The aggregate demand curve shows the relationship between the aggregate price level and the quantity of aggregate output demanded.
The aggregate demand curve is downward sloping for two reasons. The first is the wealth effect of a change in the aggregate price level—
The aggregate demand curve shifts because of changes in expectations, changes in wealth not due to changes in the aggregate price level, and the effect of the size of the existing stock of physical capital. Policy makers can use fiscal policy and monetary policy to shift the aggregate demand curve.
The aggregate supply curve shows the relationship between the aggregate price level and the quantity of aggregate output supplied.
The short-
Changes in commodity prices, nominal wages, and productivity lead to changes in producers’ profits and shift the short-
In the long run, all prices, including nominal wages, are flexible and the economy produces at its potential output. If actual aggregate output exceeds potential output, nominal wages will eventually rise in response to low unemployment and aggregate output will fall. If potential output exceeds actual aggregate output, nominal wages will eventually fall in response to high unemployment and aggregate output will rise. So the long-
In the AD–
Economic fluctuations occur because of a shift of the aggregate demand curve (a demand shock) or the short-
Demand shocks have only short-
The high cost—
Negative supply shocks pose a policy dilemma: a policy that counteracts the fall in aggregate output by increasing aggregate demand will lead to higher inflation, but a policy that counteracts inflation by reducing aggregate demand will deepen the output slump.