Aggregate demand and Aggregate Supply (AD and AS).ppt
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1、1,Aggregate demand and Aggregate Supply (AD and AS),notice the data: while potential GDP tends to move upward yr after yr, due to economic growth, actual GDP tends to rise above and fall below potential over shorter periods Date reveals an important fact: Deviations from potential output dont last f
2、orever In some of these episodes, government policy-either fiscal or monetary-helped the economy to return to full employment more quickly But even without corrective policies-such as during long parts of Great Ds of the 1930s-the economy shows a remarkable tendency to begin moving back towards pote
3、ntial output What is the mechanism behind? We will study the behavior of a new variable that we have put aside for several chapters: the price level,2,Figure 1a: Potential and Actual Real GDP, 1960-2001,3,Figure 1: The Two-Way Relationship Between Output and the Price Level,4,AD and AS,There exist a
4、 two-way relationship between price level and output (see diagram 1)Changes in price level cause changes in real GDP illustrated by Aggregate Demand curve Changes in real GDP cause changes in price level illustrated by Aggregate Supply curve,5,The Aggregate Demand Curve,First step in understanding h
5、ow price level affects economy is an important fact When price level rises, money demand curve shifts rightward (because purchases become more expensive) Shift in money demand, and its impact on the economy, is illustrated in Figure 2 Imagine a rather substantial rise in price levelfrom 100 to 140 C
6、ompared with our initial position, this new equilibrium has the following characteristics Money demand curve has shifted rightward Interest rate is higher Aggregate expenditure line has shifted downward Equilibrium GDP is lower All of these changes are caused by a rise in price level A rise in price
7、 level causes a decrease in equilibrium GDP,6,Figure 2a: Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve,(a),E,H,500,Ms,7,Figure 2b/c: Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve,(b),(c),Real GDP ($ Trillions),Aggregate Expenditure ($ Trillions),6,10,E,AEr = 6%,AEr = 9%,H,140,100,PriceLevel,H,AD,E,10,6,Real GDP ($ Tril
8、lions),8,Deriving the Aggregate Demand Curve,Panel (c) of Figure 2 shows a new curve Shows negative relationship between price level and equilibrium GDP Call aggregate demand curve Tells us equilibrium real GDP at any price level,9,Understanding the AD Curve,AD curve is unlike any other curve youve
9、encountered in this text In all other cases, our curves have represented simple behavioral relationships But AD curve represents more than just a behavioral relationship between two variables Each point on curve represents a short-run equilibrium in economy A better name for AD curve would be “equil
10、ibrium output at each price level” curvenot a very catchy name AD curve gets its name because it resembles demand curve for an individual product AD curve is not a demand curve at all, in spite of its name,10,Movements Along the AD Curve,As you will see later in this chapter, a variety of events can
11、 cause price level to change, and move us along AD curve Suppose price level rises, and we move from point E to point H along this curve Following sequence of events occurs,Opposite sequence of events will occur if price level falls, moving us rightward along AD curve,11,Shifts of the AD Curve,When
12、we move along AD curve in Figure 2, we assume that price level changes But that other influences on equilibrium GDP are constant Keep following rule in mind When a change in price level causes equilibrium GDP to change, we move along AD curve Whenever anything other than price level causes equilibri
13、um GDP to change, AD curve itself shifts Equilibrium GDP will change whenever there is a change in any of the following Government purchases Autonomous consumption spending Investment spending Net exports Taxes Money supply,12,An Increase in Government Purchases,Spending shocks initially affect econ
14、omy by shifting aggregate expenditure line In Figure 3, we assume economy begins at a price level of 100 Lets increase government purchases by $2 trillion and ask what happens if price level remains at 100 An increase in government purchases shifts entire AD curve rightward AD curve shifts rightward
15、 when government purchases, investment spending, autonomous consumption spending, or net exports increase, or when taxes decrease Analysis also applies in the other direction AD curve shifts leftward when government purchases, investment spending, autonomous consumption spending, or net exports decr
16、ease, or when taxes increase,13,Figure 3: A Spending Shock Shifts the AD Curve,(a),(b),H,10,13.5,E,AE1,AE2,Real Aggregate Expenditure ($ Trillions),Real GDP ($ Trillions),100,10,13.5,AD1,AD2,E,H,Real GDP ($ Trillions),PriceLevel,14,Changes in the Money Supply,Changes in money supply will also shift
17、aggregate demand curve Imagine that Fed conducts open market operations to increase money supply AD curve shifts rightward A decrease in money supply would have the opposite effect,15,Shifts vs. Movements Along the AD Curve: A Summary,Figure 4 summarizes how some events in economy cause a movement a
18、long AD curve, and other events shift AD curve Panels (b) and (c) of Figure 4 tell us how a variety of events affect AD curve, but not how they affect real GDP Where will price level end up? First step in answering that question is to understand the other side of the relationship between GDP and pri
19、ce level,16,Figure 4a: Effects of Key Changes on the Aggregate Demand Curve,(a),Real GDP,Price Level,P3,Q3,Q1,Q2,AD,P1,P2,17,Figure 4b: Effects of Key Changes on the Aggregate Demand Curve,AD2,AD1,(b),Real GDP,Price Level,18,Figure 4c: Effects of Key Changes on the Aggregate Demand Curve,AD2,decreas
20、es,(c),Real GDP,Price Level,AD1,19,Costs and Prices,Price level in economy results from pricing behavior of millions of individual business firms In any given year, some of these firms will raise their prices, and some will lower them But often, all firms in the economy are affected by the same macr
21、oeconomic event Causing prices to rise or fall throughout the economy what interest us in macroeconomics To understand how macroeconomic events affect the price level, we begin with a very simple assumption A firm sets price of its products as a markup over cost per unit,20,Costs and Prices,Percenta
22、ge markup in any particular industry will depend on degree of competition there In macroeconomics, we are not concerned with how the markup differs in different industries But rather with average percentage markup in economy Determined by competitive conditions Competitive structure changes very slo
23、wly, so average percentage markup should be somewhat stable from year-to-year But a stable markup does not necessarily mean a stable price level, because unit costs can change In short-run, price level rises when there is an economy-wide increase in unit costs Price level falls when there is an econ
24、omy-wide decrease in unit costs,21,GDP, Costs, and the Price Level,Primary concern here: impact of real GDP on unit costs and, therefore, on the price level Why should a change in output affect unit costs and price level? As total output increases Greater amounts of inputs may be needed to produce a
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