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MACROECONOMICS SESSION 4 LECTURE NOTES: THE AGGREGATE MARKET AGGREGRATE DEMAND Aggregate Demand: The Concept Topic: What It Is In this lesson we take a look at the demand side of the aggregate market (AD/AS analysis)--aggregate demand. A definition: Aggregate Demand is the aggregate or total expenditure on final goods and services produced in the domestic economy, at a range of price levels, during a given time period (usually a year). Three points: Expenditures are made by all members of society. Expenditures are made during the year. Expenditures are on the production that people use to satisfy wants and needs. Aggregate demand is only one side of the aggregate market--the expenditure side-the other side is aggregate supply--the producing side. Expenditures come from the household, business, government, and foreign sectors. Production comes from resources--labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship. The aggregate market is a model used to analyze the economy's total production and the price level. This analysis, also called AD/AS, lets us understand macroeconomic events, like recessions, inflation, and unemployment. The aggregate market can be used to evaluate the effects of government policies. Aggregate Demand: The Concept Topic: Circular Flow Aggregate demand and the aggregate market are all about the flow of production through the product markets of the circular flow. The circular flow is the continuous flow of production, income, and resources between households and businesses. Businesses acquire the services of productive factors through the factor markets Households acquire the resulting production from businesses through the product markets The aggregate market combines all of the individual markets for individual goods and services into a overall, comprehensive, complete, aggregate product market. This is the demand side of the aggregate market. Aggregate Demand: The Concept Topic: Summary How, first and foremost, aggregate demand represents expenditures made by all members of all sectors of our economy. Aggregate demand is one side of the aggregate market (the AD/AS model) that's used to analyze national economic problems such as recessions, unemployment, and inflation, that might plague our economy. How aggregate demand and the aggregate market are related to the circular flow model of the economy. Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Expenditures Aggregate demand is expenditures made by all members of society, that is, aggregate expenditures. A definition: Aggregate expenditures are the total expenditures on gross domestic product undertaken in a given time period. Society is grouped into four sectors, households, business, government, and foreign. Expenditures by each sector are: Household Consumption Business Investment Government Government Purchases Foreign Net exports Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Consumption Expenditures The household sector is the group responsible for the consumption part of the aggregate expenditures. Consumption is the expenditures by the household sector on final goods and services undertaken in a given time period. Three specific categories of consumption: Nondurable goods Goods lasting less than a year. Durable goods Goods lasting more than a year. Services Intangible activities. Each consumption category plays a different role in the macroeconomy. Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Investment Expenditures The business sector is the group responsible for investment expenditures. Investment is the expenditures by the business sector on final goods and services, mainly capital goods like factories and equipment, undertaken in a given time period. Three specific categories of investment: Fixed structures Buildings, factories, housing. Equipment Machinery and tools. Inventories Raw materials and unsold goods. Investment is the most volatile of our four expenditures. Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Government Purchases The government sector, like the household and business sectors, buys a portion of the final goods and services produced by the economy. These are government purchases. Two points: We study government purchases made by all three levels: federal, state, and local. But the federal level will occupy much of our interest. We study government spending only for newly produced goods. We exclude government spending on transfer payments. Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Net Exports The foreign sector, everyone who is not a citizen of our domestic economy, also purchases domestic production. These are termed net exports. Net exports are exports minus imports. Exports are purchases of domestic production by the foreign sector. Imports are the purchases of foreign production by the domestic sector. Net exports gives us an overall picture of how our economy interacts with the foreign sector. Calculating net exports by subtracting imports gives us aggregate expenditures on domestic production only. Aggregate Demand: Doing More Topic: Summary The four expenditures that make up aggregate demand: consumption, investment, government purchases, and net export expenditures. How consumption expenditures are made by households on services, durable goods, and nondurable goods. How investment expenditures are made by businesses on inventories, equipment, and fixed structures. How only government purchases of final goods and services qualify as expenditures for aggregate demand. Net exports, which are exports minus imports. Net exports represent the net expenditures of the foreign sector on our domestically produced final goods and services. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Highlights The aggregate demand curve captures the demand side of the aggregate market. Highlights: First: the price level, our GDP deflator, is on the vertical axis, and real production is on the horizontal axis. Second: the aggregate demand curve has a negative slope. At lower prices, real aggregate expenditures are higher. Third: all ceteris paribus aggregate demand determinants are constant. Fourth: the aggregate demand curve gives us information for a given time period. