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[[File:AS + AD graph.svg|right|thumb|300px|Aggregate supply/demand graph]]
[[File:AS + AD graph.svg|right|thumb|300px|Aggregate supply/demand graph]]
{{Macroeconomics sidebar}}
{{Macroeconomics sidebar}}
The '''AD–AS''' or '''aggregate demand–aggregate supply model''' is a [[macroeconomic model]] that explains [[price level]] and [[output (economics)|output]] through the relationship of [[aggregate demand]] (AD) and [[aggregate supply]] (AS).


The '''AD–AS''' or '''aggregate demand–aggregate supply model''' (also known as the '''aggregate supply–aggregate demand''' or '''AS–AD model''') is a widely used [[macroeconomic model]] that explains short-run and long-run economic changes through the relationship of [[aggregate demand]] (AD) and [[aggregate supply]] (AS) in a diagram. It coexists in an older and static version depicting the two variables [[output (economics)|output]] and [[price level]], and in a newer dynamic version showing output and [[inflation]] (i.e. the change in the price level over time, which is usually of more direct interest).
It is based on the theory of [[John Maynard Keynes]] presented in his work ''[[The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money]]''. It is one of the primary simplified representations in the modern field of [[macroeconomics]], and is used by a broad array of economists, from [[Libertarianism|libertarian]], [[monetarist]] supporters of [[laissez-faire]], such as [[Milton Friedman]], to [[Post-Keynesian economics|post-Keynesian]] supporters of [[economic interventionism]], such as [[Joan Robinson]].


The AD–AS model was invented around 1950 and became one of the primary simplified representations of macroeconomic issues toward the end of the 1970s when inflation became an important political issue. From around 2000 the modified version of a dynamic AD–AS model, incorporating contemporary [[monetary policy]] strategies focusing on [[inflation targeting]] and using the [[interest rate]] as a primary policy instrument, was developed, gradually superseding the traditional static model version in university-level economics textbooks.
==Modeling==
The AD/AS model is used to illustrate the [[Keynesian economics|Keynesian]] model of the [[business cycle]]. Movements of the two curves can be used to predict the effects that various [[exogenous variable|exogenous]] events will have on two variables: real [[GDP]] and the [[price level]]. Furthermore, the model can be incorporated as a component in any of a variety of dynamic models (models of how variables like the price level and others evolve over time). The AD–AS model can be related to the [[Phillips curve]] model of wage or price inflation and unemployment. A special case is a horizontal AS curve which means the price level is constant. The AD curve represents the locus of equilibrium in the [[IS–LM model]], also invented and developed by Keynes. The two models produce the same results with a constant price level.


The dynamic AD–AS model can be viewed as a simplified version of the more advanced and complex [[dynamic stochastic general equilibrium]] (DSGE) models which are state-of-the-art models used by [[central bank]]s and other organizations to analyze [[economic fluctuations]]. Unlike DSGE models, the dynamic AD–AS model does not provide a [[Microfoundations|microeconomic foundation]] in the form of optimizing firms and households, but the macroeconomic relationships ultimately posited by the optimizing models are similar to those emerging from the modern-version AD–AS model. At the same time, the latter is much simpler and consequently more easily accessible for students, making it a widespread tool for teaching purposes.
==Aggregate demand curve==

==History==

=== Origins ===

According to economic historian A.K. Dutt, the AD–AS diagram first made its appearance in 1948 in a contribution by O.H. Brownlee to a textbook on applied economics. Also a textbook by [[Kenneth E. Boulding]] in the same year presented a diagram in output-price space, but unlike Brownlee's version without trying to solve the model; Boulding rather uses the diagram to warn about the dangers of aggregative thinking. Brownlee, on the contrary, went on working on the diagram and in 1950 published an article in [[Journal of Political Economy]], which is allegedly the first published version of a full AD–AS model in Y-P space. In 1951, [[Jacob Marschak]] published lecture notes providing the first full textbook treatment of the AD–AS model, presenting the same model as Brownlee's 1948 version, though not citing neither Brownlee nor anyone else.<ref name=Dutt>{{cite journal |last1=Dutt |first1=Amitava Krishna |title=Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply Analysis: A History |journal=History of Political Economy |date=1 June 2002 |volume=34 |issue=2 |pages=321–364 |doi=10.1215/00182702-34-2-321}}</ref>

