Definition: A schedule or curve showing the amounts of real output (real GDP) that buyers collectively desire to purchase at various price levels.
Buyers: Households, businesses, government, and foreign entities.
Inverse Relationship:
Price level rises ➔ quantity of real GDP demanded decreases.
Price level falls ➔ quantity of real GDP demanded increases.
Downward-Sloping Curve: Indicates inverse relationship between price levels and real output purchased.
Real Balances Effect: As prices fall, the purchasing power of money increases, leading to higher demand.
Interest-Rate Effect: When the price level falls, interest rates typically fall, stimulating borrowing and spending.
Foreign Trade Effect: A decrease in domestic price level makes exports cheaper and imports more expensive, increasing net exports.
Shifts in Aggregate Demand
Determinants of Aggregate Demand:
Consumer Spending: Affected by wealth, borrowing, expectations, taxes.
Investment Spending: Influenced by expected returns, technology, excess capacity, business taxes.
Government Spending:
Increases in spending lead to increases in AD (e.g., more computers for agencies).
Decreases in spending lead to decreases in AD (e.g., fewer transportation projects).
Net Exports:
A rise in national income abroad increases foreign demand for products.
Changes in dollar exchange rates impact Canadian exports/imports and thus aggregate demand.
Aggregate Supply (AS)
Definition: A schedule or curve showing the relationship between price level and the amount of real output firms produce.
Time Horizons:
Immediate Short Run: Fixed input and output prices; AS curve is horizontal at current price levels.
Short Run: Output prices are flexible, but input prices are relatively fixed; upward-sloping AS curve indicating a positive relationship between price level and output.
Long Run: All input and output prices are flexible; AS curve is vertical at full employment level of GDP.
Determinants of Aggregate Supply
Input Prices: Costs of domestic and imported resources; productivity affects costs.
Legal-Institutional Environment: Taxes, subsidies, and regulations that impact business costs.
Economy's Equilibrium
Equilibrium Price Level and Real GDP: Occurs at the intersection of AD and AS curves; determines the economy's output.
Increased AD leads to demand-pull inflation (if AD shifts right).
Decreased AD can cause recession and cyclical unemployment (if AD shifts left).
Changes in AS can lead to cost-push inflation (if AS shifts left).
Impact of Shifts in AD/AS on the Economy
Demand-Pull Inflation: Increase from AD1 to AD2 raises price levels while real output only increases minimally due to higher prices.
Recession: Decrease in AD leads to lower output and potential unemployment due to sticky prices that do not adjust downward easily.
Cost-Push Inflation: Leftward shifts in AS raise price levels and decrease output simultaneously, exemplified by the oil-price shock.
Stimulus Measures (e.g., COVID-19): Government interventions aimed to sustain aggregate demand and supply during economic disruptions; various benefits provided support to workers and businesses.
Key Concepts for Review
Recall how aggregate demand and aggregate supply influence output and price levels in an economy.
Understand the mechanisms behind shifts in these curves and their implications for economic stability and growth.