Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply"— Presentation transcript:

1 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
Lesson 27 Sections 17, 18, 19

2 Aggregate Demand (17) The Aggregate Demand Curve is also downward sloping, but not for the same reasons as the single demand curve. Wealth Effect Rise in prices reduces buying power Interest Rate Effect A rise prices causes people to invest less and borrow more to maintain purchasing power, but this reduces the loan-able amount causing interest rates to rise

3 Shifts in Aggregate Demand
Changes in Expectations Changes in Wealth Size of Existing Stock of Physical Capital Government Policies and Aggregate Demand Fiscal Policy Monetary Policy

4 Aggregate Supply (18) Short Run Aggregate Supply Curve
Costs: Wages Nominal Wages Sticky Wages Shifts in Short Run Aggregate Supply Changes in Commodity Prices Changes in Nominal Wages Changes in Productivity

5 Long Run Aggregate Supply Curve
Potential Output Shifts in Long Run Aggregate Supply Increase in resources Land Labor Capital Increase in quality of resources (educated workforce) Technological progress Quantity of Output Y 1980 AD 1990 Aggregate Demand, 2000 Price Level Long-run aggregate supply, LRAS P 1. In the long run, technological progress shifts long-run aggregate supply . . . and ongoing inflation. leading to growth in output . . . and growth in the money supply shifts aggregate demand . . .

6 The AD – AS Model Short-Run Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Shifts of Aggregate Demand: Short Run Effects Demand Shock Negative and Positive Supply Shock Stagflation

7 Long-Run Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Long-Run Aggregate Supply Potential Output GDP, potential GDP Negative Demand Shock Effects 1 Initial Negative Demand Shock 2 Reduce Aggregate Price Level (higher unemployment in the short run) 3 Drop in nominal wages leads to increase in short run aggregate supply moving the economy back to potential output Recessionary Gap

8 Positive Demand Shock Positive Demand Shock Inflationary Gap
1 Demand increases 2 Aggregate prices and output increases reducing unemployment 3 nominal wages rise, reducing short run aggregate supply to the long range output Inflationary Gap Output Gap [(Actual-Potential)/Potential]x100 Self-correcting?


Download ppt "Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google