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Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

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Page 1: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Page 2: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

• Economic activity fluctuates from year to year.– In most years production of goods and services rises.– On average over the past 50 years, production in the U.S.

economy has grown by about 3 percent per year.– In some years normal growth does not occur, causing a recession.

• A recession is a period of declining real incomes, and rising unemployment. Since 1965, the U.S. economy has suffered six recessions.

• A depression is a severe recession. The Great Depression occurred in 1929-1941 when output fell by about 30 percent and unemployment rose to 25 percent.

Page 3: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THREE KEY FACTS ABOUT ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

• Economic fluctuations are irregular and unpredictable.– Fluctuations in the economy are often called the

business cycle. Stylized model of the business cycle.

• Most macroeconomic variables fluctuate together.

• As output falls, unemployment rises.

Page 4: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 1 A Look At Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Billions of1996 Dollars

Real GDP

(a) Real GDP

$10,000

9,000

8,000

7,000

6,000

5,000

4,000

3,000

2,0001965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 5: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THREE KEY FACTS ABOUT ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

• Most macroeconomic variables fluctuate together.– Most macroeconomic variables that measure

some type of income or production fluctuate closely together.

– Although many macroeconomic variables fluctuate together, they fluctuate by different amounts.

Page 6: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 1 A Look At Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Billions of1996 Dollars

(b) Investment Spending

$1,800

1,600

1,400

1,200

1,000

800

600

400

2001965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Investment spending

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 7: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THREE KEY FACTS ABOUT ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

• As output falls, unemployment rises.– Changes in real GDP are inversely related to

changes in the unemployment rate.– During times of recession, unemployment rises

substantially.

Page 8: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 1 A Look At Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Percent ofLabor Force

(c) Unemployment Rate

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Unemployment rate

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 9: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

EXPLAINING SHORT-RUN ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

• Short-run versus the long-run: Price Flexibility– LR: Most economists believe that classical theory describes the

world in the long run but not in the short run.• Changes in the money supply affect nominal variables but not real

variables = Monetary is neutral.• The aggregate supply curve is vertical and prices adjust fully.

– SR: Most economists believe that prices do not adjust fully in the short-run and therefore output will change.

• Changes in the money supply can affect real variables in the short-run = Money is not neutral.

• Aggregate supply is upward sloping.

• Therefore, aggregate demand as well as aggregate supply are important in determining output and prices in the short-run.

Page 10: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

The Basic Model of Economic Fluctuations

• Two variables are used to develop a model to analyze the short-run fluctuations.– The economy’s output of goods and services measured

by real GDP.– The overall price level measured by the CPI or the

GDP deflator.

• The Basic Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply– Economist use the model of aggregate demand and

aggregate supply to explain short-run fluctuations in economic activity around its long-run trend.

Page 11: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The Basic Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply– The aggregate-demand curve shows the quantity of

goods and services that households, firms, and the government want to buy at each price level.

• The Basic Model of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply– The aggregate-supply curve shows the quantity of

goods and services that firms choose to produce and sell at each price level.

Page 12: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 2 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply...

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Aggregatesupply

Aggregatedemand

Equilibriumoutput

Equilibriumprice level

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 13: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THE AGGREGATE-DEMAND CURVE

• The four components of GDP (Y) contribute to the aggregate demand for goods and services.

Y = C + I + G + NX

Page 14: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 3 The Aggregate-Demand Curve...

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Aggregatedemand

P

Y Y2

P2

1. A decreasein the pricelevel . . .

2. . . . increases the quantity ofgoods and services demanded.

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 15: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Why the Aggregate-Demand Curve Is Downward Sloping

• The AD is not downward sloping for the reasons a demand curve in microeconomics is downward sloping (substitution and income effects)

• Remember our analysis of the Wealth Portfolio – If P falls the value of money increases, people are then holding excess cash balances so they either spend it or lend it:– Spend it : The Price Level and Consumption: The Wealth Effect– Lend it: The Price Level and Investment: The Interest Rate Effect– The result of lend it: The Price Level and Net Exports: The

Exchange-Rate Effect

Page 16: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The Price Level and Consumption: The Wealth Effect– A decrease in the price level increases the value of

money in one’s portfolio and makes consumers feel more wealthy, which in turn encourages them to spend more.

