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Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Chapter 29 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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29-2 Chapter Objectives Aggregate demand (AD) Aggregate supply (AS) How AD and AS determine equilibrium price and real GDP The AD-AS model
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29-3 Aggregate Demand Amount of real GDP purchased at each price level Why the downward slope? –No income or substitution effect –Real-balances effect: purchasing power of held assets (C) –Interest-rate effect: demand for $ (I) –Foreign purchases effect (X) Consumption, investment, and net exports
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29-4 Aggregate Demand Curve Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD Aggregate Demand
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29-5 Aggregate Demand Determinants of aggregate demand –Fixed variables along the demand curve Change in fixed variable (C I G X) Multiplier effect Consumer spending variables: –Consumer wealth: value of assets –Consumer expectations: income and prices –Household borrowing: borrowing vs. repaying –Personal taxes
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29-6 Aggregate Demand Investment spending variables –Real interest rates (related to money supply) –Expected returns on investment Future business conditions Technology Degree of excess capacity Business taxes – r = i
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29-7 Aggregate Demand Government spending Remember - Non-transfers only Net export spending variables National income abroad Exchange rates –UK vs. US
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29-8 Changes in Aggregate Demand Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD 1 Increase in Aggregate Demand AD 3 AD 2 Decrease in Aggregate Demand
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29-9 Amount real GDP produced at each price level Three time horizons Immediate short run –Few days to a few months –Sticky prices and wages All prices fixed (input and output) Implicit price agreements (output) Contractual agreements (input) Aggregate Supply
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29-10 Aggregate Supply Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AS ISR Immediate-short- run Aggregate Supply QfQf
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Aggregate Supply 29-11
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29-12 Short run –Input prices fixed, Output prices variable In the Short Run, do firms prefer increase or decrease in Price Level? –Increase! – Fixed input contracts –Real profit changes Long run –All prices variable – inputs and outputs –Full employment GDP –All prices adjust Aggregate Supply
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29-13 Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level 0 QfQf Aggregate Supply (Short Run) Slope not constant: per unit production cost and firm capacity Aggregate Supply Competition for resources hikes ATC Plentiful resources limit growth of ATC
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29-14 Aggregate Supply Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AS LR Long-run Aggregate Supply QfQf
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29-15 Determinants of aggregate supply Change in input price (land, labor, capital) –Domestic resource prices –Prices of imported resources Change in productivity Change in legal-institutional environment –Business taxes and subsidies –Government regulation Aggregate Supply
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Determinants of Aggregate Supply RPG –R –Resource Prices –P –Productivity –G –Government taxes, subsidies, regulation 29-16
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29-17 Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AS 1 Increase in Aggregate Supply AS 3 AS 2 Decrease in Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply
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29-18 Equilibrium Real Output Demanded (Billions) Price Level (Index Number) Real Output Supplied (Billions) $506 508 510 512 514 108 104 100 96 92 $513 512 510 507 502 Equilibrium Price Level and Equilibrium Real GDP
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29-19 Real Domestic Output, GDP (Billions of Dollars) Price Level 100 92 502510514 a b AD AS Equilibrium
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29-20 Changes in Equilibrium Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD AS P1P1 P2P2 Q2Q2 Q1Q1 QfQf AD 1 Increase in Aggregate Demand Demand-Pull Inflation **increase in price level diminishes the multiplier effect Positive (Inflationary) GDP gap
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29-21 Changes in Equilibrium Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD 1 AS P1P1 P2P2 Q1Q1 Q2Q2 QfQf AD 2 Decrease in Aggregate Demand Creates a Recession a c b **No change in price level protects full multiplier effect Negative (recessionary) GDP gap
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29-22 Decrease in aggregate demand –Recession and cyclical unemployment –Deflation? Downward price inflexibility: –Fear of price wars –Menu costs –Wage contracts –Morale, effort, and productivity Efficiency wages: output per hour of input –Minimum Wage Changes in Equilibrium
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29-23 Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD AS 1 P1P1 P2P2 Q1Q1 QfQf Decrease in Aggregate Supply Cost-Push Inflation AS 2 a b Changes in Equilibrium
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29-24 Real Domestic Output, GDP Price Level AD 1 AS 2 P1P1 P2P2 Q2Q2 Q1Q1 Increases in Aggregate Supply – Full-Employment With Price-Level Stability AS 1 b AD 2 c P3P3 Q3Q3 a Changes in Equilibrium
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29-25 Impact of Oil Prices Aggregate supply shocks Cost push inflation Oil prices affected core inflation prior to 1980 Core inflation unaffected post 1980 –Energy efficiency –Composition of GDP –Fed vigilance
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29-26 Key Terms aggregate demand- aggregate supply (AD- AS) model aggregate demand real-balances effect interest-rate effect foreign purchases effect determinants of aggregate demand aggregate supply immediate-short-run aggregate supply curve short-run aggregate supply curve long-run aggregate supply curve determinants of aggregate supply productivity equilibrium price level equilibrium real output menu costs efficiency wages
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29-27 Next Chapter Preview… Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
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