Title: Aggregate Demand
1Aggregate Demand SupplyPart II Supply
2Aggregate Supply
- Aggregate Supply total goods services
supplied - Aggregate Supply Curve
- relates total goods services supplied to
general price level, Y f(P) - ? disagreement over derivation
- ??disagreement over shape
- Theorists distinguish between short run and long
run aggregate supply curves
3Aggregate S ? ?si
- Just as the aggregate demand curve is not equal
to the sum of individual demand curves, so too
with supply - Individual supply curves are based on ceteris
paribus assumption - But with general rise in price level, all prices
rise, including input prices so ceteris paribus
can't hold
4Aggregate Supply Results
- So, aggregate supply is not really derived, it is
presented as what happens on the whole, the net
result of all firms responses to average changes
in the price level - Yet, reasoning about the shape of the aggregate
supply curve is carried on in terms of the way
firms might be expected to act in various
situations --based on microeconomic theory about
firm decision making
5Firm Theory
- Microeconomic theory of the firm, says firms
- maximize net revenue or profit
- rising input prices shift cost curves up and
(ceteris paribus) reduce supply - falling input prices shift cost curves down and
(ceteris paribus) increase supply - Let's look at an example
6Perfectly Competitive Firm - I
- Output prices are given, max ? w/ MC MR
MC
price
AC
p1
given price MR
Q1
Output
7Perfectly Competitive Firm - II
- If costs fall, output will rise, with MC' MR
MC
price
MC'
Note
p1
no change in given price!
Q1
Q2
Output
8Perfectly Competitive Firm - III
- If Output prices rise, output rises
MC
price
AC
p2
p1
PMR
Q1
Q2
Output
9Contradiction
- Note, reasoning about aggregate supply relates
general price changes to output decisions - But
- FALLING input prices result in increased output
- RISING output prices result in increased output
10Solution?
- Consider response of firms to overall price level
- what this means is by no means clear, not in
micro theory - Consider firms' short run capacity
- in micro terms this is shape of cost curve
- Consider lags between increases in overall price
level and inputs, especially wages(!) - Clearly, the reasoning is only partially based on
microeconomic firm theory
11Positive Slope?
- In general, it is assumed that in the short run
firms will INCREASE output as the price level
rises but with increasing difficulty as they
approach their capacity (i.e., costs increase)
determined by fixed production assets - Because we are dealing with aggregates, capacity
is related, as in Keynesian theory, to "full
employment" level of Y
12Aggregate Supply Curve
- So, aggregate supply is assumed to look like this
AS
P
Y
13Changing slope?
- At low levels of Y, AS is assumed to be
relatively flat
AS
P
rationale easy to increase output, input prices
lag, esp. wages
? excess capacity
Y
14Changing slope?
- At higher levels of Y, AS is assumed to be
relatively vertical
? less excess capacity
AS
P
rationale harder to???output as input prices
?, esp. wages
Y
15Wage - Price Relation
- A central issue here is the relationship between
changes in prices and changes in wages - do wage changes lag price changes?
- do wage changes keep up with price changes?
- e.g., indexed wages?
- if prices wages adjust the same, then profit
maximization would result in no change in output,
--AS would be vertical - because ALL wages are almost never indexed, some
will fall behind and rising prices will increase
profits and result in higher output, e.g., upward
slope
16Shifts in AS curve
- Anything that changes price - output decisions
will shift curve
AS
P
Y
17Cost Shocks
- Changes in basic costs, e.g., wages or oil,
change costs for most firms
AS
P
? wages ?????costs ????AS
? oil price ????costs ????AS
Y
18Growth Stagnation
- Changes in available means of production, eg.,
labor or capital shifts AS
AS
P
? labor ????capacity ????AS
? capital ????capacity ????AS
Y
19Public Policies
- Policies that increase or decrease costs shift AS
AS
P
? EPA ????costs ????AS
? regulation ????costs ????AS
Y
20--END--