Every Graph to Know for AP Macroeconomics

1) What You Need to Know

AP Macro loves graphs because they let you predict direction (up/down) for the “big 6”: Y (real GDP/output), PL (price level/inflation), u (unemployment), i (interest rate), e (exchange rate), and net exports NX. Your job on the exam is usually to:

  • Pick the right model (graph)
  • Shift the correct curve
  • Read the new equilibrium
  • Translate the graph into macro outcomes

The “must-know” graph set

If you can draw + shift these cleanly, you’re in great shape:

  1. PPF/PPC (Production Possibilities Curve)
  2. AD–AS (Aggregate Demand / Aggregate Supply) with LRAS + gaps
  3. Keynesian Cross / Aggregate Expenditure (AE) model
  4. Money Market (Liquidity Preference)
  5. Loanable Funds Market
  6. Foreign Exchange (FOREX) Market
  7. Phillips Curve (short-run + long-run)
  8. Lorenz Curve (income distribution; shows up less, but easy points)

Critical reminder: In almost every graph question, you earn points for (1) correct shift, (2) correct new equilibrium labels, (3) correct direction-of-change statements.


2) Step-by-Step Breakdown (How to Attack Any Graph Question)

Use this every time, especially on FRQs.

  1. Identify the model and the “price” on the y-axis

    • AD–AS: y-axis is PL
    • Money market: y-axis is i
    • Loanable funds: y-axis is real r (often written as i on AP, but conceptually real)
    • FOREX: y-axis is exchange rate (be explicit: \text{USD per unit of foreign currency} or the reverse)
    • Keynesian cross: y-axis is AE, x-axis is real Y
  2. Classify the shock: demand-side or supply-side (for AD–AS)

    • Demand-side: consumption, investment, government spending, taxes, net exports, money/interest-rate channel
    • Supply-side: input prices (oil), productivity, expectations, regulations
  3. Shift ONE curve first (don’t “double shift” unless asked)

    • Example: Expansionary fiscal policy shifts AD right, not SRAS.
  4. Find the new equilibrium (intersection) and label changes

    • Always show old and new equilibria with arrows.
  5. Translate to the “big 6”

    • AD right usually: Y\uparrow, PL\uparrow, u\downarrow
    • SRAS left usually: Y\downarrow, PL\uparrow (stagflation), u\uparrow
  6. Connect models when needed (common FRQ chain)

    • Policy → Money Market (changes i) → **Investment** → **AD** → Y and PL → Phillips (inflation/unemployment) → possibly FOREX/NX

Micro-worked chain (classic FRQ)

The Fed buys bonds (open market purchase).

  1. Money market: M_S\uparrow → i\downarrow
  2. Investment: cheaper borrowing → I\uparrow
  3. AD–AS: AD\rightarrow (right) → Y\uparrow and PL\uparrow
  4. Phillips curve: in short run, inflation tends to rise as unemployment falls.

3) Key Formulas, Rules & Facts (Graph-Linked)

A) Core macro equations you should connect to graphs

ItemFormulaWhen it matters for graphsNotes
Expenditure approach GDPY = C + I + G + (X - M)AD driversChanges in C,I,G,X,M shift AD.
Quantity theoryMV = PYMoney → inflation/outputIf V stable and Y at potential, M\uparrow\Rightarrow P\uparrow (LR).
Money multiplierm = \frac{1}{rr}Bank lending → M_SLower rr → bigger multiplier → M_S\uparrow.
Real interest rater = i - \pi^eLoanable funds / Fisher effectHigher expected inflation lowers real rate for given nominal.
Spending multiplierk = \frac{1}{1 - MPC}Keynesian cross\Delta Y = k\cdot \Delta \text{(autonomous spending)}.

