Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 8 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin

2 8-2 Chapter Outline Aggregate Demand Aggregate Supply Shifts in Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Causes of Inflation Supply-Side Economics How the Government can Influence (but probably not control) the economy

3 8-3 You Are Here

4 8-4 Aggregate Demand Aggregate Demand: the amounts of real domestic output which domestic consumers, businesses, governments, and foreign buyers collectively will desire to purchase at each possible price level

5 8-5 Figure 1 Aggregate Demand RGDP PI AD

6 8-6 Why Aggregate Demand is Downward Sloping Real Balances Effect –Because higher prices reduce real spending power, prices and output are negatively related. Foreign Purchases Effect –When domestic prices are high, we will export less to foreign buyers and we will import more from foreign producers. Therefore higher prices leads to less domestic output. Interest Rate Effect –higher prices lead to inflation which leads to less borrowing and a lowering of RGDP

7 8-7 Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply: the level of real domestic output available at each possible price level

8 8-8 Figure 2 The Aggregate Supply Curve RGDP PI Keynesian Range Classical Range Intermediate Range AS

9 8-9 The Ranges of AS Keynesian Range –Large amounts of unemployment make it so that increases in aggregate demand have no affect on wages or prices. Classical Range –Full employment makes it so that increases in aggregate demand only increase wages or prices. Intermediate Range –Some sectors of the economy reach full employment more quickly than others.

10 8-10 Variables that Shift Aggregate Demand Taxes Interest Rates Confidence Strength of the Dollar Government Spending

11 8-11 Determinants of AD VariableGDP Component C,I,G,X Effect of an increase on AD Effect of a decrease on AD TaxesC,IDecrease so AD <= Increase so AD => Interest RatesC,IDecrease so AD <= Increase so AD => ConfidenceC,IIncrease so AD => Decrease so AD <= Strength of the Dollar X (exports- imports) Decrease so AD <= Increase so AD => Government Spending GIncrease so AD => Decrease so AD <=

12 8-12 Figure 3 AD Increases AD’ AS AD RGDP PI PI* RGDP* PI’ RGDP’

13 8-13 Figure 4 AD Decreases AD’ AS AD RGDP PI PI* RGDP* PI’ RGDP’

14 8-14 Variables that Shift AS Input Prices Productivity Government Regulation

15 8-15 Determinants of AS Variable Effect of an Increase on AS Effect of an Decrease on AS Input PricesDecrease so AS Increase so AS ProductivityIncrease so AS Decrease so AS Government Regulation Decrease so AS Increase so AS

16 8-16 Figure 5 Increase in AS AS AD RGDP PI PI* RGDP* AS’ PI’ RGDP’

17 8-17 Figure 6 Decrease in AS RGDP AS AD PI PI* RGDP* AS’ PI’ RGDP’

18 8-18 Causes of Inflation Demand Pull Inflation: inflation caused by an increase in aggregate demand Cost Push Inflation: inflation caused by a decrease in aggregate supply

19 8-19 Government Influence: Aggregate Demand Government can influence economic activity with aggregate demand side policies affecting: –Taxes –Government Spending –Interest Rates

20 8-20 Government Influence: Aggregate Supply Government can influence economic activity with aggregate supply side policies affecting –input costs (labor and wage) –reducing regulation –Increase incentives to Work Take Risks The actions are call Supply Side Economics


Download ppt "Chapter 8 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google