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SRAS (Keynesian AS). By: Haodi Zhang. Definition. “The total amount of goods and services that all the firms in a ll the industries in a country will produce at every price level in a given period of time. “ Economics Textbook p. 274. SRAS. SRAS. Average Price Level. Inelastic Area. P 2.
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SRAS (Keynesian AS) By: Haodi Zhang
Definition • “The total amount of goods and services that all the firms in all the industries in a country will produce at every price level in a given period of time. “ • Economics Textbook p. 274
SRAS SRAS Average Price Level Inelastic Area P2 Maynard Keynes P1 Early 20th-century economist Elastic Area Y1 Y2 Real GDP
SRAS Below Full-Employment SRAS • Full employment-level of output • Very low unemployment • Stable price (low inflation) • Resources are generally being used efficiently and near their full capacity LRAS Average Price Level PE AD1 YFE Real GDP
SRAS Below Full-Employment • Decrease in AD • Fall in price level and output (real GDP) • Equilibrium falls • Workers are laid off • Small decrease in price level leads to a large decrease in output SRAS LRAS Average Price Level PE P1 AD1 AD2 Y1 YFE Real GDP
SRAS Below Full-Employment • Further decrease in AD • Further fall in price level and output (real GDP) • Equilibrium falls • More workers are laid off • The decline in output is proportionally larger than the decline in price level, due to the high elasticity under full-employment level SRAS LRAS Average Price Level PE P1 P2 AD3 AD1 AD2 Y1 YFE Y2 Real GDP
Why are workers laid off? • Firms must lower the price due to fall in demand • Wages and prices are inflexible in the short run, therefore, wage cannot be reduced • “Fixed-wage period” • Labor market rigidities protect workers from low wages
Labor Market Rigidities • Government regulations • Minimum wage laws • Wage agreement with labor unions • Workers contract
SRAS Beyond Full-Employment • AD rises • Small increase in output and increase in average price level (inflation) • Production beyond full employment level SRAS LRAS Average Price Level P2 P1 PE AD3 AD2 AD1 Y1 YFE Y2 Real GDP
How is production beyond full-employment possible? • Full-employment does not mean zero unemployment • There are still workers who are willing and able to work but are employed • It is when the unemployment is low and stable • Nearly all the land, capital and labor are engaged in production of goods
What happens to workers? • More workers are employed in response to the high demand • Unemployment falls • Workers becomes scarce so output increases at a decreasing rate Job Contract
Right-Ward Shift of SRAS • Increase in output and decrease in price • Increase in employment • Becomes more efficient in production SRAS1 LRAS SRAS2 Average Price Level PE P1 AD1 Y1 YFE Real GDP
Left-Ward Shift of SRAS SRAS1 LRAS • Decrease in output and increase in price • Decrease in employment • Lead to inflation and decline in real GDP SRAS2 Average Price Level P1 PE AD1 Y1 YFE Real GDP
Real World Example • Japan does not lay off workers but rather decreases their wages • Therefore, full capacity is never met because of the lack of efficiency • When the AD decreases, the SRAS does not adjust to the full capacity • There is a simple decrease in price and real GDP
Japan’s SRAS (export) SRAS1 LRAS1 • Japan does not lay off workers but rather decreases their wages • Therefore, full capacity is never met because of the lack of efficiency • When the AD decreases, the SRAS does not adjust to the full capacity • There is a decrease in price and increase in real GDP LRAS1 SRAS2 Average Price Level P1 P2 AD1 Y2 Y1 Real GDP
Conclusion SRAS LRAS • The total amount of goods a country will produce at every price level in a given period of time. • There is a elastic and inelastic zone • LRAS indicated full-employment Average Price Level PE AD1 YFE Real GDP