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AD/AS Model

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AD/AS Model Diedra Flora AP Macroeconomics Short-Run Equilibrium The equilibrium of SRAS & AD determines current output (GDPR) and the price level (PL) GDPR PL AD ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AD/AS Model


1
AD/AS Model
  • Diedra Flora
  • AP Macroeconomics

2
Short-Run Equilibrium
  • The equilibrium of SRAS AD determines current
    output (GDPR) and the price level (PL)

SRAS
PL

P
AD
GDPR
YF
3
Full Employment
  • Full Employment equilibrium exists where AD
    intersects SRAS LRAS at the same point.

SRAS
LRAS
PL

P
AD
GDPR
YF
4
Shifts of AD Short-Run Effects
  • An event that shifts the AD curve is known as a
    demand shock.
  • The economy can experience positive or negative
    demand shocks.
  • Causes of demand shock are change in
    expectations, wealth, the stock of physical
    capital, or the use of fiscal or monetary policy.

5
Negative Demand Shock
  • A negative demand shock shifts the AD curve to
    the left, lowering PL and Real GDP.

SRAS
PL
P
P1
AD
AD1
GDPR
Y
Y1
6
Positive Demand Shock
  • A positive demand shock shifts the AD curve to
    the right, raising PL and Real GDP.

SRAS
PL
P1
P
AD1
AD
GDPR
Y1
Y
7
Shifts of AS Short-Run Effects
  • An event that shifts the AS curve is known as a
    supply shock.
  • The economy can experience positive and negative
    supply shocks.
  • Causes of supply shocks are changes in commodity
    (or resource) prices, nominal wages, or
    productivity

8
Negative Supply Shock
  • A negative shock shifts the SRAS curve to the
    left, raising PL and lowering Real GDP.

SRAS1
PL
SRAS
P1
P
AD
GDPR
Y1
Y
9
Stagflation
  • A supply shock causes a condition known as
    stagflation, for stagnation plus inflation.
  • When the economy experiences stagflation, its
    very unpleasant falling output leads to rising
    unemployment, and people feel that their
    purchasing power is squeezed by rising prices.

10
Positive Supply Shock
  • A positive shock shifts the SRAS curve to the
    right, lowering PL and raising Real GDP.

SRAS
PL
SRAS1
P
P1
AD
GDPR
Y1
Y
11
Long-Run Equilibrium
  • The economy is in long-run macroeconomic
    equilibrium when the point of short-run
    equilibrium is on the long-run aggregate supply
    curve.

12
Recessionary Gap Short-Run
  • A recessionary gap exists when equilibrium occurs
    below full employment output because of a
    negative demand shock.

PL
SRAS
LRAS
PL
PL1
PL2
AD
AD1
GDPR
YF
Y
Decreases in AD can cause cyclical unemployment
and recession.
13
Recessionary Gap Long-Run Effects
  • In the long-run the economy is self-correcting.
    Wages eventually fall in response to high
    unemployment. The lower cost of production
    causes the SRAS curve to shift to the right.

PL
SRAS
LRAS
SRAS1
PL
PL1
PL2
AD
AD1
GDPR
YF
Y1
In the long-run the economy self-corrects,
bringing unemployment back to full employment,
and Real GDP back to potential GDP.
14
Inflationary Gap Short-Run
  • A inflationary gap exists when equilibrium occurs
    above full employment output because of a
    positive demand shock.

PL
LRAS
SRAS1
PL1
PL
AD1
AD
GDPR
YF
Y1
15
Inflationary Gap Long-Run Effects
  • In the long-run, the economy is self-correcting.
    The increased demand for labor will cause wages
    to increase. This will cause the SRAS curve to
    shift to the left.

PL
SRAS2
LRAS
SRAS1
PL2
PL1
PL
AD1
AD
GDPR
YF
Y1
16
Supply Shocks versus Demand Shocks
  • The previous analysis of a self-correcting
    economy can apply to supply shocks as well as
    demand shocks.
  • Negative supply shocks (also known as cost-push
    inflation) are particularly difficult for an
    economy.
  • Seven of nine postwar recessions were the result
    of demand shocks, not supply shocks. The two
    supply shocks were the two worst as measured by
    the unemployment rate.

17
Increases in AS and AD Full employment, high
economic growth, and price stability
  • Increases in productivity and expanding output
    occurred between 1990 and 2000 due to a burst of
    new technology relating to computers, the
    Internet, inventory management systems,
    electronic commerce, etc. The country
    experienced full employment, high economic
    growth, AND price stability.

18
AS / AD Summary
  • ?C, ?IG, ?G, and/or ?XN ? AD
  • AD ? . GDPR? PL? . u? p?
  • AD ? . GDPR? PL? . u? p?
  • ? Input Prices, ? Productivity,
  • and/or ? Regulation ? SRAS
  • SRAS ? . GDPR? PL? . u? p?
  • SRAS ? . GDPR? PL ? . u? p?
  • The AS/AD Model is the most important graph in AP
    Macroeconomics.
  • KNOW IT!!!

19
Another Way of Drawing the SRAS Curve
SRAS
PL

GDPR
20
Different shapes of the SRASThe Horizontal SRAS
  • Under what conditions would an economy have a
    horizontal SRAS curve?
  • When there are a lot of unemployed resources or a
    constant price level as in a recession or
    depression.

21
The Positively Sloped SRAS Curve
  • Under what conditions would an economy have a
    positively sloped SRAS curve?
  • In this range, resources are getting closer to
    full-employment levels, which creates upward
    pressure on prices.

22
The Vertical SRAS Curve
  • Under what conditions would an economy have a
    vertical SRAS curve?
  • SRAS is vertical when real GDP is the full
    employment level and where any increase in demand
    will result only in an increase in prices.
  • The economy is unable to produce any more goods
    and services for a sustainable period of time.
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