2.2 Aggregate demand (AD) Flashcards
2.2.1 A)
What is aggregate demand
total demand for goods/servies within an economy
2.2.1 A)
What does an increase in AD mean for the econmy
^ economic growth, ad measures how much economic agents spend, provides a measurement of economic growth
2.2.1 A)
Whats an economic agent
household , goverment , busniess
2.2.1 A)
What are the components of AD
AD = C + I + G + (X-M)
C = consumption
I = investment
G = goverment spending
(X-M) = net trade , exports - import
2.2.1 B)
What is the most important component of AD
and the other percentails
Consumption / comsumer spending - makes up 60%
G 25% , I 15% , nt 1%
2.2.1 C)
What is the AD curve properties, why ?
Downwards sloping,
- because of wealth affect, decrease in price levels means consumers think they are wealthier as pp increases (assuming wage stays the same) they buy more increasing real GDP
-increase exports revenue & competion - decrease in privce level makes exports cheaper = ^ reveue ^ real gdp
-lower intrest rates. decrease in price level / inflation, ^ consumption and investment = ^ gdp
2.2.1 D ) movements / shifts in AD
movement = as price decreases real gdp rises , change in price level = movement
change in value of a component of ad causes a shift.
2.2.2 A) Whats disposable income
its infuecnce on c
Disposable income is the income that an individual receives after paying all of their indirect
taxes.
As consumers have more income they are likely to increase their
spending. This increases consumption within an economy and therefore AD increases.
2.2.2 B) relationship between savings and consumption
When consumers save more, they usually spend less (and vice versa). The marginal
propensity to consume shows how much of a consumers extra income they spend and how
much they save (change in consumption/change in income).
2.2.2 c)
What are the factors affecting consumption
Consumption confidence, income tax, advaliability of credit, population, intrest rate, expectation of future prices, employment/ income, wealth affect
2.2.3 A)
Define investment
The spending of money on capital goods by firms in order to increase productive possibility
2.2.3 A)
Net investment vs gross investment
Net investment takes into account deprecitation of capital
2.2.3 B)
factors that Influence investment
Rate of economic growth ^ growth = ^dd, ^ money in capital ^profit
Busniess confidence ^ investment
Keynes - strong ecomic growth more risks are taken
Demand for export - ^dd ^investment
Intrest rates v rates ^ loans , less paid back
Goverment copeate tax
Spare capacity ^ sc ^dd can be handled > no need for ^ investment
2.2.5 A)
main influence of net trade
real income, exhange rate, state of world economy, degree of protectionism, non price factors