EBK MACROECONOMICS
EBK MACROECONOMICS
4th Edition
ISBN: 8220103648165
Author: KRUGMAN
Publisher: MAC HIGHER
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Chapter 12, Problem 7P
To determine

Concept Introduction:

Aggregate Demand Curve ( AD ): It shows how price and the quantity demanded are related to each other. The curve is negatively slopped which means that when prices rise the quantity demanded falls.

Shift in Aggregate Demand Curve: There are several factors on which the shifting of demand curve depends. Some of them are:

  • Changes in expectation: when consumers are more confident about future then AD curve shifts in the right direction and vice versa.
  • Changes in wealth: when the wealth of individual increases means real value of assets increases then the AD curve shifts in right direction and when it decreases then it shifts leftward.
  • Size of stock of physical capital: when the size of stock is small then AD curve shifts rightward and vice versa.
  • Fiscal policy: It includes government expenditure and taxes. When government expenditure is increased or taxes are decreased then AD curve shifts rightward and vice versa.
  • Monetary policy: It includes money supply changes. When money supply increases AD curve shifts rightward and vice versa.

Short Run Aggregate Supply ( SRAS ): It is a positively slopped curve in which supply increases when price rises. The reason for upward slopping is that the wages are sticky in short run due to formal or informal contracts. At higher aggregate prices, there is higher profit leading to high level of output.

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Economists prefer to analyze the performance of the economy using “real” rather than nominal measures of economic activity. First, what does it mean to use real variables using consumption and  wages as cases in point? Warning:  before you throw at me the catch-all “adjusted for inflation” answer, know that I am looking for a thoughtful answer that explains in everyday English the difference between real and nominal and why it matters in the context of wages and interest rates.
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