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Chapter 7 Aggregate demand and supply: an introduction.

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1 Chapter 7 Aggregate demand and supply: an introduction

2 The aggregate demand curve A change in the price level:  Initially, P=P 0 ;  Equilibrium income: Y 0 ;  Price change: P 0  P;  The LM curve shifts to LM;  New equilibrium income: Y.

3 The aggregate demand curve Formal presentation of aggregate demand:

4 The aggregate demand curve The slope of the AD curve:  From IS-LM analysis: An increase in real balances generates a larger increase in equilibrium income for larger  G and b, or smaller h and k.  The AD curve is flatter for larger  G and b, or smaller h and k;  The classical case: h  0 AD curve is flat but not horizontal.  The liquidity trap: h  AD curve is vertical.

5 The aggregate demand curve The slope of the AD curve.

6 Aggregate demand policies Fiscal expansion:  IS  IS;  Same price: Y 0  Y;  The AD curve shifts out: AD  AD.

7 Aggregate demand policies Monetary expansion:  LM  LM;  Same price: Y 0  Y;  The AD curve shifts out: AD  AD;  K v.s. E: same income  same real balance;  The AD curve shifts upward in proportion to the increase in nominal money.

8 The aggregate supply curve The AS curve describes how much output firms are willing to supply for any price level; Quantity of supply is determined by the output price and real wage rate, as well as technology; The AS curve reflects resource and technological constraints.

9 The aggregate supply curve The Keynesian case:  Price rigidity;  Large amount of unemployment;  Firms can get as much labor as they want at the current wage rate;  The average cost of production remains constant;  The supply curve is perfectly flat.

10 The aggregate supply curve The Keynesian case.

11 The aggregate supply curve The classical case:  Price and nominal wage rate adjust quickly;  The labor market is always in equilibrium;  Output is solely determined by labor input at full employment;  The supply curve is vertical.

12 The aggregate supply curve The classical case:

13 Fiscal and monetary policy under alternative assumptions The Keynesian case: same as IS-LM.

14 Fiscal and monetary policy under alternative assumptions The classical case: fiscal policy.  Fiscal expansion: AD  AD;  At P 0 : equilibrium would be E;  Bidding up wage and price;  Equilibrium becomes E .

15 Fiscal and monetary policy under alternative assumptions Crowding out again:  Fiscal expansion: IS  IS;  At P 0 : equilibrium would be E;  Bidding up wage and price;  LM  LM;  Equilibrium becomes E  ;  Full crowding out of private investment.

16 Fiscal and monetary policy under alternative assumptions Monetary expansion under classical conditions:  Monetary expansion: AD  AD;  At P 0 : equilibrium would be E;  Bidding up wage and price;  Move along AD;  Equilibrium becomes E  ;

17 Fiscal and monetary policy under alternative assumptions Frictional unemployment and the natural rate of unemployment:  Full employment does not imply zero unemployment;  Fictional unemployment: unemployment as a result of individuals’ shifting between jobs and looking for new jobs;  Natural unemployment rate: the unemployment rate arising from normal labor market frictions in equilibrium.

18 The quantity theory and the neutrality of money The classical case:  The result of an increase in nominal money: Price rise proportionally, nominal wage rate and interest rate rise by the inflation rate; No real effect: real GDP, consumption, private investment, government purchase, unemployment, real interest rate, real wage rate, and real balance remain unchanged.  Money is neutral. Monetarism:  Money is neutral in the long run, but may not be so in the short run.


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