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    Principles of Macroeconomics
    ECON1116
    Progress0 / 31 topics
    Topics
    1. Introduction: Economics, Micro-economics, Macro-economics2. The Miracle of Modern Economic Growth3. Measuring Domestic Output: Gross Domestic Product4. The Expenditure Approach to GDP5. The Income Approach to GDP6. Other National Accounts7. Nominal GDP versus Real GDP8. Shortcomings of GDP Measurement9. Economic Growth: Modern economic growth10. Determinants of Economic Growth11. Production Possibility Analysis12. Business Cycles: Phases and characteristics13. Measurement of Unemployment14. Types of Unemployment15. Inflation: Meaning and measurement16. Facts about Inflation17. Basic Macroeconomic Relationships: Income-consumption-saving18. The Interest Rate-Investment Relationship19. The Multiplier Effect20. The Aggregate Expenditures Model: Assumptions21. Consumption and Investment Schedules22. Changes in Equilibrium GDP and the Multiplier23. Adding the Public Sector to the Model24. Equilibrium versus Full Employment GDP25. Recessionary and Inflationary Expenditure Gaps26. Aggregate Demand and Supply: Concepts27. Changes in Aggregate Demand28. Aggregate Supply and its Changes29. The Diamond-Water Paradox30. Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium31. Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy
    ECON1116›Aggregate Demand and Supply: Concepts
    Principles of MacroeconomicsTopic 26 of 31

    Aggregate Demand and Supply: Concepts

    5 minread
    897words
    Beginnerlevel

    Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Concepts

    In macroeconomics, the concepts of Aggregate Demand (AD) and Aggregate Supply (AS) are fundamental for understanding how the overall economy operates. Together, they explain changes in output, prices, employment, and the overall business cycle.

    Let’s break down both concepts in detail:


    1. Aggregate Demand (AD)

    Aggregate Demand (AD) is the total quantity of goods and services demanded across all levels of the economy at a given overall price level and during a specific period of time.

    It is represented as a downward-sloping curve on a graph where the vertical axis shows the price level and the horizontal axis shows real GDP (output).

    Formula:

    AD=C+I+G+(X−M)\text{AD} = C + I + G + (X - M)AD=C+I+G+(X−M)

    Where:

    • C = Consumption spending by households
    • I = Investment spending by businesses
    • G = Government spending
    • X - M = Net exports (exports minus imports)

    Why Is the AD Curve Downward Sloping?

    Three main reasons explain the inverse relationship between the price level and aggregate demand:

    1. Wealth Effect (Real Balances Effect)

    • When the price level falls, the real value of money increases, so consumers feel wealthier and spend more, increasing consumption (C).

    2. Interest Rate Effect

    • A lower price level means people need less money for transactions, which increases savings. This lowers interest rates, encouraging more investment (I) and consumption (C).

    3. Foreign Purchases Effect

    • A lower domestic price level makes domestic goods cheaper relative to foreign goods, increasing exports (X) and reducing imports (M), thus increasing net exports (X - M).

    Shifts in the AD Curve

    A change in the price level causes movement along the AD curve.
    A change in any non-price determinant causes the entire AD curve to shift.

    Causes of a Rightward Shift (↑ AD):

    • Increase in consumer confidence
    • Increase in government spending
    • Tax cuts (increased disposable income)
    • Lower interest rates
    • Rise in exports due to favorable foreign exchange rates

    Causes of a Leftward Shift (↓ AD):

    • Decrease in consumer or business confidence
    • Increase in taxes
    • High interest rates
    • Fall in exports (weaker global demand)

    2. Aggregate Supply (AS)

    Aggregate Supply (AS) is the total quantity of goods and services that producers in an economy are willing and able to supply at a given overall price level, during a specific period.

    There are two versions of the AS curve, depending on the time frame:


    A. Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)

    In the short run, some input prices (like wages) are sticky or fixed, which causes the SRAS curve to slope upward.

    Why is SRAS upward sloping?

    • As price levels rise, firms are more profitable, so they are willing to increase production.
    • Input costs are relatively fixed in the short run, so higher output prices mean more profit.

    Shifts in SRAS:

    Factors that affect production costs shift the SRAS curve:

    • Rightward shift (↑ SRAS):

      • Decrease in input prices (wages, raw materials)
      • Technological advancements
      • Increase in labor productivity
      • Favorable government policies (like subsidies or tax cuts)
    • Leftward shift (↓ SRAS):

      • Increase in input prices
      • Natural disasters or supply shocks
      • Strikes or political instability
      • Higher business taxes or regulations

    B. Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS)

    In the long run, all prices (including wages) are fully flexible, and the economy produces at its full employment level of output (potential GDP).

    • The LRAS curve is vertical at the full employment level of real GDP.
    • This means in the long run, output is determined by resources, technology, and institutions, not by price level.

    LRAS can shift due to:

    • Changes in labor force or population
    • Capital accumulation
    • Improvements in technology
    • Institutional or policy changes that improve productivity

    3. Equilibrium in the AD-AS Model

    The intersection of AD, SRAS, and LRAS determines the equilibrium level of output (real GDP) and the price level in the economy.

    Short-Run Equilibrium:

    • Occurs where AD intersects SRAS
    • May or may not be at full employment (can show a recessionary or inflationary gap)

    Long-Run Equilibrium:

    • Occurs where AD intersects both SRAS and LRAS
    • Economy is at full employment, with stable prices and no output gap

    4. Demand-Pull and Cost-Push Inflation

    • Demand-Pull Inflation: Caused by an increase in AD (e.g., due to government spending, low interest rates). It pulls the economy beyond full employment → inflationary gap.
    • Cost-Push Inflation: Caused by a leftward shift of SRAS, due to rising input costs (e.g., oil prices), causing higher prices and lower output → stagflation.

    5. Real-World Example

    Let’s say:

    • The government increases infrastructure spending (↑ G)
    • This increases AD (shifts right)
    • Firms respond by increasing output (movement along SRAS)
    • If economy is at full employment, this leads to inflation (no increase in output in the long run)

    Summary Table

    Concept Description
    Aggregate Demand (AD) Total demand for goods/services at various price levels
    Aggregate Supply (AS) Total output firms are willing to produce at various price levels
    SRAS Upward-sloping; shows short-run relationship between price and output
    LRAS Vertical line at full employment GDP; long-run output capacity
    AD Shifts Caused by changes in C, I, G, (X-M), taxes, interest rates, etc.
    SRAS Shifts Caused by changes in input prices, technology, productivity, policies
    Equilibrium Point where AD = AS; determines output and price level

    Previous topic 25
    Recessionary and Inflationary Expenditure Gaps
    Next topic 27
    Changes in Aggregate Demand

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