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Slope The aggregate demand curve has a negative slope. This negative slope means that households, business, government and foreign sectors are inclined to increase their aggregate spending on real production if the price level decreases and decrease spending if the price level rises. Three reasons: The real-balance effect. The interest-rate effect. The net-export effect. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Real-Balance Effect The amount of production we purchase depends on how much money we have and the price of the production we want to buy. A higher price level means money can buy less real production. A lower price level means money can buy more real production. The real-balance effect is when a change in the price level changes aggregate expenditures on real production because the purchasing power of money changes. Real refers to the real purchasing power of money. Balances refers to the balance of money we have to purchase. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Interest-Rate Effect Changes in the interest rate can alter consumption and investment spending. Changes in the investment and consumption spending that occur when changes in the price level cause changes in the interest rate is the interest-rate effect. Investment and consumption expenditures are made with borrowed funds. The interest rate affects the cost of borrowing these funds. The price level affects the interest rate: o A higher price level induces a higher interest rate, which raises the cost of borrowing and discourages investment and consumption. o A lower price level induces a lower interest rate, which reduces the cost of borrowing and encourages investment and consumption. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Net-Export Effect An increase in the price level decreases exports and increases imports, which gives us a decrease in net exports. If the price level increases in one country, the production of other countries becomes relatively cheaper. For example: An increase in the U.S. price level discourages foreign buyers from buying U.S. goods, and encourages U.S. buyers to buy relatively cheaper foreign goods. The net-export effect is that a change in the price level, changes the relative prices of exports and imports, and changes net exports in the opposite way. Aggregate Demand: The Curve Topic: Summary The basic setup, shape, and position of the aggregate demand curve on a graph. The AD curve shows the negative relationship between the price level and real GDP. What causes the negative slope of the AD curve--namely: 1) the real-balance effect, 2) the interest-rate effect, and 3) the net-export effect. Why the real-balance effect means that a higher (or lower) price level reduces (or increases) the purchasing power of money, resulting in less (or more) real production purchased. Why the interest-rate effect means that a higher (or lower) price level leads to higher (or lower) interest rates and thus a higher (or lower) cost of borrowing which decreases (or increases) consumption and investment expenditures on real production. Why the net-export effect means that a higher (or lower) price level decreases (or increases) exports and increases (or decreases) imports thus decreasing (or increasing) net export expenditures on real production. Aggregate Demand: Determinants Topic: Instability Expenditures by the household, business, government and foreign sector change over time, causing instability in the economy. Economic instability found in complex economies, business cycles, can be traced to shifts of the aggregate demand curve. The ceteris paribus determinants of the aggregate demand curve are those things that disrupt equilibrium, and lead to macroeconomic instability. Aggregate demand determinants are things, other than the price level, that affect aggregate demand. Aggregate Demand: Determinants Topic: Shifts: Increase The aggregate demand determinants cause the aggregate demand curve to shift. An increase in aggregate demand shifts the aggregate demand curve to the right Aggregate Demand: Determinants Topic: Shifts: Decrease The aggregate demand determinants cause the aggregate demand curve to shift. A decrease in aggregate demand shifts the aggregate demand curve to the left. Aggregate Demand: Determinants Topic: Summary The nature of economic instability coming from the four basic sectors. The nature of aggregate demand determinants as ceteris paribus factors that are initially assumed constant and aren't measured explicitly on our AD graph. How an increase (or decrease) in aggregate demand is represented as a shift to the right (or left) and how this increase (or decrease) represents an increase (or decrease) in aggregate expenditures over a range of price levels. Aggregate Demand: Policies Plus Topic: Business Cycles The consumption, investment, government purchase, and net export determinants cause the aggregate demand curve to shift and lead to macroeconomic instability. This instability is best viewed in terms of business cycles. The effects of business-cycle instability are: o Recession. Means higher unemployment rates and related problems. o Booming Expansion. Possibility of higher inflation rates and related problems. Aggregate demand is the prime source of economic instability. Aggregate Demand: Policies Plus Topic: Policies The federal government can exert a great deal of control over the aggregate demand curve through government policies. This control of aggregate demand is called demand-management policies. Government use of purchases and taxes to affect aggregate demand is termed fiscal policy. o Government can influence aggregate demand directly through government purchases. o Government can also indirectly alter aggregate demand through taxes that affect household consumption and business investment. Government also changes the interest rate through monetary policy with the goal of affecting consumption and investment. Aggregate Demand: Policies Plus Topic: Summary How shifts in the aggregate demand curve are a source of macroeconomic (business cycle) instability. The two basic types of macroeconomic problems associated with business cycles, recessions (with unemployment) and booming expansions (with inflation). Controlling aggregate demand instability through demand-management