=== Growing popularity in 1970s ===

In the course of time, the model spread to several textbooks, becoming a standard modelling tool in principles and intermediate economics textbooks.<ref name=Dutt/> In particular, after inflation became important in the late 1960s and 1970s, there was a need to complement the [[IS–LM model]], which had been a dominant model for teaching purposes until that time, but assumed a constant price level, with a model that incorporated aggregate supply and consequently could provide an explanation of changes in the price level. Thus, the "IS–LM–AS model", graphically depicted as an aggregate supply curve together with a curve combining the IS and LM curves and called an aggregate demand curve, became a standard teaching model only after the inflationary supply shocks of the 1970s.<ref name=Dutt/><ref name=Romer>{{cite journal |last1=Romer |first1=David |title=Keynesian Macroeconomics without the LM Curve |journal=Journal of Economic Perspectives |date=1 May 2000 |volume=14 |issue=2 |pages=149–170 |doi=10.1257/jep.14.2.149 |url=https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.14.2.149 |access-date=28 November 2023 |language=en |issn=0895-3309}}</ref> In particular, two intermediate textbooks appearing in 1978 and later to be widely used, one by [[Rudi Dornbusch]] and [[Stanley Fischer]], and one by [[Robert J. Gordon]], together with [[William Hoban Branson]]'s texbook from its second edition in 1979, all presented an AD–AS model.<ref name=Dutt/>

=== Rise of the dynamic AD–AS version ===

From around the turn of the century, the traditional AD–AS diagram, as well as the traditional version of the IS–LM diagram, upon which the derivation of the AD curve rests, has been criticized for being obsolete. One reason is that the traditional IS–LM diagram and, consequently, AD curve rested upon the assumption of the central bank targeting money supply as its central policy variable. In contrast, central banks since around 1990 have largely abandoned controlling money supply, instead attempting to [[inflation targeting|target inflation]], using the policy interest rate as their main policy instrument, possibly via a [[Taylor rule]]-like strategy. Another reason is that for real-world policy purposes, it is generally not interesting to analyze the interaction between output and the price level per se, which is what the traditional AD–AS diagram illustrates, but rather between output and the ''change'' in the price level, i.e. inflation.<ref name=Romer/><ref name=Romer2>{{cite book |last1=Romer |first1=David |title=Advanced macroeconomics |date=2019 |pages=262–264 |publisher=McGraw-Hill |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-1-260-18521-8 |edition=Fifth}}</ref><ref name=SWJ>{{cite book |last1=Sørensen |first1=Peter Birch |last2=Whitta-Jacobsen |first2=Hans Jørgen |title=Introducing advanced macroeconomics: growth and business cycles |page=vii |quote= ...we apply and extend the modern AS-AD framework where the nominal variable is the rate of inflation rather than the price level, and where monetary policy is specified as a Taylor rule for the nominal interest rate. This set-up is gradually superseding the traditional IS-LM and AS-AD analysis and makes it easier to relate the model to real-world policy discussions. |date=2022 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford, United Kingdom New York, NY |isbn=978-0-19-885049-6 |edition=Third}}</ref>

