AGGREGATE SUPPLY With Mrs. Eskra. OBJECTIVES: What will you learn? What Aggregate Supply (SRAS and LRAS) are and what they look like. Difference between.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch. 10- The Short Run Aggregate Supply Curve By J.A.SACCO.
Advertisements

Aggregate Demand and Supply
Activity 41 The neutrality of money. Money is neutral In the long run changes in money supply will only change price level and have no change on real.
Long-run equilibrium LRAS (long- run aggregate supply) is at a level of output that corresponds to equilibrium in labor market.
Aggregate Demand and Supply
MCQ Chapter 9.
April 27, 2015 Begin Unit 5 : Economic Growth and Productivity
1 Aggregate Supply Chapter 26 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Ch. 7: Aggregate Demand and Supply
1 Aggregate Supply: Short – Run & Long – Run. 2 Short-run Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply (AS) shows the quantity of real GDP produced at different.
Chapter 22 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Aggregate Demand The relationship.
Aggregate Demand and Supply
25 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair Aggregate Demand,
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 22 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
Module Aggregate Supply: Introduction and Determinants KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP* 18 Margaret Ray and David Anderson.
AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
Aggregate demand and supply. Aggregate supply is the quantity of output firms are willing to supply, for each given price level. Aggregate supply is the.
Aggregate Demand and Supply. Aggregate Demand (AD)
The AD AS Equilibrium & Long Run Aggregate Supply.
Aggregate Supply: Introduction & Determinants. Objectives: What is the aggregate supply curve and what is the relationship between the aggregate price.
Aggregate Supply – Short Run AP Macroeconomics. Where we came from… Aggregate demand represents the sum of consumption (C), investment spending (I), government.
AP Macroeconomics Aggregate Supply. The level of Real GDP (GDP R ) that firms will produce at each Price Level (PL) The relationship between the average.
Aggregate Supply: Introduction and Determinants
Module 18- The Short Run Aggregate Supply Curve
ECO Global Macroeconomics TAGGERT J. BROOKS.
Aggregate Supply Short-Run Aggregate Supply and Long-Run Aggregate Supply.
Unit 3 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Fluctuations in Outputs and Prices.
1 Aggregate Supply CHAPTER 11 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Aggregate Supply How the Aggregate supply curve illustrates the relationship between the aggregate price level and the quantity of aggregate output supplied.
Aggregate Supply Chapter 11-3 Aggregate Supply. Aggregate Supply The aggregate supply curve shows the relationship between the aggregate price level and.
INFLATION A significant and persistent increase in the price level.
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada24.1 Chapter 24 Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis.
MACROECONOMICS © 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
Instructor Sandeep Basnyat
Aggregate Equilibrium. Review: AD, SRAS, & LRAS  AD = Sum of all demands for all the goods and services in all final markets  AD = C + G + I + X - M.
Chapter 8 Long Run Macroeconomics – The Self Correcting Economy.
Aggregate Supply  Features of Macroeconomic performance: 1. Growth potential GDP. 2. Inflation. 3. Business cycle fluctuation.  Aggregate Supply Fundamental.
Principles of MacroEconomics: Econ101 1 of 24.  Aggregate Demand  Factors That Can Change AD  Short-Run Aggregate Supply  Short-Run Equilibrium 
Mr. Henry Aggregate Supply Review from AD: What issues do you see in aggregate demand if people are saving more and spending less, thus a shift.
Answers to Review Questions  1.Explain the difference between aggregate demand and the aggregate quantity demanded of real output. Ceteris paribus, how.
1 ECON203 Principles of Macroeconomics Week 7 Topic: Aggregate Supply Dr. Mazharul Islam.
National Income and Price Determination Macro Unit III.
The AD-AS Model MACRO Created: Sept 2007 by Jim Luke. Understanding the AD-AS Model: Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply (actually it’s AD-SRAS-LRAS) It.
Aim: What is Macroeconomics and AD?. Roots of Macroeconomics The Great Depression Classical economists believed that the economy was self correcting Keynes.
CHAPTER 9 Introduction to Economic Fluctuations slide 0 Econ 101: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Larry Hu Lecture 10: Introduction to Economic Fluctuation.
1 Appendix 14A The Self-Correcting Aggregate Demand and Supply Model ©2004 South-Western.
Chapter 10 Lecture - Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand.
Aggregate Supply Krugman Section 4 Module 18. Definition  AS is a schedule showing level of real domestic output available at each possible price level.
Aggregate Supply The quantity of output that firms are willing and able to produce for the economy In the long run, the level of output depends on the.
Long Run Long Run Aggregate Supply. While engaged in a lesson on long- run aggregate supply, you will analyze the qualities of aggregate supply in the.
AGGREGATE DEMAND, AGGREGATE SUPPLY, AND INFLATION Chapter 25 1.
Lesson 7-2 Aggregate Supply. Aggregate Supply: the Long Run and The Short Run Basic Definitions The short run in macroeconomic analysis is a period in.
Phillips Curve Analysis Inflation & Unemployment Managing the short run trade-off.
Alomar_111_151 Chapter 11: Aggregate Demand (AD) and Aggregate Supply (AS)
Macro Chapter 9 An Introduction to Basic Macroeconomic Markets.
Relationship between GDP and Unemployment… Now lets add PL changes… This is the Aggregate Model.
CHAPTER OUTLINE 13 The AD /AS Model Dr. Neri’s Expanded Discussion of AD / AS Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy Effects in the Long Run Monetary Policy Shocks.
Student Parking Fees UT Parking Sticker range $127-$765 Texas State $115-$825 Texas A&M $275 and up ACC $15 per semester Tarleton State $120 Baylor $300.
Extending The Analysis Extending The Analysis Of AS To The Long Run Alban William Housego Phillips WithPhillip & Laffer.
Module Aggregate Supply: Introduction and Determinants KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP* 18 Margaret Ray and David Anderson.
Introduction to Aggregate Supply Module 18. Key skills and content Define AS (aggregate supply) Explain why the AS curve is upward sloping Identify the.
Sections 1 and 2 Chapter 10, 8 th and 9 th edition Chapter 9, 7 th edition Introduction to Economic Fluctuations.
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
Aggregate Supply Short-Run Aggregate Supply and Long-Run Aggregate Supply.
2.3.1 Unit content – the characteristics of AS Students should be able to: Draw an AS curve Distinguish between movement along, and a shift of, the AS.
+ Aggregate Supply Chapter Aggregate Supply (AS) Is the total amount of goods and services that all the firms in all the industries in a country.
Krugman/Wells Macroeconomics in Modules and Economics in Modules Third Edition MODULE 28 (64) Aggregate Supply.
Economics 020 Lecture 12 6 October, 1997.
Presentation transcript:

