Aggregate Demand and Supply Flashcards

1
Q

Aggregate Demand

A
  • refers to the total of all goods and services demanded at various price levels
  • shows the inverse relationship between the total real output and the average price level
  • AD = C + I + G + (X - M)

add diagram

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2
Q

From the IB syllabus: determinants of AD

A
  • C - consumer confidence, interest rates, wealth, income taxes, level of household indebtedness, expectations of future price level
  • I - interest rates, business confidence, technology, business taxes, level of corporate indebtedness
  • G - political and economic priorities, transfer payments
  • (X-M) - income of trading partners, exchanges rates, trade policies
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2
Q

Shifts in Aggregate Demand (Determinants)

A
  • consumption - total spending on domestic goods and services
  • investment - addition of capital stock to the economy by firms (replacement or induced)
  • Government Expenditure - at any level, depends on policies
  • Exports (revenues) - domestic goods and services bought by foreign consumers
  • Imports (Expenditures) - goods and serivces bought from foreign producers
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3
Q

Consumer demand

A
  • durable goods - used/consumed over longer period of time (usually years)
  • when loans are needed, they are usually for durable goods
  • Non-durable goods - used/consumed over a shorter period of time (weeks, months)
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4
Q

Study tip for aggregate demand (shifts)

A

think of the money flow in the economy. Increase money flow in the economy = aggregate demand shift to the right. Decrease money flow in the economy = aggregate demand shift to the left.
1. an increase in consumer confidence would make people spend more = agg dem shift outward
2. increase foreign income = they can buy more of my exports = more money in the circular flow in economy = add demand shift outward
3. increase in interest rate = investors save more, spend less = less money in the circular flow in economy = agg demand shift inward

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5
Q

Aggregate Supply

A
  • refers to the total of all goods and services supplied at various price levels
  • it shows the relationship between real output and the average price level
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6
Q

from the IB syllabus: determinants of SRAS

A
  • Costs of factors or production
  • indirect taxes
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7
Q

Factors affecting quantity of FOP

A
  • Land reclamation
  • increased access to supply of resources
  • discovery of new resources
  • increase in birth rate
  • immigration
  • decrease in natural rate of unemployment
  • investment
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8
Q

factors affecting quality of FOP

A
  • technological advancement
  • fertilizers
  • irragation
  • education
  • training
  • apprenticeship program
  • r&d
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9
Q

from the IB syllabus: shifts of LRAS

A
  • changes in the quantity and/or quality of FOP
  • improvements in technology
  • increases in efficiency
  • changes in institutions
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10
Q

short run aggregate supply

A

the upward-sloping short-run aggregate supply curve reflects limited excess capacity in the economy.
As output nears full employment, some factors of production become scarce, leading firms to compete for these resources, which drives prices up.

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11
Q

Long run aggregate supply

A

long-run aggregate supply curve is vertical at full employment
it represent the economy’s maximum output, where all resources are fully employed and cannot produce more with current technology and resources.

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12
Q

how can we push out the physical limit

A

Incrase the factors of production (i.e. discover more oil deposits)
improve the factors of production
promote savings (to have more funds available for investment)
promote mobility of factors between sectors of the economy
promote research and development to increase the level of technology
promote the supply side (incentives, investment, innovation, entrepreneurial spirit)

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13
Q

Keynesian Phase 2

A

economy starts to feel inflationary pressure as FOP become scarcer and prices for FOP rise
PL rises to compensate for higher costs

insert diagram

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14
Q

Keynesian Phase 1 (Deflationary gap)

A

increase in AD and Y but no change in PL (no increase in producer costs)
using up spare capacity

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15
Q

Keynesian Phase 3 (inflationary gap)

A

if operating at full employment and AD rises the outcome is ‘purely inflationary’
no increase in output is possible, only change is in PL
the present FOP cannot produce more

insert diagram

15
Q

inflationary gap

A

an inflationary gap exists when the economy is in equilibrium at a level of output that is GREATER than the full employment level of output

16
Q

deflationary gap

A

a deflationary gap exists when the economy is in equilibrium at a level of output that is LESS than the full employment level of output

17
Q

explaining diagram for macro equilibrium

A
  1. state what has occured
  2. consequences of that (and which determinant)
  3. which curve shifts and in which direction
  4. refer to curve from diagram
  5. refer to price consequences
  6. refer to output consequences
    Also - you could discuss the impact on inflation and unemployment