B) Each required graph: axes, curves, and “shift causes”

1) PPF / PPC
  • Axes: quantity of Good A vs Good B (often capital vs consumer goods)
  • Shape: bowed out (increasing opportunity cost)
  • Key moves:
    • On curve: efficient
    • Inside: recession/unemployment
    • Outside: unattainable now
    • Outward shift: growth (technology, resources)
2) AD–AS (with LRAS)
  • Axes: PL (y) vs real Y (x)
  • Curves:
    • AD: downward sloping (wealth effect, interest-rate effect, net export effect)
    • SRAS: upward sloping (sticky wages/input prices)
    • LRAS: vertical at Y^* (potential output)
  • Classic shifts:
    • AD right: C\uparrow, I\uparrow, G\uparrow, T\downarrow, NX\uparrow, M_S\uparrow (via i\downarrow)
    • SRAS left: oil price spike, wages up, negative supply shock
    • SRAS right: productivity/tech improvements, input costs down
3) Keynesian Cross (Aggregate Expenditure model)
  • Axes: AE (y) vs real Y (x)
  • Lines:
    • 45° line: where AE = Y
    • AE line: planned spending; slope is MPC
  • Shifts:
    • Autonomous spending up (like G\uparrow or I\uparrow): AE shifts up → equilibrium Y\uparrow by multiplier
4) Money Market (Liquidity Preference)
  • Axes: i (y) vs quantity of money M (x)
  • Curves:
    • Money demand (MD): downward (transactions + asset demand)
    • Money supply (MS): vertical (set by Fed)
  • Shifts:
    • MS right: expansionary monetary policy → i\downarrow
    • MD right: higher income/price level → i\uparrow
5) Loanable Funds Market
  • Axes: real interest rate r (y) vs quantity of loanable funds (x)
  • Curves:
    • Supply: national saving (upward)
    • Demand: borrowing for investment (downward)
  • Shifts:
    • Government deficit: public saving down → supply left → r\uparrow, crowding out I\downarrow
    • Higher productivity/expected returns: demand right → r\uparrow and I\uparrow
6) Foreign Exchange (FOREX) Market

Two common AP setups—be consistent and label clearly.

  • Option A (common): y-axis = \text{price of foreign currency in USD} (e.g., \text{USD per euro})
    • If this price rises, the foreign currency appreciates and the USD depreciates.
  • Curves:
    • Demand for foreign currency: Americans buying foreign goods/assets
    • Supply of foreign currency: foreigners buying US goods/assets
  • Shifts:
    • US interest rates rise: foreign capital inflow → demand for USD rises (equivalently, supply of foreign currency rises) → USD appreciates
    • US imports rise: demand for foreign currency rises → foreign currency appreciates
7) Phillips Curve
  • Axes: inflation rate \pi (y) vs unemployment rate u (x)
  • Curves:
    • SRPC: downward sloping (short-run tradeoff)
    • LRPC: vertical at natural rate u^*
  • Moves/shifts:
    • Demand-pull inflation (AD right): move up/left along SRPC
    • Adverse supply shock (SRAS left): SRPC shifts right/up (higher inflation at every unemployment rate)
8) Lorenz Curve (income inequality)
  • Axes: cumulative % of households (x) vs cumulative % of income (y)
  • Line of equality: 45°
  • More bowed Lorenz curve: more inequality

4) Examples & Applications (How AP Twists These)

Example 1: Expansionary fiscal policy in recession

Scenario: Economy is below potential output; government increases G.

  • AD–AS: AD\rightarrow → Y\uparrow, PL\uparrow
  • Loanable funds: deficit likely rises → supply left → r\uparrow (crowding out some I)
  • Key insight: Fiscal expansion raises output but can raise interest rates.

Example 2: Negative supply shock (oil price spike)

  • SRAS: shifts left
  • AD–AS result: Y\downarrow and PL\uparrow (stagflation)
  • Phillips: SRPC shifts right/up (worse inflation-unemployment combo)
  • Key insight: Demand policy here is tricky: boosting AD fights unemployment but worsens inflation.