Because of that, the original AD–AS model has increasingly been supplanted in textbooks by a dynamic version which directly analyzes equilibria in output and inflation levels, showing these variables along the axes of the diagram.<ref name=Romer2/><ref name=SWJ/><ref name=mankiw>{{cite book |last1=Mankiw |first1=Nicholas Gregory |title=Macroeconomics |date=2022 |publisher=Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-1-319-26390-4 |edition=Eleventh, international}}</ref> In some textbooks, the dynamic AD–AS version is referred to as the "three-equation New Keynesian model",<ref name=Davis>{{cite journal |last1=Davis |first1=Leila E. |last2=Gómez-Ramírez |first2=Leopoldo |title=Teaching post-intermediate macroeconomics with a dynamic 3-equation model |journal=The Journal of Economic Education |date=2 October 2022 |volume=53 |issue=4 |pages=348–367 |doi=10.1080/00220485.2022.2111385 |s2cid=252249958 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00220485.2022.2111385 |access-date=17 November 2023 |language=en |issn=0022-0485}}</ref> the three equations being an IS relation, often augmented with a term that allows for expectations influencing demand, a monetary policy (interest) rule and a short-run Phillips curve.<ref name=araujo>{{cite journal |last1=de Araujo |first1=Pedro |last2=O’Sullivan |first2=Roisin |last3=Simpson |first3=Nicole B. |title=What Should be Taught in Intermediate Macroeconomics? |journal=The Journal of Economic Education |date=January 2013 |volume=44 |issue=1 |pages=74–90 |doi=10.1080/00220485.2013.740399 |s2cid=17167083 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00220485.2013.740399 |access-date=17 November 2023 |language=en |issn=0022-0485}}</ref> Olivier Blanchard in his widely-used<ref name=Courtoy>{{cite web |last1=Courtoy |first1=François |last2=De Vroey |first2=Michel |last3=Turati |first3=Riccardo |title=What do we teach in Macroeconomics? Evidence of a Theoretical Divide |url=https://sites.uclouvain.be/econ/DP/IRES/2021023.pdf |website=sites.uclouvain.be |publisher=UCLouvain |access-date=17 November 2023}}</ref> intermediate-level textbook uses the term IS–LM–PC model (PC standing for Phillips curve) for the same basic construction.<ref name=blanchard>{{cite book |last1=Blanchard |first1=Olivier |title=Macroeconomics |date=2021 |publisher=Pearson |location=Harlow, England |isbn=978-0-134-89789-9 |edition=Eighth, global}}</ref>{{Rp|195–201}}

=== A stepping stone towards DSGE models ===

The dynamic AD–AS model can be viewed as a simplified version of the more advanced and complex [[dynamic stochastic general equilibrium]] (DSGE) models which are state-of-the-art models used by central banks and other organizations to analyze economic fluctuations. Unlike DSGE models, the dynamic AD–AS model does not provide a [[Microfoundations|microeconomic foundation]] in the form of optimizing firms and households, but the macroeconomic relationships ultimately posited by the optimizing models are similar to those emerging from the modern-version AD–AS model.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|427–428}}

== Static AD–AS model==

The traditional or static AD/AS model illustrates the relationship between output and the price level of the economy under the assumptions of the model, containing both a short-run and a long-run aggregate supply curve (abbreviated SRAS and LRAS, respectively). In the short run wages and other resource prices are sticky and slow to adjust to new price levels. This gives way to an upward sloping or, in the extreme case of completely fixed prices, horizontal SRAS. In the long-run, resource prices adjust to the price level bringing the economy back to its structural output level along a vertical LRAS.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Reed|first=Jacob|date=2016|title=AP Macroeconomics Review: AS-AD Model|url=http://www.apeconreview.com/asad-model.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160625003354/http://www.apeconreview.com/asad-model.html|archive-date=25 June 2016|access-date=4 September 2020|website=APEconReview.com}}</ref> Movements of the two curves can be used to predict the effects that various [[exogenous variable|exogenous]] events will have on two variables: real [[GDP]] and the [[price level]].

===Aggregate demand curve===
{{main|Aggregate demand}}
{{main|Aggregate demand}}
The AD (aggregate demand) curve is defined by the [[IS–LM model|IS–LM]] equilibrium income at different potential price levels.
The downward sloping AD curve is derived from the [[IS–LM model]].
[[File:AS AD.png|thumb|IS–LM diagram, with real income plotted horizontally and the interest rate plotted vertically]]
[[File:AS AD (2).png|thumb|AD–AS diagram, with real income plotted horizontally and the price level plotted vertically]]
[[File:AS AD (2).png|thumb|AD–AS diagram, with real income plotted horizontally and the price level plotted vertically]]
It shows the combinations of the price level and level of the output at which the goods and assets markets are simultaneously in equilibrium.


The AD (aggregate demand) curve in the static AD–AS model is downward sloping, reflecting a negative correlation between output and the price level on the demand side. It shows the combinations of the price level and level of the output at which the goods and assets markets are simultaneously in equilibrium.
The equation for the AD curve in general terms is:


The equation for the AD curve in general terms can be written as:
: <math>Y=Y^{d}\left(\tfrac{M}{P}, G, T, Z_1\right)</math>


: <math>Y=Y^{d}\left(\tfrac{M}{P}, G, T, Z_1\right)</math>,
where Y is real [[GDP]], M is the nominal [[money supply]], P is the [[price level]], G is real [[government spending]], T is real taxes levied, and Z<sub>1</sub> other variables that affect the location of the IS curve (any component of spending) or the LM curve (influences on money demand). The real money supply has a positive effect on aggregate demand, as does real government spending; taxation has a negative effect on it.