policies, including fiscal and monetary policies. Fiscal policy that affects aggregate spending directly through government purchases and indirectly through taxes. Monetary policy that affects aggregate spending indirectly interest rates. AGGREGRATE SUPPLY Aggregate Supply: The Concept Topic: What It Is In this lesson we will look at the other side of the aggregate market, the aggregate supply, to see how gross domestic product gets produced. Society's scarce resources, with the opportunity cost of their alternative uses, must be combined to produce these goods and services. A Definition: Aggregate supply is the total, or aggregate, production of final goods and services available in the domestic economy at a range of price level, during a given time period (usually one year). Similar to aggregate demand. The goal of aggregate supply is to combine scarce resources to produce our economy's gross domestic product. Four resource categories of aggregate supply: o Labor The people working. o Capital Tools and equipment. o Land Raw materials. o Entrepreneurship Those who assume the risk of production. The goods and services produced are supplied to meet the demands of our households, business, government, and foreign sectors. Gross production is the supply side of the aggregate market, the supply of real production, or real GDP. Aggregate Supply: The Concept Topic: Price Level Aggregate supply is the relation between real production, measured as real GDP, and the price level, measured as the GDP price deflator. This is comparable to the relation for aggregate demand and lets us combine both relations to form the aggregate market. How does the price level affect the supply of real production? For markets, the law of supply is that a higher price induces an increase in the quantity supplied. Does this work for aggregate supply, too? How the price level affects real production depends on the difference between the short run and long run. Aggregate Supply: The Concept Topic: Summary Aggregate supply as one side of the aggregate market (the AD/AS model) that's used to analyze macroeconomic problems such as recessions, unemployment, and inflation, that might plague our economy. How aggregate supply is the combined production of goods and services coming from our factors of production. A few thoughts on the price level and it's role in the supply of aggregate real production. Aggregate Supply: Two Options Topic: Time Periods Production of goods and services takes time.Two time periods: Long run A period in which all prices are flexible. Long run price flexibility means that all markets are in equilibrium. Short run A period in which some prices are flexible and some are rigid. Short run price rigidity leads to disequilibrium in resource markets, even though product and financial markets are in equilibrium. In the short run, disequilibrium in resource markets (especially labor) means that jobs remain unfilled or some workers are unemployed, even though we have equilibrium in the product markets, with satisfied buyers and sellers. Aggregate Supply: Two Options Topic: Long Run In the long run all prices are flexible, which ensures that all markets are in equilibrium. Prices rise to eliminate market shortages and fall to eliminate market surpluses, resulting in equilibrium. Equilibrium in the labor market is particularly important: o In the long run, the labor market is characterized by both flexible prices and full employment. o The economy is operating on the boundary of the production possibilities curve. The time it takes prices to adjust to correct market disequilibrium and get to the long run is critical to the study of macroeconomics and government policies. Aggregate Supply: Two Options Topic: Short Run In the short run some prices are flexible and some prices are rigid. Rigid prices are most important to resource and labor markets. Rigid prices prevent markets from eliminating surpluses and from reaching equilibrium. In the labor market, surpluses mean unemployment and not reaching full employment. Short run aggregate supply involves the interplay of many elements in addition to price rigidity. Aggregate Supply: Two Options Topic: Summary The differences between the long run and the short run aggregate supply, in terms of price flexibility and full employment. How the long run is achieved when all prices are flexible, giving us full employment and equilibria in the product, financial, and resource markets. How aggregate supply reacts in the long run to more or less demand for aggregate production to maintain full employment at alternative price levels. Aggregate Supply: The Curves Topic: Long Run The long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) curve captures the relationship between the price level and the aggregate supply of real production in the long run. GDP deflator, the price level, is measured on the vertical axis. Real GDP, the real production, is measured on the horizontal axis. Highlights: The LRAS is a straight, vertical line. The price level does not affect the aggregate supply of real production. The supply is real production given that all resources are fully employed. Flexible prices ensures that full employment production is maintained, in the long run. Aggregate Supply: The Curves Topic: Short Run The short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve captures the relationship between the price level and the aggregate supply of real production in the short run. GDP deflator, the price level, is measured on the vertical axis. Real GDP, the real production, is measured on the horizontal axis. Highlights: The SRAS is a positively-sloped line. The positive slope means that higher price levels correspond to greater levels of real production. With rigid prices, the price level does affect the aggregate supply of real production in the short run. Aggregate Supply: The Curves Topic: Market Supply While the market supply curve and the short-run aggregate supply curve look similar, there are important differences. The price and quantity for the short-run aggregate supply curve are the price level and real production, not the price and quantity of a specific good. The positive slope of the short-run aggregate supply curve is based on rigid wages, tapping into frictional, and structural unemployment, and misperceptions about real wages. The slope of the market supply curve is based on increasing opportunity cost. The short-run aggregate supply curve is not just the aggregation of all market supply curves in the economy. Aggregate Supply: The Curves Topic: Summary The vertical long-run aggregate supply curve which graphically illustrates that the price level has no affect on the full employment level of aggregate supply in the long run. The positively-sloped short-run aggregate supply curve which graphically illustrates that the price level does affect aggregate supply in the long run, and that it's possible to change short-run production, above or below full employment, if the price level changes. Similarities and differences between aggregate supply and market supply. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Stability The shifts in the aggregate supply curves are usually small, steady, and readily expected. The supply-side of the aggregate market is usually the perfect picture of stability. Most of economy's instability result from instability on the demand side of the aggregate market. Shifts of the aggregate supply curve are due to ceteris paribus determinants. The supply determinants are things, other than the price level, that affect aggregate supply. Both, short-run aggregate supply and long-run aggregate supply curves, can increase or decrease. In both, long run and shot run: An increase shifts the aggregate supply curve to right. It means that producers are willing and able to offer more real production for sale at any and all price levels. A decrease shifts the aggregate supply curve to left. It means that producers are willing and able to offer less real production for sale at any and all price levels. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Long Run Supply The key characteristic of the long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) curve is that it is vertical at the full employment level of production. Whatever affects the full-employment level of real production will cause the long-run aggregate supply curve to shift. The determinants of the long-run aggregate supply curve are the same things that cause the production possibilities curve to shift: The Q and Q determinants: Quantity of Resources. Quality of Resources. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Quantity of Resources A change in the quantity of labor, capital, land, or entrepreneurship will alter full employment real production and shift the long-run aggregate supply curve. Changes in resource quantities tend to be steady and predictable. Labor can change for three reasons: o Natural growth of population. o Migration. o The labor force participation rate. Capital changes from depreciation of capital and investment in capital. Land changes from exploration and discovery of natural resources. Entrepreneurship, while difficult to measure, increases when more people assume the risk of production. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Quality of Resources Resource quality tends to change slowly and gradually. We seldom see big jumps in these long run aggregate supply determinants. Two ways to improve resource quality: Technology: The information about production techniques. It generally moves forward, so that aggregate supply increases. Technology primarily affects capital and land. Education: Transferring information, knowledge, and training to people. It also generally moves forward, increasing aggregate supply. Education is most important for labor. Resource quality generally increases, but it can decrease in unusual circumstances. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Short Run Supply The short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve is related to the price level, and this relation depends on production cost. An increase in production cost decreases aggregate supply and shifts the SRAS leftward. A decrease in production cost increases aggregate supply and shifts the SRAS rightward. Key production cost changes: Wages: Wages shift the SRAS from adjustments in workers perceptions of the current price level and expectations about future prices. Material Cost: Key economy-wide resources, like oil, can cause the SRAS to shift through big changes in price. Aggregate Supply: Determinants Topic: Summary The rather stable, passive nature of the supply side of the aggregate market--at least when compared to the demand side. How aggregate supply determinants shift the LRAS and SRAS curves, with an increase in aggregate supply moving rightward and a decrease moving leftward. How the LRAS curve shifts from changes in full employment production resulting from changes in the quantity or quality of scarce resources. Some of the ways that quantities of labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship can change. How resource quality is primarily changed through technology and education. Production cost--especially things like wages and oil prices--as the primary determinant of the SRAS curve. Aggregate Supply: Connections Topic: Self-Correction The aggregate market has a self-correcting mechanism that ensures the long-run full-employment equilibrium will be reached by itself, without government policies. The predicament: Long run means full employment and flexible prices. Short run means price rigidity without full employment. The automatic, self-correcting solution: 1. Disequilibrium in the labor market exerts pressure on wages to correct the imbalance, even with wage rigidity. 