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Aggregate
Demand and
Supply Analysis
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Preview
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Learning Objectives
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Learning Objectives
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Aggregate Demand
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Aggregate Demand
Y ad C I G NX
The aggregate demand curve is downward sloping because
P M / P i I Y ad
and
P M / P i E NX Y ad
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Aggregate Demand
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Figure 1 Leftward Shift in the
Aggregate Demand Curve
Inflation
Rate, π
r , G , T , NX , C , I , f
decreases aggregate demand
and shifts the AD curve to the
left
AD2 AD1
Aggregate Output, Y
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Figure 2 Rightward Shift in the
Aggregate Demand Curve
Inflation
Rate, π
r ,G , T , NX , C , I , f
Increases aggregate
demand and shifts the AD
curve to the right
AD1 AD2
Affregate Output, Y
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Factors that Shift the Aggregate
Demand Curve
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Summary Table 1
Factors That
Shift the
Aggregate
Demand Curve
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Aggregate Supply
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Figure 3 Long- and Short-Run
Aggregate Supply Curves
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Shifts in Aggregate Supply Curves
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Figure 4 Shift in the Long-Run
Aggregate Supply Curve
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Shifts in the Short-Run Aggregate
Supply Curve
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Summary Table 2 Factors That Shift
the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
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Figure 5 Shift in the Short-Run Aggregate
Supply Curve from Changes in Expected
Inflation and Price Shocks
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Figure 6 Shift in the Short-Run Aggregate
Supply Curve from a Persistent Positive
Output Gap
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Equilibrium in Aggregate Demand
and Supply Analysis
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Short-Run Equilibrium
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Figure 7 Short-Run Equilibrium
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Figure 8 Adjustment to Long-Run Equilibrium
in Aggregate Supply and Demand Analysis
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Self-Correcting Mechanism
• Rapid:
– Wages and prices are flexible
– Less need for government intervention
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Changes in Equilibrium: Aggregate
Demand Shocks
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Figure 9 Positive Demand Shock
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Figure 10 The Volcker Disinflation
Source:
Economic
Report of the
President.
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Figure 11 Negative Demand Shocks,
2000–2004
Source:
Economic
Report of the
President.
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Changes in Equilibrium: Aggregate
Supply (Price) Shocks
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Changes in Equilibrium: Aggregate
Supply (Inflation) Shocks
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Figure 12 Temporary Negative
Supply Shock
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Figure 13 Negative Supply Shocks,
1973–1975 and 1978–1980
Source:
Economic
Report of the
President.
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Permanent Supply Shocks and Real
Business Cycle Theory
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Permanent Supply Shocks and Real
Business Cycle Theory
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Figure 14 Permanent Negative
Supply Shock
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Figure 15 Positive Supply Shocks,
1995–1999
Source:
Economic
Report of the
President.
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Conclusions
• Aggregate demand and supply analysis
yields the following conclusions:
1. A shift in the aggregate demand curve affects output
only in the short run and has no effect in the long
run.
2. A temporary supply shock affects output and inflation
only in the short run and has no effect in the long
run (holding the aggregate demand curve constant).
3. 3. A permanent supply shock affects output and
inflation both in the short and the long run.
4. 4. The economy has a self-correcting mechanism
that returns it to potential output and the natural
rate of unemployment over time.
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Figure 16 Negative Supply and Demand
Shocks and the 2007–2009 Crisis
Source:
Economic
Report of the
President.
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AD/AS Analysis of Foreign Business
Cycle Episodes
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Figure 17 U.K. Financial Crisis,
2007–2009
Source: Office of
National Statistics,
UK.
http://www.statisti
cs.gov.uk/statbase
/tsdtimezone.asp.
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Figure 18 China and the Financial
Crisis, 2007–2009
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Appendix to Chapter 22: The Phillips Curve
and the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
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Figure 1 Inflation and Unemployment in the
United States, 1950–1969 and 1970–2014
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Figure 2 The Short- and Long-Run
Phillips Curve
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Three Important Conclusions
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The Short-Run Aggregate Supply
Curve
• To complete our aggregate demand and supply
model, we need to use our analysis of the
Phillips curve to derive a short-run aggregate
supply curve, which represents the relationship
between the total quantity of output that firms
are willing to produce and the inflation rate.
• We can translate the modern Phillips curve into
a short-run aggregate supply curve by
replacing the unemployment gap (U – Un) with
the output gap, the difference between output
and potential output (Y – YP).
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Okun’s Law
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Figure Okun’s Law, 1960–2014
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