AS/AD Flashcards

1
Q

AD definition

A

The total planned expenditure of goods and services produced in the UK

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2
Q

Why AD slopes downwards

A

1) the net exports effect
2) the real wealth effect
3) the interest rate effect

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3
Q

What is the net exports effect (downwards slope)?

A

Lower prices mean higher international competitiveness, meaning net exports are higher at lower prices

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4
Q

What is the real wealth effect

A

Let w = nominal wealth
Then w/p = real wealth
As price falls, real wealth rises and people purchase more goods and services

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5
Q

What is the interest rate effect

A

At higher prices, interest rates are likely to be raised by the monetary authorities
Higher interest = less spending

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6
Q

Aggregate demand formula

And what do the letters stand for

A
AD = C + I + G + (X-M)
C = consumption
I = investment
G = government expenditure 
(X-M) = value of net exports
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7
Q

What are the relative importance of CIG and (X-M) to AD

In percentages

A

C =60%
I =15%
G =25%
(X-M) =1%

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8
Q

What are the influences on investment? (6)

A

Confidence future sales
Interest rates
Demand of exports
Access to credit
Accelerator effect (GDP increase so increase in capital investment)
Animal spirit (confidence = too many risks)
Gov. policy+regulations

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9
Q

What happens to gov spending (G) when there is high economic growth?

A

G falls:
Less money on benefits
More tax revenue

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10
Q

Influences on net exports (X-M)? (3)

A

Domestic income
Changes in exchange rates : weaker £ = more expensive exports = less demand of imports (M) and more demand of exports (X)
Protectionism (tax, restrictions, embargos)

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11
Q

How does ‘animal spirit’ effect C&I

A

High spirits lead to increased C & I

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12
Q

AS definition

A

The total value of output of the economy at a given price level at a given point in time

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13
Q

Why is the SR curve upward sloping

A

When firms increase output the have to increase the rate of production so the cost of production will be more so they’ll increase their prices

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14
Q

Assumptions of SR aggregate supply

A

All factors of production are fixed

The only exception being more labour or making existing labour work harder

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15
Q

Factors effecting SRAS (shifts)

A

Changes in cost of raw materials and energy (increased cost = reduced SRAS)
Changes in exchange rates (importing materials)
Changes in tax rates (incresed tax = increase cost of production = reduced SRAS)

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16
Q

Determinants of SRAS

A

Anything effecting cost of production or productivity

17
Q

Assumptions of the neo-classical LRAS

A

Money wage rates and all other factor input prices are fully variable. The economy always produces at the full capacity level of output, as wages will self-adjust to ensure that this is the case

18
Q

Shape of classical LRAS

A

Straight vertical line

19
Q

What is Yfe?

A

It is output with full employment.

20
Q

What are sitcky downward wages?

A

As output goes down it is harder to reduce wages of labour

21
Q

What is the assumptions with Keynesian LRAS

A

Money wage rates and all other factors input prices are sticky downwards. Wages may find it hard to fall, due to national minimum wage, trade union disputes, and reluctance to do so by firms due to negative impacts on worker productivity

22
Q

Factors effecting LRAS

A
Technological advances
Changes in education and skills
Changes in relative productivity
Changes in government regulations
Demographic changes and migration
Competition policy
23
Q

What are the 4 main ways to evaluate AD/AS

A

Time Lags
Magnitude
Significance
Relaxing ‘ceteris paribus’ assumptions