2. This automatically moves us from the short run to the long run and fullemployment equilibrium. The critical question: How long does the self-correcting mechanism take? Days? Months? Years? Aggregate Supply: Connections Topic: Policies Government can use supply-management policies to shift the aggregate supply curves. Supply-management policies have been less popular among politicians because they tend to be slower than demand-management policies. Politicians tend to prefer faster demand-management policies when seeking to replace the slow-moving automatic mechanism. Supply-management policies: Business deregulation to reduce production cost. Tax policies that stimulate capital investment. Technology and education that increase capital and labor quality. Aggregate Supply: Connections Topic: Summary Questions over undertaking government policies or letting the selfcorrection mechanism of the aggregate market achieve full employment. An introduction into supply-management policies that can be used to reduce macroeconomic instability. How aggregate supply comes together with aggregate demand for a model that we can use to analyze our macroeconomy. AGGREGRATE MARKET Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: What It Is In this lesson we will learn about the aggregate market and how it is used to understand and explain the macroeconomy. A definition: The aggregate market is the combined product markets for all final goods and services produced in the economy in a given time period, usually one year. It combines aggregate demand and aggregate supply to analyze the price level and real production. Everyone is part of the aggregate market: the household, business, government, and foreign sectors. The aggregate market (also called AD/AS analysis) is a tool for explaining the macroeconomy Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: Two Sides: SRAS The aggregate market combines two sides, those who buy, aggregate demand, and those who sell, aggregate supply. Aggregate demand is the spending by the four basic sectors of the economy: household, business, government, and foreign sector. Aggregate supply is the economy's producers -- the factors of production: labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship. The aggregate market is the mechanism through which buyers and sellers come together to exchange the economy's production. The SRAS curves represents part of the supply side of the aggregate market. Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: Two Sides: LRAS The aggregate market combines two sides, those who buy, aggregate demand, and those who sell, aggregate supply. Aggregate demand is the spending by the four basic sectors of the economy: household, business, government, and foreign sector. Aggregate supply is the economy's producers -- the factors of production: labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship. The aggregate market is the mechanism through which buyers and sellers come together to exchange the economy's production. The LRAS curves represents part of the supply side of the aggregate market. Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: Two Sides: AD The aggregate market combines two sides, those who buy, aggregate demand, and those who sell, aggregate supply. Aggregate demand is the spending by the four basic sectors of the economy: household, business, government, and foreign sector. Aggregate supply is the economy's producers -- the factors of production: labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurship. The aggregate market is the mechanism through which buyers and sellers come together to exchange the economy's production. The AD curves represents the demand side of the aggregate market. Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: Two Traits The aggregate market is designed to explain the macroeconomy's price level and real production. Aggregate demand is the relation between expenditures on real production and the price level. Aggregate supply is the relation between the supply of real production and the price level--short run and long run. The aggregate market identifies suitable values for the price level and real production that keep the aggregate economy--buyers and sellers--satisfied. The aggregate market helps us to analyze and understand the macroeconomy. We are primarily concerned with the problems of inflation and unemployment. Aggregate Market: The Concept Topic: Summary <=PAGE BACK | PAGE NEXT=> The notion of the aggregate market as an analytical tool used for understanding the macroeconomy. Combining the two sides of the aggregate market, aggregate demand and aggregate supply. The two aspects of the macroeconomy analyzed with the aggregate market-the price level and real production. The two basic problems that can be examined with the aggregate market-unemployment and inflation. Aggregate Market: Equilibrium Topic: Concept Equilibrium in the aggregate market occurs when the forces of aggregate demand and aggregate supply are balanced. Equilibrium is a balance of forces that will remain unchanged until some other, outside force intervenes. For the market, the forces are supply and demand. For the aggregate market, the forces are aggregate demand and aggregate supply. The aggregate demand force is our four sectors who want GDP at the lowest price level possible. The aggregate supply force is our scarce resources who want to sell GDP at the highest prices possible. Aggregate Market | Unit 2: Equilibrium Topic: Three Markets The macroeconomy contains three interrelated aggregate markets--product markets, resource markets, and financial markets. In general, a market is in equilibrium when buyers and sellers come upon a price that generates the same quantity demanded and quantity supplied. Two macroeconomic notions of equilibrium: Long-run equilibrium: All three aggregate markets achieve equilibrium simultaneously. Short-run equilibrium: Price and wage rigidity prevent equilibrium in the resource markets, even though the aggregate product and financial markets are in equilibrium. Aggregate Market: Equilibrium Topic: Moving Target The dynamic nature of the aggregate market makes the long-run equilibrium a moving target. The difference between long-run and short-run equilibria is critical to the study of the macroeconomy. Aggregate demand, especially investment, is volatile. Aggregate supply, although somewhat predictable, involves continuous adjustments. Long-run equilibrium is a perpetually pursued goal, but seldom actually reached. As we approach the long-run equilibrium target, it has likely changed due to different economic conditions, due to changes in aggregate demand, aggregate supply, or more than likely, both. Aggregate Market: Equilibrium Topic: Summary How the equilibrium concept is applied to the aggregate market. The three macroeconomic markets that are relevant to macroeconomic equilibrium--product, financial, and resource markets. How long-run equilibrium exists when all three aggregated markets--product, financial, resource--are in equilibrium. How short-run