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9: Aggregate Demand

  • Page ID
    287969
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    Learning Objectives

    Upon completion of this unit, you will be able to

    • know the four components of aggregate spending, how they respond (or do not respond) to disposable income, and how to graph the aggregate spending curve.
    • understand the circular flow of income and how leakages and injections balance each other.
    • be able to identify macro equilibrium and realize that it is not the same as full employment.
    • recognize the importance of this difference to the Keynesian argument for intervention with aggregate spending.

    • 9.1: The Great Depression
      This page discusses the business cycle, contrasting the Classical economic view, which supported self-adjusting markets, with the challenges posed by the Great Depression of the 1930s, which led to extended unemployment and economic decline despite lower prices. This exacerbated the need for government intervention, as exemplified by the New Deal. The analysis notes that since 1945, U.S.
    • 9.2: Depressions, Recessions and the AS/AD
      This page discusses the AS/AD framework, which illustrates economic inefficiencies, particularly regarding labor utilization. It identifies full employment output (QF) and highlights the implications of actual output (QE) falling below or exceeding this level, leading to unemployment or inflationary gaps, respectively. The significant recession from 1929-1933, marked by a 27% drop in output, raised concerns about recovery and the need for measures to address these economic challenges.
    • 9.3: Aggregate Demand
      This page explains that a recession happens when actual output is below full-employment output, often due to declining aggregate demand or supply. The Great Depression serves as a key example, where a significant drop in aggregate demand was exacerbated by ineffective government policies post-1929 stock market crash.
    • 9.4: John Maynard Keynes
    • 9.5: AD Shortfall
    • 9.6: Consumption Function
    • 9.7: Shifts in the Consumption Function vs Shifts in Aggregate Demand


    This page titled 9: Aggregate Demand is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Martin Medeiros.