Example 3: Fed raises reserve requirement

  • Banking/money supply: multiplier down → M_S\downarrow
  • Money market: MS\leftarrow → i\uparrow
  • AD–AS: I\downarrow → AD\leftarrow → Y\downarrow and PL\downarrow
  • Key insight: Tight money → higher rates → lower investment → lower AD.

Example 4: USD appreciation and net exports

Scenario: Higher US interest rates attract foreign investors.

  • FOREX: demand for USD rises → USD appreciates
  • Net exports: US exports more expensive, imports cheaper → NX\downarrow
  • AD–AS: AD\leftarrow (because NX falls)
  • Key insight: Stronger currency tends to reduce AD through NX.

5) Common Mistakes & Traps

  1. Mixing up Money Market vs Loanable Funds

    • Wrong: Using money market to show government borrowing.
    • Fix: Gov deficits → loanable funds supply left (crowding out). Fed actions → money market MS shift.
  2. Forgetting what the y-axis “price” is

    • Wrong: Saying “price rises” in money market.
    • Fix: In money market, the “price of money” is i.
  3. Confusing appreciation/depreciation on FOREX

    • Wrong: If \text{USD per euro} rises, saying USD appreciates.
    • Fix: If foreign currency costs more USD, the USD depreciated (it buys fewer euros).
  4. Shifting LRAS in the short run

    • Wrong: Treating an AD change as shifting LRAS.
    • Fix: LRAS shifts with long-run productivity/resources (growth), not short-run demand policy.
  5. Moving along vs shifting AD

    • Wrong: “Price level rises so AD shifts left.”
    • Fix: A change in PL causes a **movement along AD**, not a shift. Shifts come from C,I,G,NX or monetary transmission.
  6. Saying ‘SRAS always returns by itself immediately’

    • Wrong: Assuming instant long-run adjustment.
    • Fix: Long-run adjustment happens as nominal wages/expectations adjust; in the interim, SRAS can stay shifted.
  7. Keynesian cross: confusing the 45° line with AE

    • Wrong: Shifting the 45° line.
    • Fix: The 45° line is fixed; AE shifts with autonomous spending.
  8. Crowding out direction errors

    • Wrong: Deficit increases saving supply.
    • Fix: Deficit reduces national saving → loanable funds supply left → r\uparrow → I\downarrow.

6) Memory Aids & Quick Tricks

Trick / MnemonicWhat it helps you rememberWhen to use
“MS right → i down”Money market mechanicsAny Fed expansionary action
“Deficit → Saving Sinks”Gov deficit shifts loanable funds supply leftFiscal policy / crowding out
“Strong dollar = weaker NX”Appreciation hurts exports, boosts imports → NX\downarrowFOREX + AD link
“SRAS left = Stagflation”Output down, prices upNegative supply shock
“AE shift × multiplier”Keynesian cross output changeAny G, I, C autonomous change
“SRPC moves with AD, shifts with SRAS”Demand changes move along; supply shocks shift SRPCPhillips curve questions

7) Quick Review Checklist (2-minute glance)

  • Can you draw and label axes for: AD–AS, money market, loanable funds, FOREX, Phillips, Keynesian cross, PPF?
  • Do you know the direction rules?
    • MS\uparrow \Rightarrow i\downarrow \Rightarrow I\uparrow \Rightarrow AD\uparrow
    • Deficit \uparrow \Rightarrow S\downarrow \Rightarrow r\uparrow \Rightarrow I\downarrow
    • USD appreciation \Rightarrow NX\downarrow \Rightarrow AD\downarrow
  • Can you distinguish shifts vs movements along (especially AD and MD)?
  • Can you handle supply shocks: SRAS left and SRPC shift right/up?
  • Can you state the big outcomes quickly: Y, PL, u, i, exchange rate, NX?

You’re aiming for clean graphs, clean labels, and confident direction-of-change statements—those are the fastest points on AP Macro.