Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Flashcards
What’s the difference between the Keynesian model and the AD-AS model.
The Keynesian model is only concerned with demand assuming that the price level remains the same. Whereas, the AD-AS model includes aggregate supply (consumer decisions) and varying price level.
What is meant by Aggregate Demand?
Total quantity of goods and services demanded at different price levels. The AD curve gives a level of output where AE=Y for each price level.
What causes a movement along the AD curve?
The price level causes movement along the AD curve, of which the AD curve is downward sloping.
What causes a shift in the AD curve?
World economy: exchange rates and foreign national income.
Expectations: spending
Fiscal policy: taxes
Monetary policy: interest rates and money supply.
What is aggregate supply?
The total quantity of goods and services supplied at different price levels.
What do firms production decisions depend on? What is the Aggregate production function?
Labor, Capital and Technology
Aggregate production function:
F( L,K,T)
Difference between short run aggregate supply and long run aggregate supply
Short run: inputs are fixed and output will change according to changes in the price level.
Long run: inputs will change according to changes in the price level but outputs are fixed.
How does the Short Run Aggregate Supply curve (SRAS) work?
The higher the price level the higher the output due to higher profits in the short run with the fixed costs of production. Alternatively, a lower price level causes firms to produce less because it results in less profits.
How does the Long Run Aggregate Supply curve (LRAS) work?
In the long run inputs adjust to changes in the price level and output does not depend on the price level as it is undetermined what they may be.
What is the level of real GDP that an economy produces in the long run?
Potential GDP
Movements along the SRAS and LRAS
In the short run, firms respond to the change in price level by either an increase (moving right) or a decrease (moving left) in the output.
In the long run, inputs change depending on the price level, but real GDP remains the same (no way to determine output) therefore it will move up or down the line.
How does long-run macroeconomic equilibrium work?
Where Potential GDP intersects with AD as price level is arbitrary.
How does an inflationary or recessionary gap occur?
When potential GDP is greater than actual GDP it is a recessionary gap.
When actual GDP is greater than potential GDP it is an inflationary gap.
What happens subsequently to a recessionary gap and inflationary gap and the process of being brought back to equilibrium?
An inflationary gap means firms are using factors of production a rate higher than the normal utilization rate. This excess demand for labor results in wages to increase, subsequently increasing their cost per unit. As a result, SRAS shifts to the left.
A recessionary gap means that firms are not using the factors of production at full capacity. The excess supply of labor pushes wages down and firms cost per unit to decrease. As a result, SRAS shifts to the right.
How else will the economy reach potential GDP without the adjustment in wages?
Government interventions and the central bank