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Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Inflation

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Title: Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and Inflation


1
Aggregate Demand,Aggregate Supply,and Inflation
2
The Aggregate Demand Curve
  • Aggregate demand is the total demand for goods
    and services in the economy.

3
Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve
  • To derive the aggregate demand curve, we examine
    what happens to aggregate output (income) (Y)
    when the price level (P) changes, assuming no
    changes in government spending (G), net taxes
    (T), or the monetary policy variable (Ms).

4
Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve
The Impact of an Increase in the Price Level on
the Economy Assuming No Changes in G, T, and Ms
5
Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve
  • The aggregate demand (AD) curve is a curve that
    shows the negative relationship between aggregate
    output (income) and the price level.

6
The Aggregate Demand CurveA Warning
  • The AD curve is not a market demand curve. It is
    a more complex concept.
  • We cannot use the ceteris paribus assumption to
    draw an AD curve. In reality, many prices
    (including input prices) rise together.

7
The Aggregate Demand CurveA Warning
  • A higher price level causes the demand for money
    to rise, which causes the interest rate to rise.
  • Then, the higher interest rate causes aggregate
    output to fall.

8
The Aggregate Demand CurveA Warning
  • At all points along the AD curve, both the goods
    market and the money market are in equilibrium.

9
Other Reasons for a Downward-Sloping Aggregate
Demand Curve
  • The consumption link The decrease in
    consumption brought about by an increase in the
    interest rate contributes to the overall decrease
    in output.

10
Other Reasons for a Downward-Sloping Aggregate
Demand Curve
  • The real wealth effect, or real balance, effect
    is the change in consumption brought about by a
    change in real wealth that results from a change
    in the price level.

11
Aggregate Expenditureand Aggregate Demand
  • At every point along the aggregate demand curve,
    the aggregate quantity of output demanded is
    exactly equal to planned aggregate expenditure.

12
Shifts of the Aggregate Demand Curve
  • An increase in the quantity of money supplied at
    a given price level shifts the aggregate demand
    curve to the right.

13
Shifts of the Aggregate Demand Curve
  • An increase in government purchases or a decrease
    in net taxes shifts the aggregate demand curve to
    the right.

14
Shifts of the Aggregate Demand Curve
15
The Aggregate Supply Curve
  • Aggregate supply is the total supply of all goods
    and services in the economy.

16
The Aggregate Supply Curve
  • The aggregate supply (AS) curve is a graph that
    shows the relationship between the aggregate
    quantity of output supplied by all firms in an
    economy and the overall price level.

17
The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
  • The aggregate supply curve is not a market supply
    curve or the sum of all the individual supply
    curves in the economy.

18
The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
  • Firms do not simply respond to market-determined
    prices, but they actually set prices.
    Price-setting firms do not have individual supply
    curves because these firms are choosing both
    output and price at the same time.

19
The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
  • When we draw a firms supply curve, we assume
    that input prices are constant. In
    macroeconomics, an increase in the overall price
    level means that at least some input prices will
    be rising as well.
  • The outputs of some firms are the inputs of other
    firms.

20
The Aggregate Supply CurveA Warning
  • Rather than an aggregate supply curve, what does
    exist is a price/output response curve a
    curve that traces out the price and output
    decisions of all the markets and firms in the
    economy under a given set of circumstances.

21
Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
  • In the short run, the aggregate supply curve (the
    price/output response curve) has a positive slope.

22
Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
  • At low levels of aggregate output, the curve is
    fairly flat. As the economy approaches capacity,
    the curve becomes nearly vertical. At capacity,
    the curve is vertical.

23
Aggregate Supply in the Short Run
  • Macroeconomists focus on whether or not the
    economy as a whole is operating at full capacity.
  • As the economy approaches maximum capacity, firms
    respond to further increases in demand only by
    raising prices.

24
Output Levels andPrice/Output Responses
  • When the economy is operating at low levels of
    output, an increase in aggregate demand is likely
    to result in an increase in output with little or
    no increase in the overall price level.