equilibrium results when the product and financial markets are in equilibrium, but the resource market is not. The long-run equilibrium as a moving target that is always pursued, but seldom reached. Aggregate Market: Doing Curves Topic: Long-Run Equilibrium Long-run equilibrium in the aggregate market can be seen by combining the aggregate demand and supply sides (curves) of the market into a graph. Equilibrium in the long run aggregate market equilibrium is at the intersection of the two curves and at full-employment production. At the long-run equilibrium: o The quantity of real production supplied is equal to the quantity of real production demanded. o Both sides of the market are satisfied and not inclined to change the price level. Aggregate Market: Doing Curves Topic: Long Run Disequilibrium: Too High We can see what happens if the price level is not at the long-run equilibrium price level of Pe. If price level is the too high the supply of real production is greater than demand. We have surpluses in product markets throughout the economy. Market prices decrease and so too does the price level. Aggregate expenditures then increase to reach full employment. Aggregate Market: Doing Curves Topic: Long Run Disequilibrium: Too Low We can see what happens if the price level is not at the long-run equilibrium price level of Pe. If price level is the too low the supply of real production is less than demand. We have shortages in product markets throughout the economy. Market prices increase and so too does the price level. Aggregate expenditures then decrease to reach full employment. Aggregate Market: Doing Curves Topic: Short-Run Equilibrium Let's identify short-run equilibrium. The negatively-sloped aggregate demand curve, is labeled AD. This curve is the same as in the long run. The SRAS curve is the positivelysloped short-run aggregate supply curve. The short-run aggregate market equilibrium at the intersection of the two curves. At this short-run equilibrium: The quantities of real production demanded and supplied are equal, buyers and sellers are satisfied, and the price level doesn't change. But, we don't know where full employment is located. This equilibrium might involve a surplus or a shortage in the labor market. Aggregate Market: Doing Curves Topic: Summary The long-run equilibrium of the aggregate market achieved at the intersection of the aggregate demand and long-run aggregate supply curves. What happens when the price level is above or below the long-run equilibrium price level. The short-run equilibrium of the aggregate market achieved at the intersection of the aggregate demand and short-run aggregate supply curves. Aggregate Market: Self Correction Topic: Short Run The aggregate market, which is typically at or near short-run equilibrium, is persistently motivated to seek out the long-run equilibrium. This motivation comes from an imbalance in the labor market created by rigid wages, temporarily tapping into frictional and structural unemployment, and misperceptions about the real wage. The imbalance is temporary. The macroeconomy will automatically move toward long-run equilibrium and full employment. Wages are flexible in the long run, but rigid in the short run. This is the key to the self-correction mechanism of the aggregate market. Aggregate Market: Self Correction Topic: Recessionary Gap The aggregate market can automatically reach long-run equilibrium by closing a recessionary gap. Key points: Short-run equilibrium is at the intersection of the AD and the SRAS (SRo) curves. The initial short-run price level is Po, and real production is Qo. Short-run equilibrium is to the left of the full employment production, Qf. We have a recessionary gap. As wages fall, production cost decreases which increases short-run aggregate supply. The SRAS curves shift to reach the full employment level at the intersection of the LRAS and AD curves. Aggregate Market: Self Correction Topic: Inflationary Gap The aggregate market can automatically reach long-run equilibrium by closing an inflationary gap. Key points: Short-run equilibrium is at the intersection of the AD and the SRAS (SRo) curves. The initial short-run price level is Po, and real production is Qo. Short-run equilibrium is to the right of the full employment production, Qf. We have an inflationary gap. As wages rise, production cost increases which decreases short-run aggregate supply. The SRAS curves shift to reach the full employment level at the intersection of the LRAS and AD curves. Aggregate Market: Self Correction Topic: Summary How the short-run equilibrium creates an imbalance in the labor market that leads to self-correction of the aggregate market to the long-run equilibrium. How the aggregate market adjusts to full employment automatically, with shifts of the short-run aggregate supply curve to eliminate a recessionary gap. How the aggregate market adjusts to full employment automatically, with shifts of the short-run aggregate supply curve to eliminate a inflationary gap. Aggregate Market: Policy Preview Topic: Time It takes time to move the economy from short run equilibrium to long run equilibrium. Two options: Wait for self-correcting mechanism --> A short-run imbalance in the labor market eventually triggers the steps that move the economy to fullemployment production and long-run equilibrium. Take immediate steps --> Induced shifts in the AD, SRAS, LRAS curves that would, presumably reach full employment faster than the self-correcting mechanism. The critical questions remains: How much time is needed to adjust from the short run to the long run? Aggregate Market: Policy Preview Topic: Time of Adjustment There is no specific, absolute time period that separates short run from long run. Time factors: First: The size of the gap between short-run real production and long-run real production. Bigger gaps take longer to close. Second: Because prices are less rigid going up than down, inflationary gaps tend to close more quickly than recessionary gaps. Third: Adjustment speed depends on the underlying structure of the economy, including things like size, government laws, resource endowments, and culture. These change over time and differ among countries. But adjustment is usually months not days. Aggregate Market: Policy Preview Topic: