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11.8: Key Terms

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    180846
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    aggregate demand (AD)
    the amount of total spending on domestic goods and services in an economy
    aggregate demand (AD) curve
    the total spending on domestic goods and services at each price level
    aggregate demand/aggregate supply model
    a model that shows what determines total supply or total demand for the economy, and how total demand and total supply interact at the macroeconomic level
    aggregate supply (AS)
    the total quantity of output (i.e. real GDP) firms will produce and sell
    aggregate supply (AS) curve
    the total quantity of output (i.e. real GDP) that firms will produce and sell at each price level
    full-employment GDP
    another name for potential GDP, when the economy is producing at its potential and unemployment is at the natural rate of unemployment
    intermediate zone
    portion of the SRAS curve where GDP is below potential but not so far below as in the Keynesian zone; the SRAS curve is upward-sloping, but not vertical in the intermediate zone
    Keynes’ law
    “demand creates its own supply”
    Keynesian zone
    portion of the SRAS curve where GDP is far below potential and the SRAS curve is flat
    long run aggregate supply (LRAS) curve
    vertical line at potential GDP showing no relationship between the price level for output and real GDP in the long run
    neoclassical economists
    economists who generally emphasize the importance of aggregate supply in determining the size of the macroeconomy over the long run
    neoclassical zone
    portion of the SRAS curve where GDP is at or near potential output where the SRAS curve is steep
    potential GDP
    the maximum quantity that an economy can produce given full employment of its existing levels of labor, physical capital, technology, and institutions
    Say’s law
    “supply creates its own demand”
    short run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve
    positive short run relationship between the price level for output and real GDP, holding the prices of inputs fixed
    stagflation
    an economy experiences stagnant growth and high inflation at the same time

    11.8: Key Terms is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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