– This increase in consumer spending means larger quantities of goods and services demanded.

– P↓ → VofM↑ → wealth↑ → spend it → C↑ →AD↑

Page 17: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The Price Level and Investment: The Interest Rate Effect– A lower price level increases the value of cash holdings

and wealth, people lend more, this reduces the interest rate, which encourages greater spending on investment goods.

– This increase in investment spending means a larger quantity of goods and services demanded.

– P↓ → VofM↑ → wealth↑ → lend it → SLF↑ → r↓ → I↑ → AD↑

Page 18: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The Price Level and Net Exports: The Exchange-Rate Effect– A lower price level increases the value of cash holdings

and wealth, people lend more, this reduces the interest rate, NCO increases the supply of dollars increases, the real exchange rate depreciates, which stimulates U.S. net exports.

– The increase in net export spending means a larger quantity of goods and services demanded.

– P↓ → VofM↑ → wealth↑ → lend it → SLF↑ → r↓ → S$ ↑ → eP/P*↓ → NX↑ → AD↑

Page 19: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Shifts in the Aggregate-Demand Curve• The downward slope of the aggregate demand curve shows

that a fall in the price level raises the overall quantity of goods and services demanded.

• Many other factors, however, affect the quantity of goods and services demanded at any given price level. When one of these other factors changes, the aggregate demand curve shifts.

• Shifts arise from autonomous (not related to P or Q in US)– Consumption – consumer confidence– Investment – business confidence– Government Purchases – Military, Medicare

– Net Exports – ROW incomes↑

Page 20: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Shifts in the Aggregate Demand Curve

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Aggregatedemand, D1

P1

Y1

D2

Y2

Page 21: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THE AGGREGATE-SUPPLY CURVE• In the long-run, aggregate-supply curve is vertical. This

is the Classical view.• In the short run, the aggregate-supply curve is upward

sloping. This a modification of the Keynesian view.• The Long-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve

– In the long run, an economy’s production of goods and services depends on its supplies of labor, capital, and natural resources and on the available technology used to turn these factors of production into goods and services. Q= A F(K/L, H/L, NR/L)

– The price level does not affect these variables in the long run.

Page 22: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 4 The Long-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve

Quantity ofOutput

Natural rateof output

PriceLevel

0

Long-runaggregate

supply

P2

1. A changein the pricelevel . . .

2. . . . does not affect the quantity of goods and services supplied in the long run.

P

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 23: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

THE AGGREGATE-SUPPLY CURVE

• The Long-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve– The long-run aggregate-supply curve is vertical

at the natural rate of output.– This level of production is also referred to as

potential output or full-employment output.

Page 24: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Why the Long-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve Might Shift

• Any change in the economy that alters the natural rate of output shifts the long-run aggregate-supply curve.

• The shifts may be categorized according to the various factors in the classical model that affect output.

• Shifts arising – Labor– Capital– Natural Resources– Technological Knowledge

Page 25: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 5 Long-Run Growth and Inflation

Quantity ofOutput

Y1980

AD1980

AD1990

Aggregate Demand, AD2000

PriceLevel

0

Long-runaggregate

supply,LRAS1980

Y1990

LRAS1990

Y2000

LRAS2000

P1980

1. In the long run,technological progress shifts long-run aggregate supply . . .

4. . . . andongoing inflation.

3. . . . leading to growthin output . . .

P1990

P2000

2. . . . and growth in the money supply shifts aggregate demand . . .

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 26: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

A New Way to Depict Long-Run Growth and Inflation

• Short-run fluctuations in output and price level should be viewed as deviations from the continuing long-run trends.

Page 27: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Why the Aggregate-Supply Curve Slopes Upward in the Short Run

• In the short run, an increase in the overall level of prices in the economy tends to raise the quantity of goods and services supplied.

• A decrease in the level of prices tends to reduce the quantity of goods and services supplied.