25
The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the
Overall Price Level
  • There must be a lag between changes in input
    prices and changes in output prices, otherwise
    the aggregate supply (price/output response)
    curve would be vertical.

26
The Response of Input Prices to Changes in the
Overall Price Level
  • Wage rates may increase at exactly the same rate
    as the overall price level if the price-level
    increase is fully anticipated. Most input
    prices, however, tend to lag increases in output
    prices.

27
Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve
  • A cost shock, or supply shock, is a change in
    costs that shifts the aggregate supply (AS) curve.

28
Shifts of the Short-RunAggregate Supply Curve
29
The Equilibrium Price Level
  • The equilibrium price level is the point at which
    the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves
    intersect.

30
The Equilibrium Price Level
  • P0 and Y0 correspond to equilibrium in the goods
    market and the money market and a set of
    price/output decisions on the part of all the
    firms in the economy.

31
The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
  • Costs lag behind price-level changes in the short
    run, resulting in an upward-sloping AS curve.
  • Costs and the price level move in tandem in the
    long run, and the AS curve is vertical.

32
The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
  • Output can be pushed above potential GDP by
    higher aggregate demand. The aggregate price
    level also rises.

33
The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
  • When output is pushed above potential, there is
    upward pressure on costs, and this causes the
    short-run AS curve to the left.
  • Costs ultimately increase by the same percentage
    as the price level, and the quantity supplied
    ends up back at Y0.

34
The Long-RunAggregate Supply Curve
  • Y0 represents the level of output that can be
    sustained in the long run without inflation. It
    is also called potential output or potential GDP.

35
Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary
and Fiscal Policy
  • AD can shift to the right for a number of
    reasons, including an increase in the money
    supply, a tax cut, or an increase in government
    spending.
  • Expansionary policy works well when the economy
    is on the flat portion of the AS curve, causing
    little change in P relative to the output
    increase.

36
Aggregate Demand, AggregateSupply, and Monetary
and Fiscal Policy
  • On the steep portion of the AS curve,
    expansionary policy does not work well. The
    multiplier is close to zero.
  • When the economy is operating near full capacity,
    an increase in AD will result in an increase in
    the price level with little increase in output.

37
Long-Run AggregateSupply and Policy Effects
  • If the AS curve is vertical in the long run,
    neither monetary policy nor fiscal policy has any
    effect on aggregate output.
  • In the long run, the multiplier effect of a
    change in government spending or taxes on
    aggregate output is zero.

38
The Simple KeynesianAggregate Supply Curve
  • The output of the economy cannot exceed the
    maximum output of YF.
  • The difference between planned aggregate
    expenditure and aggregate output at full capacity
    is sometimes referred to as an inflationary gap.

39
Causes of Inflation
  • Inflation is an increase in the overall price
    level.
  • Sustained inflation occurs when the overall price
    level continues to rise over some fairly long
    period of time.

40
Causes of Inflation
  • Demand-pull inflation is inflation initiated by
    an increase in aggregate demand.
  • Cost-push, or supply-side, inflation is inflation
    caused by an increase in costs.

41
Cost-Push, or Supply-Side Inflation
  • Stagflation occurs when output is falling at the
    same time that prices are rising.
  • One possible cause of stagflation is an increase
    in costs.

42
Cost-Push, or Supply-Side Inflation
  • Cost shocks are bad news for policy makers. The
    only way to counter the output loss is by having
    the price level increase even more than it would
    without the policy action.

43
Expectations and Inflation
  • If every firm expects every other firm to raise
    prices by 10, every firm will raise prices by
    about 10. This is how expectations can get
    built into the system.
  • In terms of the AD/AS diagram, an increase in
    inflationary expectations shifts the AS curve to
    the left.

44
Money and Inflation
  • Hyperinflation is a period of very rapid
    increases in the price level.

45
Money and Inflation
  • An increase in G with the money supply constant
    shifts the AD curve from AD0 to AD1. This leads
    to an increase in the interest rate and crowding
    out of planned investment.

46
Money and Inflation
  • If the Fed tries to prevent crowding, it will
    increase the money supply and the AD curve will
    shift farther and farther to the right. The
    result is a sustained inflation, perhaps
    hyperinflation.

