UNIT 5&6
Apr. 7, 2016
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Short run Aggregate Supply-In macroeconomics
this is the period in which wages (and other input prices) remain fixed as
price level increases or decreases.
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LRAS- period of time in which wages have become
fully responsive to changes in price level.
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Effects over Short-run:
-In the short run, price level changes
allow for companies to exceed normal outputs and hire more workers because
profits are increasing while wages remain constant.
-in the long run, wages will adjust to the
price level and previous output levels will adjust accordingly
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Equilibrium in the Extended Model-The long AS
Curve in represented with a vertical line @ full employment level of real GDP.
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Demand Pull inflation in the AS model
-demand pull- prices increase based on
increase in aggregate demand
-in the short run, demand pull will drive
up prices, and increase production
-in the long run, increases in aggregate
demand will eventually return to previous levels.
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Cost push & the extended model:
-cost push arises from factors that will
increase per unit costs such as increase in the price of key resource.
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Dilemma for the Government
-in an effort to fight cost-push, the
government can react in two different ways.
-action such as spending but the govt could
begin an inflationary spiral.
-no action however could lead to recession
by keeping production and employment levels declining.
4/8/16
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Long run Phillip’s curve: natural rate of unemployment
is held constant. Because the Long-run Phillips curve exist at the natural rate
of unemployment (Un) structural changes in the economy that affect (Un) will
also cause the LRPC to shift. Increase in Un will shift to right, Decrease will
shift to left.
-long run Phillip’s curve: is no tradeoff
between inflation and unemployment.
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Represented by a vertical line
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Occurs at natural rate of unemployment.
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LRPC will only shift if LRAS shifts.
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NRU (4%-5%) = frictional + Structural + Seasonal
unemployment
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Major LRPC composition is that more worker
benefits create higher rates and fewer worker benefits create lower rates.
-supply shocks is caused by rapid an
significant recourse cost which causes the LRAS curve to shift.
·
The misery index: a combination of unemployment
and inflation in a given year.
·
Single digit misery is good.
4/11/16
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Inflation- general rise in price level
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Deflation-general decline in the price level
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Disinflation-decrease in the rate of inflation
over time
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Stagflation- unemployment and inflation
increasing at the same time.
Just a reminder, When demand is high, there are few production processes that have unemployed fixed outputs. Any increase in demand production causes the prices to increase which results in a steep or vertical AS curve.
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