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10 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply 10-1 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Learning objectives In this chapter students will learn: 1. About aggregate demand (AD) and the factors that cause it to change. 2. About aggregate supply (AS) and the factors that cause it to change. 3. How AD and AS determine an economy’s equilibrium price level and level of real GDP. 4. How the AD-AS model explains periods of demand-pull inflation, cost-push inflation, and recession. 10-2 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Aggregate demand • Aggregate demand is a schedule or curve that shows the various amounts of real domestic output that domestic and foreign buyers will desire to purchase at each possible price level. • The aggregate demand curve is shown in Figure 10.1. 1. It shows an inverse relationship between price level and real domestic output. 2. The explanation of the inverse relationship is not the same as for demand for a single product, which centered on substitution and income effects. a. Substitution effect doesn’t apply within the scope of domestically produced goods, since there is no substitute for “everything.” b. Income effect also doesn’t apply in the aggregate case, since income now varies with aggregate output. 3. What is the explanation of the inverse relationship between price level and real output in aggregate demand? 10-3 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies AD – AS Model Price Level Aggregate Demand Curve Aggregate Demand AD Real Domestic Output, GDP Click to Link to Appendix 10: Relationship of AD to the AE Model 10-4 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies • Real balances effect: When price level falls, the purchasing power of existing financial balances rises, which can increase spending and vice versa. • Interest-rate effect: A decline in price level means lower interest rates that can increase levels of certain types of spending and vice versa. • Foreign purchases effect: When price level falls, other things being equal, domestic prices will fall relative to foreign prices, which will tend to increase spending on exports and also decrease import spending in favor of home products that compete with imports and vice versa. (Similar to the substitution effect) 10-5 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Determinants of aggregate demand Change in price level will change AD from one point to another on the AD curve. AD will not Shift. • Determinants of AD are the “other things” that can cause a shift or change in demand (AD shifters). 1. Changes in consumer spending: If consumers decide to buy more, AD will shift to the right and vice versa. Factors affecting consumer spending are: a) Consumer wealth (financial and real): An increase in the real value of wealth prompts people to save less and buy more; AD shifts to RHS, and vice versa. 10-6 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies a) Consumer expectations: When consumers expect their real incomes to increase, they spend more of their income. When they expect surging inflation in the near future, they will spend more before prices escalate, AD will shift to RHS, and vice versa. b) Household indebtedness: If households’ indebtedness rises beyond normal levels, consumers may be forced to consume less in order to pay interest and principle on their debt, and vice versa. c) Taxes: A tax rise reduces disposable income of the public and forces the public to buy less, AD shifts to LHS, and vice versa 10-7 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 2. Changes in investment spending An increase in investment spending shifts AD to the RHS, and vice versa. Changes in investment can be caused by changes in several factors. a) Real interest rates: An increase in interest rates will lower investment spending, AD shifts to the LHS. Remember, we are not referring here to the interest rate effect resulting from a change in price level, but due to changes in money supply. b) Expected returns: higher expected returns will increase investment and AD shifts to the RHS, and vice versa. Expected returns are affected by: 10-8 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies - Expectations about future business conditions. Technology Degree of excess capacity Business taxes 3. Changes in government spending: An increase in G will shift AD to the RHS, and vice versa. 4. Changes in net export spending (unrelated to price level): A rise in net exports, will shift AD to the RHS and vice versa. Remember that these changes are not prompted by changes in price level. These are due to changes in other factors such as: 10-9 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies – National income abroad: Rising national incomes abroad encourages foreigners to buy more of our products, Xn rises and AD shifts to the RHS. – Exchange rates: Depreciation of the KD. encourages Kuwait’s exports since Kuwait’s products become less expensive when foreign buyers can obtain more KDs for their currency. Conversely, dollar depreciation discourages import buying in Kuwait because our KD can’t be exchanged for as much foreign currency. 