where Y is real [[GDP]], M is the nominal [[money supply]], P is the [[price level]], G is real [[government spending]], T is real taxes levied, and Z<sub>1</sub> any other variables that affect aggregate demand.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Salter |first=Alexander W. |title=Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Keep It Simple, Stupid! {{!}} AIER |url=https://www.aier.org/article/aggregate-demand-and-aggregate-supply-keep-it-simple-stupid/ |access-date=2024-03-24 |website=www.aier.org |language=en-US}}</ref>
==Aggregate supply curve==

===Aggregate supply curve===
{{main|Aggregate supply}}
{{main|Aggregate supply}}
The aggregate supply curve (AS curve) describes the quantity of output the firms plan to supply for each given price level.


The aggregate supply curve in the static AD–AS model illustrates the relationship between the supply of goods and services on the one hand and the price level on the other hand.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|266}} Under the premise that the price level is flexible in the long run, but sticky or even completely fixed under shorter time horizons, it is usual to distinguish between a long-run and a short-run aggregate supply curve. Whereas the long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is vertical, the short-run aggregate supply curve will have a positive slope<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|377}} or, in the extreme case of a completely constant price level, be horizontal.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|268}}
The '''Keynesian aggregate supply curve''' shows that the AS curve is significantly horizontal implying that the firm will supply whatever amount of goods is demanded at a particular price level during an [[economic depression]]. The idea behind that is because there is unemployment, firms can readily obtain as much labour as they want at that current wage and production can increase without any additional costs (e.g. machines are idle which can simply be turned on). Firms' average costs of production therefore are assumed not to change as their output level changes. This provides a rationale for Keynesians' support for government intervention. The total output of an economy can decline without the price level declining; this fact, in conjunction with the Keynesian belief of wages being inflexible downwards, clarifies the need for government stimulus. Since wages cannot readily adjust low enough for aggregate supply to shift outward and improve total output, the government must intervene to accomplish this result. However, the Keynesian aggregate supply curve also contains a normally upward-sloping region where aggregate supply responds accordingly to changes in price level. The upward slope is due to the [[law of diminishing returns]] as firms increase output, which states that it will become marginally more expensive to accomplish the same level of improvement in productive capacity as firms grow. It is also due to the scarcity of natural resources, the rarity of which causes increased production to also become more expensive. The vertical section of the Keynesian curve corresponds to the physical limit of the economy, where it is impossible to increase output.


The equation for the aggregate supply curve in general terms may be written as
The '''classical aggregate supply curve''' comprises a short-run aggregate supply curve and a vertical long-run aggregate supply curve. The short-run curve visualizes the total planned output of goods and services in the economy at a particular price level. The "short-run" is defined as the period during which only final good prices adjust and factor, or input, costs do not. The "long-run" is the period after which factor prices are able to adjust accordingly. The short-run aggregate supply curve has an upward slope for the same reasons the Keynesian AS curve has one: the law of diminishing returns and the scarcity of resources. The long-run aggregate supply curve is vertical because factor prices will have adjusted. Factor prices increase if producing at a point beyond [[full employment]] output, shifting the short-run aggregate supply inwards so equilibrium occurs somewhere along full employment output. Monetarists have argued that demand-side expansionary policies favoured by Keynesian economists are solely inflationary. As the aggregate demand curve is shifted outward, the general price level increases. This increased price level causes households, or the owners of the [[factors of production]] to demand higher prices for their goods and services. The consequence of this is increased production costs for firms, causing short-run aggregate demand to shift back inwards. The theoretical ultimate result is inflation.<ref>{{cite book |last=Glanville |first=Alan |title=Economics From a Global Perspective |edition=Third |publisher=Glanville Books |year=2011 |page=224 |isbn=9780952474685 }}</ref>
:<math>Y=Y^{s}(W/P, \ \ P/P^{e}, \ \ Z_2)</math>,


where W is the nominal wage rate (exogenous due to stickiness in the short run), P<sup>e</sup> is the anticipated (expected) price level, and Z<sub>2</sub> is a vector of exogenous variables that can affect the position of the labor demand curve.
The mainstream AS-AD model contains both a long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) and a short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve essentially combining the classical and Keynesian models. In the short run wages and other resource prices are sticky and slow to adjust to new price levels. This gives way to the upward sloping SRAS. In the long-run, resource prices adjust to the price level bringing the economy back to a full employment output; along vertical LRAS.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Reed|first=Jacob|date=2016|title=AP Macroeconomics Review: AS-AD Model|url=http://www.apeconreview.com/asad-model.html|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160625003354/http://www.apeconreview.com/asad-model.html|archive-date=25 June 2016|access-date=4 September 2020|website=APEconReview.com}}</ref>


