output that can be sustained in the long run without inflation. It is also called potential output or potential GDP.

Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Monetary and Fiscal Policy


AD can shift to the right for a number of reasons, including an increase in the money supply, a tax cut, or an increase in government spending.

The Simple Keynesian Aggregate Supply Curve


The output of the economy cannot exceed the maximum output of YF. The difference between planned aggregate expenditure and aggregate output at full capacity is sometimes referred to as an inflationary gap.

Causes of Inflation
Inflation is an increase in the overall price level.

Sustained inflation occurs when the overall

price level continues to rise over some fairly long period of time.

Causes of Inflation
Demand-pull inflation is inflation initiated by an increase in aggregate demand.

Causes of Inflation
Cost-push, or supplyside, inflation is inflation caused by an increase in costs.

Cost-Push, or Supply-Side Inflation


Stagflation occurs when output is falling at the same time that prices are rising. One possible cause of stagflation is an increase in costs.

Money and Inflation


Hyperinflation is a period of very rapid increases in the price level.

THANX

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