AGGREGATE SUPPLY With Mrs. Eskra

OBJECTIVES: What will you learn? What Aggregate Supply (SRAS and LRAS) are and what they look like. Difference between SRAS and LRAS. How LRAS can move to change our country’s production capabilities.

AS/AD Model The x-axis represents quantity as in microeconomics, but OVERALL quantity in an economy (real GDP). The y-axis represents the overall price level, not just price of specific item. This is the most common graph that shows overall (macroeconomic) activity.

Aggregate Supply Relationship between the price level and the total amount (of real GDP) producers are willing to produce. This relationship changes over time, so we need to distinguish between the short run and the long run.

SRAS Short-run aggregate supply is assumed to maintain the positive price and quantity correlation; more can be produced through increased resource utilization, technological improvements or other factors. SRAS is an upward sloping curve.

Aggregate Supply (SRAS) Positive relationship between the price level and the total amount (of real GDP) producers can produce. In the short run, businesses can produce more as prices rise: -Won’t have to pay workers more immediately. -Can use their inventories. This is why it is possible for AS to slope upwards in the short run.

Aggregate Supply (SRAS) Think about it this way: You can pull an “all-nighter” to cram for an exam or get your house ready to entertain the next day. This way you can accomplish more than normal. Would this level of activity be sustainable for you, night after night, indefinitely?

Aggregate Supply (SRAS) Think about it this way: If employers want to take advantage of higher prices in the short run, they can hire workers to work overtime and draw down their inventories to produce more right now. At some point, though, there is a limit to the amount of resources (land, labor, and capital).

What will Shift SRAS? Anything that will help producers supply more will increase SRAS in the economy, like: – Excellent weather – Natural resources – Labor force productivity / education – Reduced costs to firms

What will Shift SRAS? Anything that will make if more difficult for producers will decrease SRAS in the economy, like: – Natural disasters / bad weather – Labor force changes, like an aging population or lack of education – Increased costs to firms

LRAS Long-run aggregate supply is assumed to be constant in the long- run as in the long-run resources are assumed to be used optimally, leaving no potential for increasing capacity. LRAS is a vertical curve.

Aggregate Supply (LRAS) This LRAS curve represents our economy’s full potential in terms of production, given our current resources. This amount of production is possible when resources are fully employed (zero cyclical unemployment). So our production capacity is fixed unless something changes to increase our ability to produce more.

Aggregate Supply (LRAS) Ramping up our production in the short run can only get us so far. In the long run we have a limited amount of resources (materials, workers, etc). In the long-run, then, the amount of production that producers can sustain is fixed. So our production capacity is fixed unless something changes to increase our ability to produce more.

SUSTAINABILITY Consumption and production that does not stress or exceed the threshold required for natural regeneration of depleted resources.

Aggregate Supply (LRAS) Example: If many producers use our resources (like timber) faster than these resources are being replaced, this rate of growth is unsustainable. So how does our economy grow over time, then?

LRAS can move! Over time, it is possible for the economy to grow. We must find more land, labor or capital: -Population changes (greater amount of people in workforce) -Discover new resources -Advance technology These changes would shift out our LRAS, giving us the ability to produce more into the long run.

LRAS can move! However, the LRAS can also shift to the left. This happens if something reduces our amount of land, labor or capital: -Natural disasters -Wars These changes would shift our LRAS in, decreasing our ability to produce into the long run.

RECAP: What did you learn? What Aggregate Supply is and what it looks like. Difference between SRAS and LRAS. How LRAS can move to change our country’s potential for production.