Page 28: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 6 The Short-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Short-runaggregate

supply

1. A decreasein the pricelevel . . .

2. . . . reduces the quantityof goods and servicessupplied in the short run.

Y

P

Y2

P2

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 29: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Why the Aggregate-Supply Curve Slopes Upward in the Short Run

To understand an upward sloping short-run supply curve we need to understand expectations. Specifically, expectations about prices.– Remember nominal interest rates equals the real rate of

interest plus the rate of inflation: i=r+%ΔP– Borrowers and lenders must form expectations about

what prices will be in the future before they agree to lend and borrow.

– In the macroeconomy, individuals form expectations about the price level (inflation later on).

• Workers form Pe when negotiating form nominal wages (W).• Business form Pe ,especially about inputs, when setting prices.

Page 30: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The expected price level Pe is the link between aggregate supply in the short-run and in the long-run.

• In the long-run P=Pe, people can’t be “fooled”, but in the short-run P can be less than, equal to, or more than Pe.

• Three theories of upward-sloping short-run aggregate supply:– The Misperceptions Theory– The Sticky-Wage Theory– The Sticky-Price Theory

Page 31: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• The Misperceptions Theory– Changes in the overall price level temporarily

mislead suppliers about what is happening in the markets in which they sell their output:

– A lower price level causes misperceptions about relative prices.

• These misperceptions induce suppliers to decrease the quantity of goods and services supplied.

Page 32: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

The Sticky-Wage Theory

• The Sticky-Wage Theory– Nominal wages are slow to adjust, or are

“sticky” in the short run:• Wages do not adjust immediately to a fall in the

price level.

• A lower price level makes employment and production less profitable.

• This induces firms to reduce the quantity of goods and services supplied.

Page 33: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

The Sticky-Price Theory

– Prices of some goods and services adjust sluggishly in response to changing economic conditions:

• An unexpected fall in the price level leaves some firms with higher-than-desired prices.

• This depresses sales, which induces firms to reduce the quantity of goods and services they produce.

Page 34: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Why the Short-Run Aggregate-Supply Curve Might Shift

• Shifts arising – Labor– Capital– Natural Resources.– Technology.– Expected Price Level.

• An increase in the expected price level reduces the quantity of goods and services supplied and shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the left.

• A decrease in the expected price level raises the quantity of goods and services supplied and shifts the short-run aggregate supply curve to the right.

Page 35: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 7 The Long-Run Equilibrium

Natural rateof output

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Short-runaggregate

supply

Long-runaggregate

supply

Aggregatedemand

AEquilibriumprice

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 36: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 8 A Contraction in Aggregate Demand

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Short-run aggregatesupply, AS

Long-runaggregate

supply

Aggregatedemand, AD

AP

Y

AD2

AS2

1. A decrease inaggregate demand . . .

2. . . . causes output to fall in the short run . . .

3. . . . but over time, the short-runaggregate-supplycurve shifts . . .

4. . . . and output returnsto its natural rate.

CP3

BP2

Y2

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 37: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

TWO CAUSES OF ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

• Shifts in Aggregate Demand– In the short run, shifts in aggregate demand cause

fluctuations in the economy’s output of goods and services.– In the long run, shifts in aggregate demand affect the

overall price level but do not affect output.

• An Adverse Shift in Aggregate Supply– A decrease in one of the determinants of aggregate supply

shifts the curve to the left:• Output falls below the natural rate of employment.• Unemployment rises.• The price level rises.

Page 38: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 10 An Adverse Shift in Aggregate Supply

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Aggregate demand

3. . . . and the price level to rise.

2. . . . causes output to fall . . .

1. An adverse shift in the short-run aggregate-supply curve . . .

Short-runaggregate

supply, AS

Long-runaggregate

supply

Y

AP

AS2

B

Y2

P2

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 39: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

The Effects of a Shift in Aggregate Supply

• Stagflation– Adverse shifts in aggregate supply cause stagflation—a

period of recession and inflation.• Output falls and prices rise.• Policymakers who can influence aggregate demand cannot offset

both of these adverse effects simultaneously.