47
Review Terms and Concepts
hyperinflation inflation inflationary
gap potential output, or potential GDP real
wealth, or real balance, effect stagflation sustai
ned inflation
aggregate demand aggregate demand (AD)
curve aggregate supply aggregate supply (AS)
curve cost-push, or supply-side, inflation cost
shock, or supply shock demand-pull
inflation equilibrium price level
48
Aggregate Supply
49
Aggregate Supply
  • Aggregate supply is the relationship between the
    price level in the economy and the quantity of
    aggregate output firms are willing and able to
    supply, other things held constant
  • The foundation of aggregate supply is the labor
    market
  • Like any market, the labor market has a demand
    side and a supply side
  • A good understanding of aggregate supply requires
    a correct understanding of the demand and supply
    sides of the labor market

50
Labor Supply
  • The supply of labor depends primarily on the wage
    rate (the dollar cost of a unit of labor, such as
    an hour of work)
  • The supply of labor also depends on
  • The size of the adult population
  • The skills (productivity) of the adult population
  • Households preferences for work versus leisure

51
The Nominal Wage and the Real Wage
  • The nominal wage is the wage measured in terms of
    current dollars
  • The real wage is the wage measured in terms of
    dollars of constant purchasing power
  • The real wage is the wage measured in terms of
    the quantity of goods it will purchase
  • Both workers and employers care more about the
    real wage than the nominal wage

52
Wages and Price Level Expectations
  • Nominal wages are important because resource
    agreements (such as wage contracts) are typically
    negotiated in nominal wages
  • Since wage contracts are negotiated ahead of
    time, they are based on workers expectation for
    the price level

53
Potential Output and the Natural Rate of
Unemployment
  • Potential output is the economys maximum
    sustainable output level, given the supply of
    resources, technology, and the underlying
    economic institutions
  • Another point of view is the that potential
    output is the level of output where there are no
    surprises about the price level
  • The natural rate of unemployment is the rate that
    occurs when the economy is producing it potential
    level of output

54
The Actual Price Level is Higher Than Expected
  • Firms experience higher profits, which stimulates
    the demand side of the labor market, pushing the
    economy past its potential output in the short
    run
  • Workers will respond by supplying more labor if
  • They are legally bound to do so by labor
    contracts
  • There is a large pool of unemployed labor causing
    workers to be cautious about asking for wage
    increases
  • Workers are uninformed concerning the increase in
    the economys price level
  • In the long run, wages will rise, bringing the
    economy to potential output

55
The Actual Price Level is Lower Than Expected
  • In this case, firms experience lower profits,
    which depresses the demand side of the labor
    market, pushing the economy below its potential
    output in the short run
  • Workers may respond by lowering wage demands as
    time passes

56
The Short-Run Supply Curve
  • If the price level is higher than expected, the
    quantity supplied is above the economys
    potential output
  • If the price level is lower than expected, the
    quantity supplied decreases
  • As a result, there is a positive short-run
    relationship between the price level and
    aggregate output supplied

Price Level
SRAS
Real GDP
57
The Short Run
  • The short run is a period during which some
    resources prices, especially labor, are fixed by
    agreement

58
Aggregate Supply and Equilibrium
Price Level
AD
SRAS
Potential output
Real GDP
59
The Actual Price Level is Higher Than Expected
Potential output
AD
Price Level
SRAS
SRAS
Real GDP
expansionary gap
60
The Actual Price Level is Lower Than Expected
Potential output
Price Level
SRAS
AD
SRAS
Real GDP
contractionary gap
61
Changes in Aggregate Supply
  • Adverse supply shocks are unexpected events that
    reduce aggregate supply
  • Beneficial supply shocks are unexpected events
    that reduce aggregate supply

Price Level
LRAS
LRAS
AD
SRAS
SRAS
Real GDP
62
Demand and Supply in the Labor Market
Nominal wage rate
D
S
Millions of workers
63
The Effect of a Higher Price Level
D
Nominal wage rate
S
D
S
Millions of workers
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