A horizontal aggregate supply curve (sometimes called a "Keynesian" aggregate supply curve) implies that the firm will supply whatever amount of goods is demanded at a particular price level. One possible justification for this is that when there is unemployment, firms can readily obtain as much labour as they want at that current wage, and production can increase without any additional costs (e.g. machines are idle which can simply be turned on). Firms' average costs of production therefore are assumed not to change as their output level changes.
===Shifts in aggregate supply curves===
The Keynesian model, in which there is no long-run aggregate supply curve and the classical model, in the case of the short-run aggregate supply curve, are affected by the same determinants. Any event that results in a change of production costs shifts the curves outwards or inwards if production costs are decreased or increased, respectively. Some factors which affect short-run production costs include: taxes and subsidies, price of labour (wages), and price of raw materials. These factors shift short-run curves ''exclusively''. Changes in the quantity and quality of labour and capital affect both long-run and short-run supply curves. A greater quantity of labour or capital corresponds to a lower price for both. A greater quality in labour or capital corresponds to a greater output per worker or machine.


The long-run aggregate supply curve refers not to a time frame in which the capital stock is free to be set optimally (as would be the terminology in the micro-economic [[theory of the firm]]), but rather to a time frame in which wages are free to adjust in order to equilibrate the labor market and in which price anticipations are accurate. A vertical long-run aggregate supply curve (sometimes called a "classical" aggregate supply curve) illustrates a situation where the level of output does not depend on the price level, but is exclusively determined by the supply of production factors like the capital and the labour force, employment being at its structural ("natural") level.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|267}}
The long-run aggregate supply curve of the classical model is affected by events that affect the [[potential output]] of the economy. Factors revolve around changes in the quality and quantity of factors of production.


==Dynamic AD–AS model==
==Fiscal and monetary policy under Classical and Keynesian cases==
The equation for the aggregate supply curve in general terms for the case of excess supply in the labor market, called the short-run aggregate supply curve, is
:<math>Y=Y^{s}(W/P, \ \ P/P^{e}, \ \ Z_2)</math>


The modern or dynamic AD/AS model illustrates the connection between output and inflation, combining an IS relation (i.e., a relation describing aggregate demand as a function of various demand components, some of which are negatively related to the interest rate), a monetary policy rule determining the policy interest rate (which together form the AD curve) and a Phillips curve relationship from which the aggregate supply curve is derived.<ref name=Romer2/>{{Rp|263}}<ref name=SWJ/>{{Rp|593–600}}
where W is the nominal wage rate (exogenous due to stickiness in the short run), P<sup>e</sup> is the anticipated (expected) price level, and Z<sub>2</sub> is a vector of exogenous variables that can affect the position of the labor demand curve (the capital stock or the current state of technological knowledge). The real wage has a negative effect on firms' employment of labor and hence on aggregate supply. The price level relative to its expected level has a positive effect on aggregate supply because of firms' mistakes in production plans due to mis-predictions of prices.


===Aggregate demand curve===
The long-run aggregate supply curve refers not to a time frame in which the capital stock is free to be set optimally (as would be the terminology in the micro-economic [[theory of the firm]]), but rather to a time frame in which wages are free to adjust in order to equilibrate the labor market and in which price anticipations are accurate. In this case the nominal wage rate is endogenous and so does not appear as an independent variable in the aggregate supply equation. The long-run aggregate supply equation is simply
:<math>Y=Y^{s}(Z_2)</math>


The AD curve slopes downward, illustrating a negative correlation between output and inflation. When the central bank observes increased inflation, it will raise its policy interest rate sufficiently to increase the real interest rate of the economy, dampening aggregate demand and consequently the overall activity level of the economy.<ref name=Romer2/>{{Rp|263}}<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|411}}
and is vertical at the full-employment level of output. In this long-run case, Z<sub>2</sub> also includes factors affecting the position of the labor supply curve (such as population), since in labor market equilibrium the location of labor supply affects the labor market outcome.