• Policy Responses to Recession– Policymakers may respond to a recession in one of the

following ways:• Do nothing and wait for prices and wages to adjust.• Take action to increase aggregate demand by using monetary

and fiscal policy.

Page 40: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Figure 11 Accommodating an Adverse Shift in Aggregate Supply

Quantity ofOutput

Natural rateof output

PriceLevel

0

Short-runaggregate

supply, AS

Long-runaggregate

supply

Aggregate demand, AD

P2

AP

AS2

3. . . . whichcauses theprice level to rise further . . .

4. . . . but keeps outputat its natural rate.

2. . . . policymakers canaccommodate the shiftby expanding aggregatedemand . . .

1. When short-run aggregatesupply falls . . .

AD2

CP3

Copyright © 2004 South-Western

Page 41: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Short-run vs. Long-run Adjustment

• The economy may contract or expand in the short-run, but it will return to the long-run level of output and the natural rate of unemployment (full-employment or YFE).

• Aggregate supply is the curve that shifts to return the economy to full employment.

• Given that we have emphasized sticky wages, over other theories of the slope of the AS curve, lets use wage flexibility in the long-run to explain how the AS shifts and returns the economy to YFE

• The basic idea is that wages will adjust upwards when Yactual> YFE or the unemployment rate is below the natural rate and downwards if Yactual<YFE.

Page 42: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

• If Yactual> YFE, Uactual<UNR, this will cause nominal wages (W) to rise in the long-run and the AS will decrease or shift up and to the left.

• If Yactual< YFE, Uactual>UNR, this will cause nominal wages (W) to fall in the long-run and the AS will increase or shift down and to the right.

• In both cases, nominal wages will continue to adjust until we return to the UNR and YFE is restored.

Page 43: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Adjustment to Shifts in AD and AS

• Positive AD shock, AD↑, P↑, Y↑, Yactual> YFE, Uactual<UNR, W↑, AS↓, until Yactual=YFE, Uactual=UNR (Figure 7 above)

• Negative AD shock, AD↓, P↓, Y↓, Yactual<YFE, Uactual>UNR, W↓, AS↑, until Yactual=YFE, Uactual=UNR (Figure 7 above)

• Positive AS shock, AS↑, P↓, Y↑, Yactual> YFE, Uactual<UNR, W↑, AS↓, until Yactual=YFE, Uactual=UNR (Figure 8 above)

• Negative AS shock, AS↓, P↑, Y↓, Yactual<YFE, Uactual >UNR, W↓, AS↑, until Yactual=YFE, Uactual=UNR(Figure 8 above)

Page 44: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• All societies experience short-run economic fluctuations around long-run trends.

• These fluctuations are irregular and largely unpredictable.

• When recessions occur, real GDP and other measures of income, spending, and production fall, and unemployment rises.

Page 45: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• Economists analyze short-run economic fluctuations using the aggregate demand and aggregate supply model.

• According to the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply, the output of goods and services and the overall level of prices adjust to balance aggregate demand and aggregate supply.

Page 46: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• The aggregate-demand curve slopes downward for three reasons: a wealth effect, an interest rate effect, and an exchange rate effect.

• Any event or policy that changes consumption, investment, government purchases, or net exports at a given price level will shift the aggregate-demand curve.

Page 47: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• In the long run, the aggregate supply curve is vertical.

• The short-run, the aggregate supply curve is upward sloping.

• The are three theories explaining the upward slope of short-run aggregate supply: the misperceptions theory, the sticky-wage theory, and the sticky-price theory.

Page 48: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• Events that alter the economy’s ability to produce output will shift the short-run aggregate-supply curve.

• Also, the position of the short-run aggregate-supply curve depends on the expected price level.

• One possible cause of economic fluctuations is a shift in aggregate demand.

Page 49: Powerpoint Presentation Long-run Aggregate Supply and Demand

Summary

• A second possible cause of economic fluctuations is a shift in aggregate supply.

• Stagflation is a period of falling output and rising prices.