Sunday, March 1, 2015

Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply, and the Investment Demand Curve

*Aggregate Demand*
Shifts in aggregate demand:there are two parts to a shift in ad
  - a change in c, Ig, and/or Xn
  - a multiplier effect that produces a greater change than the original change in the 4 components
  • increase=shifts to the right
  • decrease=shift to the left

Determinants of AD:
Consumption
   - household spending is affect by: 
       - consumer wealth
           . More wealth= more spending (AD shifts ->)
           . Less wealth= less spending (AD shifts <-)
       - consumer expectations
           . Positive expectations = more spending (AD ->)
           . Negative expectation = less spending (AD <-)
       - household indebtedness
           . Less debt = more spending 
           . More debt = less spending 
       - taxes 
           . Less taxes = more spending 
           . More taxes = less spending
Gross private investment 
• investment spending is a sensitive to:
      - the real interest rate 
           . Lower real interest rate = more investment (AD->)
           . Higher real interest rate = less investment (AD<-)
      - expected returns 
           . Higher expected returns = more investment
           . Lower expected returns = less investment
           . Especial returns are influenced by 
                 - expectation of future profitability 
                 - technology 
                 - degree of excess capacity (Existjng stock of capital)
Govt spending
• more govt spending (AD->)
• less govt spending (AD<-)
Net exports 
• nets exports are sensitive to:
    -exchange rate (international value of $)
        . Strong $ = more imports and fewer exports (AD<-)
        . Weak $ = fewer imports and more exports (AD->)
     - relative income 
         . Strong foreign Economies = more exports 
         . Week foreign economies = less exports

*Aggregate Supply*
-Long Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) - the period of time where input prices are completely flexible and adjust to changes in the price level.
-the level of real GDP supplied is independent of price level.
-It marks the level of full employment in the economy. (FE, Yf, Y' = full employment)
-Analogous to PPC
-Since input prices are flexible in long run, changes in price level do not change firms real profits and therefore don't change firms level of output.
-LRAS is vertical at the economy's level of full employment. 

-Short Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) - Period of time where input prices are sticky and don't adjust to changes in the price level
-the level o real GDP supplied is directly related to the price level.
-because input prices are sticky in the short run, the SRAS is upward slopping. 
-an increase in SRAS is seen as a shit to the right ---> and decrease to the left <---
-the key to understanding shifts in SRAS is per unit cost production
-per unit cost production = total input cost

Determinants of SRAS: (affect unit production cost)
  1. Input Prices
  2. Productivity
  3. Legal - Institutional Environment: taxes and subsidies

  • Taxes (money to government) on business increase per unit production cost, shits SRAS <----
  • Subsidies (money from government) to business reduce per unit production cost, shifts SRAS ---->
Domestic Resource Prices:
-wages (75% of all business costs)
-cost of capital 
-raw materials (commodity prices)
Foreign Resource Prices:
-Strong money: lower foreign resource prices
-Weak money: higher foreign resource prices

Market Power: Monopolies and cartels that control the price of those resources.
-Increase in resource prices: SRAS <----
-Decrease in resource prices: SRAS ---->

Productivity = total output/total inputs
More productivity = lower unit production cost ---->
Lower productivity = higher unit production cost <----

Government Regulation: creates a cost o compliance = SRAS <----
Deregulation: reduces compliance cost = SRAS ---->

Full Employment – Equilibrium exists where AD interests 

SRAS and LRAS at the same point.

Recessionary Gap - exists when equilibrium occurs below full employment output.
-AD decrease shifts to the left 

Inflationary Gap- exists when equilibrium occurs                    beyond full employment output.
-AD increases shifts to the right

Interest Rates and Investments Demand
Money spent on expenditures on:
o   New plants ( factories )
o   Capital equipment ( machinery )
o   Technology ( hardware and software )
o   New homes
o   Inventories ( goods sold by producers )
·         How do a business make investment decisions?
o   Cost / Benefits Analysis
·         How does a business determine benefits?
o   Expected rate of return
·         How does a business count the cost?
o   Interest Cost
·         How does a business determine the amount of investment they undertake?
o   Compare expected rate of return to interest cost
§  If expected return > interest cost, then invest
§  If expected return < interest cost, do not invest

Real ( r% ) vs. Nominal ( i% )  (pie)inflation

What’s the difference?
·         Nominal is observable rate of interest. Real subtracts out inflation (pie%) and only known ex post facto.
How to compute the real interest rate
r%= i% - pie%

What determines cost of an investment decision?
·         Real interest rate ( r%)

What is the shape of investment demand slope?
·         Downward sloping

Why?
·         When interest rates are high, few investments are profitable. When interest rate are low, more investments are profitable.


*The Investment Demand Curve*
Cost of production 
- lower cost shifts ID ---->
-Higher cost shifts ID <----
Business Taxes
-lower business taxes shift ID ---->
-higher business taxes shift ID <----
Technological Change
  • New technology ---->
  • Lack of technology <----
Stock of Capital
  • If an economy is low on capital then ID shifts ---->
  • If it has much capital then ID shifts <----
Expectations 
  • positive expectations shift ID ---->
  • negative expectations shift ID <----
LRAS: represents a point on an economics production possibilities curve and it is a vertical line at an output level that represents the quantity of goods and services a nation can produce over a sustained period using all of its productive resources as efficiently as possible.
-always at full employment
-does not change as price level changes
-shifts outward if there is a change in technology, resource, or there is economic growth. 


Three Schools of Economics:




Classical:
Keynesian: 
 Monetary:
People- Adam Smith, John B. Say, David Ricardo, Afford Marshall.
Savings (leakage)
Investment (injection)
-says competition is good
-invisible hand (market runs itself)
-concept of laissez-faire
-Say’s law: supply creates its own demand
-whatever output is produced will be demanded
-the economy is always at or close to full employment
-In the long run the economy will balance out at FE
-Trickle-down effect: help the rich first, then the rest
-savings increase with interest rates
-prices and wages are flexible downward
-AS determines output
-AS = AD at full equilibrium
People- John Maynard Keynes
-congress
savers does not equal investors
-competition is flawed
-AD is the key, not As
demand creates its own supply therefore AD creates its own output
-savings are inverse to interest rates
-leaks causes constant recessions and savings too
-ratchet effects and sticky wages block Say's law
-since there is no mechanism capable of full employment, in the long run we are dead
the economy is not always close to or at full employment
-fiscal policy, add stabilizers, use expansionary and contractionary policies
People - Allan Greenspan
-Ben Bernanke
-congress can't time the policy options
-voters won't allow contractionary options
-easy and tight money
-we can change the required reserves if needed
-buy and sell bonds through open market operation
-we can use the interest rate to change the discount rate and federal fund rate.

1 comment:

  1. You have great organized notes even with the graphs. They are just like the graphs we took but on our graphs everything is fully labeled

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