10-10 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Changes in Aggregate Demand Changes in Aggregate Demand Curve Price Level Increase in Aggregate Demand Decrease in Aggregate Demand AD2 AD1 AD3 Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-11 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Aggregate supply • Aggregate supply is a schedule or curve showing the level of real domestic output available at each possible price level. 1. Long run: resource prices match changes in the price level 2. Short run: resource prices do not respond to price level changes • Aggregate supply in the long run 1. In the long run the aggregate supply curve is vertical at the economy’s full-employment output. 2. The curve is vertical because in the long run resources prices adjust to changes in the price level, therefore do not change real profit, leaving no incentive for firms to change their output. Aggregate supply does not respond to changes the price level. • • Aggregate supply in the short run Resource prices doe not immediately adjust to changes in the price level, as the price level increases, real profit rises with higher this causes the economy to produce more and vice versa. 10-12 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply in the Long Run Price Level ASLR Long Run Aggregate Supply Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-13 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 1. The short run aggregate supply curve is upward sloping. 2. The lag between product prices and resource prices makes it profitable for firms to increase output when the price level rises. 3. To the left of full-employment output, the curve is relatively flat. The relative abundance of idle inputs means that firms can increase output without substantial increases in production costs and thus product prices. 4. To the right of full-employment output the curve is relatively steep. Shortages of inputs and production bottlenecks will require substantially higher prices to induce firms to produce. 10-14 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply in the Short Run Per-Unit Production Cost Total Input Cost = Units of Output W 10.1 Price Level Aggregate Supply (Short Run) 0 Qf Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-15 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Determinants of aggregate supply • As price level changes, AS moves from one point to another along the AS curve. • Determinants are the “other things” (other than the price level) that cause changes or shifts in aggregate supply (AS shifters). At each price level, these shift AS either to RHS or LHS. 1. Input prices: Higher input prices increase per-unit cost and reduces AS, and vice versa. Resources can either be domestic or imported. 10-16 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies a. Domestic resource prices: Increases in supply of resources reduce per-unit cost and shifts AS to RHS, and vice versa. – Capital. Additions to the stock of capital. A fall in Price of machinery and equipments decreases per-unit production costs and AS shifts to the RHS and vice versa. – Labor. Wages and salaries make up about 75% of all business costs. Immigration, influx of women to the labor market put downward pressures on wages and AS shifts to RHS. Labor supply increases because immigration reduce per-unit production costs. AS shifts to the RHS. Rapid early retirements increase wages and shift AS to the LHS. – Land. Discoveries of mineral deposits, irrigation, technical innovations. These lowers rents and shift AS to the RHS. 10-17 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies b. Prices of imported resources: For example oil, tin…etc. when increase will shift AS to LHS, and vice versa. Exchange rate fluctuations are one factor that affects imported factor prices. c. Market power in certain industries: Ability to set market prices, e.g., OPEC can push oil price up and thus AS to LHS in oil importing countries. 2. Changes in productivity: 3. (productivity = real output / input) can cause changes in perunit production cost (production cost per unit = total input cost / units of output). Productivity improvement is very important in business efforts to reduce costs. • • 10-18 If productivity rises, unit production costs will fall. This can shift aggregate supply to the right and lower prices. If productivity falls, unit production costs will rise. This can shift aggregate supply. Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 3. legal-institutional environment: • Change in legal-institutional environment in which businesses operate. Examples of these can changes are: - business taxes and subsidies - government regulation. More regulation tends to push perunit costs and shifts AS to LHS. 10-19 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Changes in Aggregate Supply Changes in Aggregate Demand Curve Price Level AS3 AS1 Decrease in Aggregate Supply AS2 Increase in Aggregate Supply Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-20 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium: Real Output and the Price Level Equilibrium price and quantity are found where the aggregate demand and supply curves intersect. Real Output Demanded (Billions) Price Level (Index Number) Real Output Supplied (Billions) $506 108 $513 508 104 512 510 100 510 512 96 507 514 92 502 Equilibrium Price Level and Equilibrium Price Level 10-21 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium Price Level AS Equilibrium 100 a 92 b AD 502 510 514 Real Domestic Output, GDP (Billions of Dollars) 10-22 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies INCREASES IN AGGREGATE DEMAND • Increases in aggregate demand cause demand-pull inflation (Figure 10.7). 1. Increases in aggregate demand increase real output and create upward pressure on prices, especially when the economy operates at or above its full employment level of output. 2. The multiplier effect weakens the further right the aggregate demand curve moves along the aggregate supply curve. More of the increase in spending is absorbed into price increases instead of generating greater real output. 10-23 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium Increase in Aggregate Demand Price Level AS Demand-Pull Inflation P2 P1 AD1 AD Qf Q1 Q2 Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-24 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies • • DECREASES IN AGGREGATE DEMAND If AD decreases, recession and cyclical unemployment may result. See Figure 10.8. Prices don’t fall easily. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Fear of price wars keeps prices from being reduced. Menu costs discourage repeated price changes. Wage contracts are not flexible so businesses can’t afford to reduce prices. Employers are reluctant to cut wages because of impact on employee effort, etc. Employers seek to pay efficiency wages – wages that maximize work effort and productivity, minimizing cost. Minimum wage laws keep wages above that level. 10-25 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium Decrease in Aggregate Demand Price Level AS b P1 a c P2 Creates a Recession AD1 AD2 Q1 Q 2 Qf Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-26 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies • SHIFTS IN AGGREGATGE SUPPLY • Shifting aggregate supply occurs when a supply determinant changes. (See Key Questions 5, 6, 7): 1. Leftward shift in curve illustrates cost-push inflation (see Figure 10.9). 2. Rightward shift in curve will cause a decline in price level (see Figure 10.10). See text for discussion of this desirable outcome. 3. In the late 1990s, despite strong increases in aggregate demand, prices remained relatively stable (low inflation) as aggregate supply shifted right (productivity gains). 10-27 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium Decrease in Aggregate Supply Price Level AS1 Cost-Push Inflation P2 P1 AS b a AD Q1 Qf Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-28 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium Increases in Aggregate Supply – Full-Employment With Price-Level Stability Price Level AS1 P3 P2 P1 AS2 b c a AD2 AD1 Q1 Q2Q3 Real Domestic Output, GDP 10-29 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies V. LAST WORD: Has the Impact of Oil Prices Diminished? • In the mid- and late 1970s, oil price shocks caused cost-push inflation, rising unemployment, and a negative GDP gap (stagflation). • In the late 1980s and through most of the 1990s, oil prices fell, prompting OPEC (along with Mexico, Norway, and Russia) to restrict output and raise prices (up to $34 per barrel in March 2000). This price shock did not cause the cost-push inflation and recessionary conditions as with previous shocks. • In 2005, conflict in the Middle East, combined with rapidly rising demand for oil in India and China, pushed oil prices above $60 per barrel (and over $70 per barrel in July 2006). U.S. inflation rose in 2005, but not core inflation (inflation rate minus price changes in food and energy). • A number of reasons explain why oil price shocks have had less of an impact: 1. Lower production costs from productivity increases have offset inflationary pressures from oil price increases. 10-30 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 2. The amount of gas and oil used to produce each dollar of output has declined by about 50 percent since 1970. (from 14,000 BTUs to 7,000 BTUs per dollar of GDP). 3. Federal reserve monetary policy helped keep oil price increases from becoming generalized. 