Summary A preview of how the aggregate market is used to analyze government policies. The two alternatives for closing recessionary and inflationary gaps--(1) self correction based on shifts of the automatic SRAS and (2) government policies that induce shifts in the AD, SRAS, and LRAS curves. Questions about the time it takes for the economy to adjust from the short run to the long run. AGGREGRATE SHOCKS Aggregate Shocks: Instability Topic: What It Is The aggregate market is a useful analysis for the study of the macroeconomy and its adjustments. The aggregate market tends toward equilibrium. Short-Run Equilibrium: Intersection of AD and SRAS curves. Expenditures on real output match production. Labor market is prone to be out of equilibrium. Long-Run Equilibrium: Intersection of AD and LRAS curves. Expenditures on real output match production. Labor market in equilibrium. Real world changes can be analyzed by examining how the aggregate market adjusts toward equilibrium. To examine aggregate market adjustments we need to make use of the ceteris paribus concept. The aggregate market curves, AD, LRAS, and SRAS, are constructed assuming other things remain unchanged. The determinants of each curve, initially assumed constant, don't really stay unchanged, and they cause changes in the aggregate market. The purpose of this aggregate market analysis is to help us to understand why the macroeconomy tends to be unstable, volatile and prone toward business cycles. Aggregate Shocks: Instability Topic: Fluctuations Our goal is to explain business cycle fluctuations. The real GDP path the economy would take with long-run equilibrium-at full employment--is the straight, green upward-sloping line. The actual real GDP path, the jagged red line, tends to be less smooth. The business cycle is the movement above and below the long-run trend. When the actual is below the long-run equilibrium line, we get unemployment. When the actual is above the long-run equilibrium line, we get inflation. Ceteris paribus factors are what create fluctuations away from the long-run trend. Aggregate demand determinants are the main cause. Aggregate Shocks: Instability Topic: Summary The aggregate market as a tool to analyze the macroeconomy and its adjustments toward equilibrium. How aggregate market adjustments are important to the difference between short-run equilibrium and long-run equilibrium. That the aggregate market curves--AD, LRAS, and SRAS--are constructed assuming other (ceteris paribus) things remain unchanged. Ceteris paribus determinants as the source of business cycle fluctuations away from the long-run, full employment growth trend of the economy. Aggregate Shocks: Extension Topic: Instability Before getting to the graphs, here are four specific real-world-type issues to illustrate the direction that we're headed with our analysis of instability: Increases in physical wealth, especially consumer durable goods and capital investment, which affect aggregate demand. Changes in monetary policy that affect interest rates, which affect aggregate demand expenditures on durable goods and capital. Technological advances that improve long-run and short-run aggregate supply. Changes in wages and production costs that affect short-run aggregate supply. Aggregate Shocks: Extension Topic: Self-Correction The aggregate market has a perpetual inclination to adjust from short-run equilibrium to long-run equilibrium. The aggregate market self-correction mechanism relies on wages, the key production cost determinant. Short-run labor market imbalances induce wage changes that move the aggregate market to long-run equilibrium. A recessionary gap Unemployment causes lower wages and production costs, and an increase in short-run aggregate supply. An inflationary gap Labor market imbalances increase wages and production cost, and decrease in short-run aggregate supply. Long run equilibrium is restored in both cases. Aggregate Shocks: Extension Topic: Summary The different determinant induced shifts of the AD, LRAS, and SRAS curves. A few of the more important determinants that shift the AD, LRAS, and SRAS curves. How specific real-world issues, such as increases in physical wealth, changes in monetary policy, technological advances, and wage changes, create instability in the macroeconomy. How the self-correction mechanism works through wage-changes and the labor market to restore the long-run equilibrium. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: AD Shifts There are two directions that the aggregate demand curve can shift: An increase in aggregate demand is a rightward shift of the AD curve. A decrease in aggregate demand is a leftward shift of the AD curve. And we have the AD curve shifting in two versions of the aggregate market, long run and short run. This gives us four basic curve-shifting alternatives: An increase, with the long-run aggregate market. A decrease, with the long-run aggregate market. An increase, with the short-run aggregate market. A decrease, with the short-run aggregate market. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: AD Increase: Long Run The long-run equilibrium is given by the intersection of the negatively-sloped AD curve and the vertical LRAS. An increase in AD results in a new long-run equilibrium. At the new equilibrium, real production does not change, it stays at Qf. The price level increases from Po to P1. We're missing a lot of short-run action that occurs as we go from one long-run equilibrium to another. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: AD Decrease: Long Run The long-run equilibrium is given by the intersection of the negatively-sloped AD curve and the vertical LRAS. A decrease in AD results in a new long-run equilibrium. At the new equilibrium, real production does not change, it stays at Qf. The price level decreases from Po to P2. We're still missing a lot of short-run action that occurs as we go from one long-run equilibrium to another. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: AD Increase: Short Run The short-run equilibrium is given by the intersection of the negatively sloped AD curve and the positively-sloped SRAS. An increase in AD and results in a new short-run equilibrium. At the new equilibrium, both real production and the price level increase. Real production can increase above full employment -- in the short run. This shift gives us an intermediate point from one long-run equilibrium to another. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: AD Decrease: Short Run The short-run equilibrium is given by the intersection of the negatively sloped AD curve and the positively-sloped SRAS. A decrease in AD and results in a new short-run equilibrium. At the new equilibrium, both real production and the price level decrease. Real production can decrease below full employment -- in the short run. This shift gives us an intermediate point from one long-run equilibrium to another. Aggregate Shocks: Basic Shifts Topic: Summary How increases in aggregate demand in the long run affect only the price level, not real production which remains at full employment. How increases in aggregate demand in the short run affect both the price level and the level of real production which may be below or above the full employment level. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: AD Our analysis of AD-curve-induced aggregate market adjustment from one equilibrium to another is more complex when we include the self-correction mechanism from the short run to the long run. Two cases: Aggregate demand increases. Aggregate demand decreases. The complex adjustment is a two step process: First: The AD curve shifts, which leads to a short-run equilibrium and moves the aggregate market away from the long-run equilibrium. Second: Wages adjust to achieve equilibrium in the labor market--eventually-which changes production costs, shifts the SRAS, and restores long-run equilibrium. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: AD Increase The case of an increase in the AD curve. Let's start at long-run equilibrium. All three curves, AD, LRAS, and SRAS, intersect at the same long-run equilibrium values, Po and Qf. With a rightward shift of the AD curve, the aggregate market achieves short-run equilibrium at a higher price level and more real production. The labor market imbalance causes wages and production cost to rise. The SRAS shifts leftward. It stops shifting when it intersects the new AD and the original LRAS curves for a new long-run equilibrium. The price level is even higher and real production returns to full employment. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: AD Decrease The case of an decrease in the AD curve. Let's start at long-run equilibrium. All three curves, AD, LRAS, and SRAS, intersect at the same long-run equilibrium values, Po and Qf. With a leftward shift of the AD curve, the aggregate market achieves shortrun equilibrium at a lower price level and less real production. The labor market imbalance causes wages and production cost to fall. The SRAS shifts rightward. It stops shifting when it intersects the new AD and the original LRAS curves for a new long-run equilibrium. The price level is even lower and real production returns to full employment. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: SRAS Shifts of the SRAS curve that move the aggregate market away of the long-run equilibrium also trigger the self-correcting mechanism that moves it back. The initial shift of the SRAS curve is caused by any of the ceteris paribus determinants. The self-correcting shift of the SRAS curve is caused by wage changes triggered by an imbalance in the labor market. Once again, we have two alternatives: Short run aggregate supply increases. Short run aggregate supply decreases. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: SRAS Increase The case of an increase in the SRAS curve. Let's start at long-run equilibrium, Po and Qf. With a rightward shift of the SRAS curve, the aggregate market achieves short-run equilibrium at a lower price level and more real production. The labor market imbalance causes wages and production cost to rise. The SRAS shifts leftward, returning to its original position. The price level and real production return to full employment levels. From long run to long run, nothing changed. But before the long-run adjustment, we have more production at lower prices. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: SRAS Decrease The case of an decrease in the SRAS curve. Again we start at long-run equilibrium, Po and Qf. With a leftward shift of the SRAS curve, the aggregate market achieves short-run equilibrium at a higher price level and less real production. The labor market imbalance causes wages and production cost to fall. The SRAS shifts rightward, returning to its original position. The price level and real production return to full employment levels. From long run to long run, nothing changed. But before the long-run adjustment, we have less production at higher prices. Aggregate Shocks: Complex Shifts Topic: Summary How the self-correction mechanism moves the aggregate market from short-run equilibrium to long-run equilibrium. That the analysis of the shifts of the AD and SRAS curves are only the start of a process that becomes more complex when we include self-correcting shifts of the SRAS. The two adjustment stages triggered by shifts of the AD curve. First, the shift of the AD curve. Second, the self-correcting shift of the SRAS curve. The two adjustment stages triggered by shifts of the SRAS curve. First, the shift of the SRAS curve. Second, the self-correcting shift of the SRAS curve that returns the aggregate market back to it's original position. Aggregate Shocks: Synthesis Topic: Business Cycles To illustrate a business cycle, let's begin with long-run, full-employment equilibrium. With an expansion, consumers have accumulated durable goods. This decreases consumption spending and aggregate demand. The AD curve shifts leftward. We have a recession. Before the SRAS curve automatically shifts to restore full employment, people start buying durable goods again and the AD curve shifts rightward. We have a recovery. The AD curve doesn't stop at full employment. With our expansion we have (possibly) inflation. But accumulation of durable goods causes a decrease in aggregate demand again and another recession. The process continues. Aggregate Shocks: Synthesis Topic: Summary How the aggregate market can be used to demonstrate a simple business cycle that's caused by consumption expenditures on durable goods.