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Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply. Chapter 33 PINK SQUAD. Introduction. Over the long run, real GDP grows about 3% per year on average. In the short run, GDP fluctuates around its trend. Recessions : periods of falling real incomes and rising unemployment

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Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

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  1. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Chapter 33 PINK SQUAD

  2. Introduction Over the long run, real GDP grows about 3% per year on average. In the short run, GDP fluctuates around its trend. Recessions: periods of falling real incomes and rising unemployment Depressions: severe recessions (very rare) Short-run economic fluctuations are often called business cycles. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  3. Economic Fluctuation Fun Facts • Economic fluctuations are irregular and unpredictable. Recessions vary in length and frequency, so the term business “cycles” is somewhat misleading as they are not regular/orderly. • In general, macroeconomic quantities fluctuate together. For example, in a recession, investment, consumer spending, income, prices, stock value, and tax revenue generally all fall at similar rates. • Decreases in output increase unemployment. (As firms lower production in a recession, they need fewer workers.) AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  4. Classical Economics—A Recap The previous chapters are based on the ideas of classical economics, especially: The Classical Dichotomy, the separation of variables into two groups: Real – quantities, relative prices Nominal – measured in terms of money The neutrality of money: Changes in the money supply affect nominal but not real variables. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  5. Classical Economics—A Recap Most economists believe classical theory describes the world in the long run, but not the short run. In the short run, changes in nominal variables (like the money supply or P ) can affect real variables (like Y or the u-rate). To study the short run, we use a new model. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  6. The Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply P The price level SRAS P1 AD Y Y1 Real GDP, the quantity of output 0 “Short-Run Aggregate Supply” The model determines the eq’m price level “Aggregate Demand” and eq’m output (real GDP). AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  7. The Aggregate-Demand (AD) Curve The AD curve shows the quantity of all g&s demanded in the economy at any given price level. P P2 P1 AD Y Y2 Y1 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  8. Why the AD Curve Slopes Downward Y = C + I + G + NX Assume G fixed by govt policy. To understand the slope of AD, must determine how a change in P affects C, I, and NX. P P2 P1 AD Y Y2 Y1 0 Y1 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  9. The Wealth Effect (P and C ) Suppose P rises. The dollars people hold buy fewer g&s, so real wealth is lower. People feel poorer. Result: C falls. Decrease in price level raises real value of money, therefore making consumers wealthier, encouraging them to spend more. More consumer spending means more goods/services demanded. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  10. The Interest-Rate Effect (P and I ) Suppose P rises. Buying g&s requires more dollars. To get these dollars, people sell bonds or other assets. This drives up interest rates. Result: I falls.(Recall, I depends negatively on interest rates.) Decrease in price level means households need less money to buy goods/services, so they’re more inclined to lend money out, (Buying bonds, ect), raising interest rates. This encourages greater spending, therefore increasing goods/services demanded. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  11. The Exchange-Rate Effect (P and NX ) Suppose P rises. U.S. interest rates rise (the interest-rate effect). Foreign investors desire more U.S. bonds. Higher demand for $ in foreign exchange market. U.S. exchange rate appreciates. U.S. exports more expensive to people abroad, imports cheaper to U.S. residents. Result: NX falls. When price level falls, U.S. interest rates fall, so the real value of the dollar declines (depreciation). This stimulates net exports and therefore increases goods/services demanded. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  12. The Slope of the ADCurve: Summary An increase in P reduces the quantity of g&s demanded because: P P2 Y Y2 0 • the wealth effect (C falls) P1 • the interest-rate effect (I falls) AD • the exchange-rate effect (NX falls) Y1 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  13. Why the ADCurve Might Shift Any event that changes C, I, G, or NX– except a change in P – will shift the AD curve. Example: A stock market boom makes households feel wealthier, C rises, the AD curve shifts right. P P1 AD2 AD1 Y Y1 Y2 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  14. Why the ADCurve Might Shift Changes in C Stock market boom/crash Preferences re: consumption/saving tradeoff Tax hikes/cuts Changes in I Firms buy new computers, equipment, factories Expectations, optimism/pessimism Interest rates, monetary policy Investment Tax Credit or other tax incentives Changes in G Federal spending, e.g., defense State & local spending, e.g., roads, schools Changes in NX Booms/recessions in countries that buy our exports. Appreciation/depreciation resulting from international speculation in foreign exchange market AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  15. The Aggregate-Supply (AS) Curves The AS curve shows the total quantity of g&s firms produce and sell at any given price level. LRAS P SRAS Y 0 AS is: • upward-sloping in short run • vertical in long run AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  16. The Long-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve (LRAS) The natural rate of output (YN) is the amount of output the economy produces when unemployment is at its natural rate. YN is also called potential output or full-employment output. LRAS P Y 0 YN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  17. Why LRASIs Vertical YN determined by the economy’s stocks of labor, capital, and natural resources, and on the level of technology. An increase in P LRAS P P1 P2 Y 0 does not affect any of these, so it does not affect YN. YN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  18. Why the LRAS Curve Might Shift Any event that changes any of the determinants of YN will shift LRAS. Example: Immigration increases L, causing YN to rise. LRAS1 LRAS2 P Y ’ YN 0 YN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  19. Why the LRAS Curve Might Shift Changes in L or natural rate of unemployment Immigration Baby-boomers retire Govt policies reduce natural u-rate Changes in K or H Investment in factories, equipment More people get college degrees Factories destroyed by a hurricane Changes in natural resources Discovery of new mineral deposits Reduction in supply of imported oil Changing weather patterns that affect agricultural production Changes in technology Productivity improvements from technological progress AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  20. Using AD & AS to Depict LR Growth and Inflation Over the long run, tech. progress shifts LRAS to the right LRAS1990 P LRAS1980 LRAS2000 P2000 P1990 AD2000 P1980 AD1990 AD1980 Y 0 and growth in the money supply shifts AD to the right. Result: ongoing inflation and growth in output. Y2000 Y1980 Y1990 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  21. Short Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) The SRAS curve is upward sloping: Over the period of 1-2 years, an increase in P P SRAS P2 P1 Y Y1 Y2 0 causes an increase in the quantity of g & s supplied. AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  22. Why the Slope of SRASMatters If AS is vertical, fluctuations in ADdo not cause fluctuations in output or employment. P Phi SRAS Phi ADhi Plo Plo ADlo Y Ylo Yhi 0 LRAS If AS slopes up, then shifts in ADdo affect output and employment. AD1 Y1 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  23. The Sticky-Wage Theory First explanation for upward slope of SRAS Nominal wages take a while to adjust to changing economic conditions (sticky wages) -This is due to long term contracts between firms and workers or slowly changing social norms Example: firm thinks P=100, hires workers at $20/hr. P actually = 95, so they get less per unit and production is less profitable. So, they hire fewer workers and reduce output. Over time, they can renegotiate contracts, but for not, employment/production is below long-run levels. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  24. The Sticky-Price Theory Suppose the Fed increases the money supply unexpectedly. In the long run, P will rise. In the short run, firms without menu costs can raise their prices immediately. Firms with menu costs wait to raise prices. Meantime, their prices are relatively low, which increases demand for their products,so they increase output and employment. Hence, higher P is associated with higher Y, so the SRAS curve slopes upward. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  25. The Misperceptions Theory Firms may confuse changes in P with changes in the relative price of the products they sell. If P rises above PE, a firm sees its price rise before realizing all prices are rising. The firm may believe its relative price is rising, and may increase output and employment. So, an increase in P can cause an increase in Y, making the SRAS curve upward-sloping. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  26. What the 3 Theories Have in Common: In all 3 theories, Y deviates from YN when Pdeviates from PE. Output Expected price level Natural rate of output (long-run) a > 0, measures how much Y responds to unexpected changes in P Actual price level 0 Y = YN + a(P– PE) AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  27. What the 3 Theories Have in Common: P SRAS When P > PE the expected price level PE When P < PE Y YN Y < YN Y > YN 0 Y = YN + a(P– PE)