10-31 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 1 • The Relationship of the Aggregate Demand Curve to the Aggregate Expenditures Model • Deriving AD-curve from aggregate expenditures model. (See Appendix Figure 10.1) • Both models measure real GDP on horizontal axis. • Suppose initial price level is P1 and aggregate expenditures AE1 as shown in Appendix Figure 10.1a. Equilibrium real domestic output is Q1. There will be a corresponding point on the aggregate demand curve (Point 1 on Appendix Figure 10.1b). • If price rises to P2, aggregate expenditures will fall to AE2 because purchasing power of wealth falls, interest rates may rise, and net exports fall. (See Appendix Figure 10.1a) Then new equilibrium is at Q2. That generates a point (Point 2) up and to the left of Point 1 on Appendix Figure 10.1b. 10-32 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies • If price rises to P3, real asset balance value falls, interest rates rise again, net exports fall and new equilibrium is at Q3. Again see Appendix Figures 10.1a and 10.1b. • Technically, the aggregate demand curve is found by drawing a line (or curve) through Points 1, 2, and 3 on Appendix Figure 10.1b. • Aggregate demand shifts and the aggregate expenditures model (Appendix Figure 10.2): 1. When there is a change in one of the determinants of aggregate demand, there will be a change in the aggregate expenditures as well. Look at Appendix Figure 10.2a. 2. The change in aggregate expenditures is multiplied and aggregate demand shifts by more than the initial change in spending (see Appendix Figure 10.2b). The text illustrates the multiplier effect of a change in investment spending. 10-33 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 3. Shift of AD curve = initial change in spending x multiplier 4. The effect of the shift on real domestic output and the price level will depend on the starting point relative to full-employment output, as well as the relative steepness of the aggregate supply curve. 10-34 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Deriving the AD Curve Aggregate Expenditures (billions of dollars) AE1 (at P1 ) AE2 (at P2 ) AE3 (at P3 ) As Price Levels Increase… Price Level 45° P3 Real GDP Declines P2 P1 AD Q1 Q2 Q3 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-35 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Deriving the AD Curve AE2 (at P1 ) Aggregate Expenditures AE1 (at P1 ) Increase in Aggregate Expenditures Price Level 45° Increase in Aggregate Demand P1 AD2 AD1 Q1 Q2 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-36 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Deriving the AD Curve AE2 (at P1 ) Aggregate Expenditures AE1 (at P1 ) The Shift in the Aggregate Demand Curve is a Multiple of the initial Change in Aggregate Expenditures Price Level 45° P1 AD2 AD1 Q1 Q2 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-37 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Key Terms • aggregate demandaggregate supply (ADAS) model • aggregate demand • real-balances effect • interest-rate effect • foreign purchases effect • determinants of aggregate demand • aggregate supply • long-run aggregate supply curve 10-38 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies • short-run aggregate supply curve • determinants of aggregate supply • productivity • equilibrium price level • equilibrium real output • menu costs • efficiency wages Next Chapter Preview… Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Click to Link to Appendix 10: Relationship of AD to the AE Model 10-39 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 10 Appendix The Relationship of the Aggregate Demand Curve to the Aggregate Expenditures Model Return to Chapter 10 10-40 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Deriving the AD Curve Aggregate Expenditures (billions of dollars) AE1 (at P1 ) AE2 (at P2 ) AE3 (at P3 ) As Price Levels Increase… Price Level 45° P3 Real GDP Declines P2 P1 AD Q1 Q2 Q3 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-41 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Deriving the AD Curve AE2 (at P1 ) Aggregate Expenditures AE1 (at P1 ) Increase in Aggregate Expenditures Price Level 45° Increase in Aggregate Demand P1 AD2 AD1 Q1 Q2 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-42 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Deriving the AD Curve AE2 (at P1 ) Aggregate Expenditures AE1 (at P1 ) The Shift in the Aggregate Demand Curve is a Multiple of the initial Change in Aggregate Expenditures Price Level 45° P1 AD2 AD1 Q1 Q2 Real Domestic Product, GDP 10-43 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies Return to Chapter 10 Next Chapter Preview… Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Return to Chapter 10 10-44 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 10-45 Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies