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3.3 Macroeconomic Models Tatiana Gema. Aggregate Demand  A schedule or curve that shows the amounts of real output that buyers collectively desire to.

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Presentation on theme: "3.3 Macroeconomic Models Tatiana Gema. Aggregate Demand  A schedule or curve that shows the amounts of real output that buyers collectively desire to."— Presentation transcript:

1 3.3 Macroeconomic Models Tatiana Gema

2 Aggregate Demand  A schedule or curve that shows the amounts of real output that buyers collectively desire to purchase at each price level.  Price and amount of real GDP demanded are inversely related.  Slopes downward because: - real-balances effect: caused by changes in price level Higher price reduces publics purchasing power and vise-versa

3 Continued… interest-rate effect: assume supply of money is fixed higher price level increases the demand for money and vise-versa Since money supply is fixed an increase in money demand will cause interest rates to go up. Foreign purchases effect: When both U.S and foreign price level rises and exchange rates do not respond quickly, it causes U.S and foreigners to buy less of each others goods Exports falls and imports rise

4 AD Graph

5 Aggregate Supply  A schedule or curve showing the level of real output that firms will produce at each price level.  Long Run: wages and resource prices match price level  Short Run: wages and resource prices do not respond to price level changes

6 Long Run  Supply curve is vertical showing wages respond completely to price level change at full employment output.  Price level change do not alter the amount of real GDP.  Price level changes do not affect firms profits and does not cause firms to alter their output

7 Short Run  Supply curve is upward sloping.  A rise in price causes a increase in real output and vice-versa.

8 Keynesian vs. Neoclassical  Neoclassical: supply creates its own demand act of producing goods generates income equal to the value of the goods produced There will always be full-employment because market is always fixing itself  Keynesian: Explained why unemployment can occur Not all income is spent at the same time its produced Unsold goods would accumulated in warehouses causing reductions in outputs and firms to eliminate workers Government should play a role in the economy

9 Full employment level of national income  National Income is the level of total output, expenditure or income of an economy over a period of time.  measure National income by GDP (a measure of all domestic production)  employment level of National Income means the level of total output attained when unemployment is at a socially acceptable level.

10 Equilibrium level of national income  When short run aggregate supply is perfectly elastic, any change in aggregate demand will feed straight through to a change in the equilibrium level of real national output.

11 Inflationary Gap  Amount by which an economies aggregate expenditures at the full employment GDP exceed those just necessary to achieve full employment.  Moves above equilibrium point  Effect= excessive spending that will pull up output prices  Graph on pg. 186

12 Recessionary Gap  Amount by which aggregate expenditures at the full employment GDP fall short of those required to achieve full employment GDP.  Caused by insufficient total spending  Graph on pg.186

13 Business Cycle

14 Continued…  Peak: business activity reached a temporary maximum.  Recession: a period of decline in total output, income, employment, and trade.  Trough: output and unemployment are at their lowest levels.  Recovery: output and employment rise toward full employment.


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