  28. SRASand LRAS The imperfections in these theories are temporary. Over time, sticky wages and prices become flexible misperceptions are corrected In the LR, PE = P AS curve is vertical 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  29. Why the SRASCurve Might Shift Everything that shifts LRAS shifts SRAS, too. Also, PE shifts SRAS: If PE rises, workers & firms set higher wages. At each P, production is less profitable, Y falls, SRAS shifts left. LRAS P SRAS SRAS PE PE Y 0 YN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  30. The Long-Run Equilibrium In the long-run equilibrium, PE = P, Y = YN , and unemployment is at its natural rate. P Y 0 LRAS SRAS PE AD YN AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  31. Economic Fluctuations Caused by events that shift the AD and/or AS curves. Four steps to analyzing economic fluctuations: 1.Determine whether the event shifts AD or AS. 2. Determine whether curve shifts left or right. 3. Use AD-AS diagram to see how the shift changes Y and P in the short run. 4. Use AD-AS diagram to see how economy moves from new SR eq’m to new LR eq’m. 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  32. The Effects of a Shift in AD Event: Stock market crash 1. Affects C, AD curve 2. C falls, so AD shifts left 3. SR eq’m at B. P and Y lower,unemp higher 4. Over time, PE falls, SRAS shifts right,until LR eq’m at C.Y and unemp back at initial levels. LRAS P SRAS1 SRAS2 P1 P2 B AD1 P3 C AD2 Y YN Y2 0 A AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  33. The Effects of a Shift in SRAS Event: Oil prices rise 1. Increases costs, shifts SRAS(assume LRAS constant) 2. SRAS shifts left 3. SR eq’m at point B. P higher, Y lower,unemp higher From A to B, stagflation, a period of falling output and rising prices. LRAS P SRAS2 SRAS1 B P2 P1 A AD1 Y YN Y2 0 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

  34. Accommodating an Adverse Shift in SRAS If policymakers do nothing, 4. Low employment causes wages to fall, SRAS shifts right,until LR eq’m at A. LRAS P SRAS2 P3 C SRAS1 B P2 P1 A AD2 AD1 Y YN Y2 0 Or, policymakers could use fiscal or monetary policy to increase AD and accommodate the AS shift: Y back to YN, butP permanently higher. AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

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