Equilibrium 3
Equilibrium 3
Equilibrium 3
Equilibrium A
price
Aggregate
demand
0 Equilibrium Quantity of
output Output
Equilibrium
• In the short run equilibrium may be above
or below the full employment rate. In other
words AD and AS may not intersect at the
LRAS.
• In the long run equilibrium will be at the
LRAS, because in the long-run short run
AS will have adjusted so that short-run
aggregate output is equal to the potential
output.
Short-run Equilibrium Below Full
Employment Potential Output
(recessionary gap)
LRAS
Price Level
AS
PL1
AD
Q1 FE RGDP
Short run Equilibrium Above Full
Employment Potential Output
(inflationary gap)
LRAS
Price Level
AS
PL1
AD
Q1 FE RGDP
Changes in AD
• Increases in AD cause the price level and
the level of output and employment to rise.
• This rise in price level is known as
demand-pull inflation.
• Decreases in AD cause the price level and
the level of output and employment to fall.
• Increases or decreases in AD are known
as Demand Shocks
Increases in AD
LRAS
Price Level
AS
PL2
PL1
AD2
AD
Q1 FE ,Q2 RGDP
Changes in AS
LRAS
Price Level
AS
AS1
PL
PL1
AD
FE Q1 RGDP
Changes in AS
AS2
AS
PL2
PL1
AD
Q2 Q1 FE RGDP
Self-Correcting Nature of
Economy
• In the long-run aggregate supply will shift
so that equilibrium will be at the long-run
level of output
• This happens as nominal wages and other
input prices adjust to meet the current
price level
Short run Equilibrium Below Full Employment
-Lower price levels lead to lower wages,
shifting SRAS right
LRAS
Price Level
AS
AS2
PL1
PL2
AD
Q1 FE ,Q2 RGDP
Short run Equilibrium Above Full
Employment
-Higher price levels lead to higher wages,
shifting SRAS left
LRAS
Price Level
AS2
AS
PL1
AD1
FE Q1 RGDP