===Aggregate supply curve===

The dynamic AS curve slopes upward, reflecting the mechanisms of the Phillips curve: Other things equal, higher levels of activity reflect higher increases in wages and other marginal costs of production, causing higher inflation through the firms' price-setting mechanisms<ref name=Romer2/>{{Rp|263}}<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|409}} as they induce firms to raise their prices at a higher rate.<ref name=SWJ/>{{Rp|594}} There will be a vertical long-run aggregate supply curve at the level of structural (natural) output.<ref name=SWJ/>{{Rp|595}}


==Shifts of aggregate demand and aggregate supply==
==Shifts of aggregate demand and aggregate supply==
Line 53: Line 75:


===Shifts of aggregate demand===
===Shifts of aggregate demand===
The following exogenous events would shift the aggregate demand curve to the right. As a result, the price level would go up. In addition if the time frame of analysis is the short run, so the aggregate supply curve is upward sloping rather than vertical, real output would go up; but in the long run with aggregate supply vertical at full employment, real output would remain unchanged.


The dynamic aggregate demand curve shifts when either fiscal policy or monetary policy is changed or any other kinds of shocks to aggregate demand occur.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|411}} Changes in the level of potential Y also shifts the AD curve, so that this type of shocks has an effect on both the supply and the demand side of the model.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|412}}
Rightward aggregate demand shifts emanating from the IS curve:

Rightward aggregate demand shifts can be caused by any shock to one of the autonomous components of aggregate demand, e.g.:

* An exogenous increase in [[consumer spending]]
* An exogenous increase in [[consumer spending]]
* An exogenous increase in investment spending on [[physical capital]]
* An exogenous increase in investment spending on [[physical capital]]
Line 64: Line 88:
* An exogenous increase in purchases of the country's exports by people in other countries
* An exogenous increase in purchases of the country's exports by people in other countries
* An exogenous decrease in imports from other countries
* An exogenous decrease in imports from other countries

Rightward aggregate demand shifts emanating from the LM curve:
* An exogenous increase in the nominal money supply
* An exogenous increase in the demand for money supply i.e. liquidity preference


===Shifts of aggregate supply===
===Shifts of aggregate supply===
The following exogenous events would shift the short-run aggregate supply curve to the right. As a result, the price level would drop and real GDP would increase.
* An exogenous decrease in the wage rate
* An increase in the physical capital stock
* Technological progress — improvements in our knowledge of how to transform capital and labor into output


The dynamic aggregate supply curve is drawn for a given value of inflation expectations and level of potential output. Changes in either of these variables as well as a number of possible supply shocks will shift the dynamic aggregate supply curve.<ref name=mankiw/>{{Rp|409}}<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Great Recession: A Macroeconomic Earthquake {{!}} Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis |url=https://www.minneapolisfed.org/article/2017/the-great-recession-a-macroeconomic-earthquake |access-date=2024-03-24 |website=www.minneapolisfed.org |language=en}}</ref>
The following events would shift the long-run aggregate supply curve to the right:

The long-run aggregate supply curve is affected by events that affect the [[potential output]] of the economy. These include the following shocks which would shift the long-run aggregate supply curve to the right:

* An increase in population
* An increase in population
* An increase in the physical capital stock
* An increase in the physical capital stock
* Technological progress
* Technological progress


==Applications==
===Transition dynamics===
===Functional finance theory===
* Movement back to the steady state is fastest when the economy is furthest from its steady state.
AD-AS analysis are applied to [[Functional Finance Theory]] and/or MMT to study a relationship between inflation rate and economic growth rate. When a country's economy grows, the country needs deficit spending to maintain [[full employment]] without inflation. Inflation starts to occur when the interest rate of its government bond becomes larger than the growth rate, provided that the country maintains full employment. Also, when the country recovers from recession, it needs to increase government expenditure to achieve full employment. <ref> {{cite journal
* This means that as the aggregate supply is shocked by factors of production, it will move away from its steady state. In response, the supply will slowly shift back to the steady state equilibrium, first with a large reaction, then consequently smaller reactions until it reaches steady state. The reactions back to equilibrium are largest when furthest from steady state, and become smaller as they near equilibrium.
| title = AD-AS Analysis from the Perspective of Functional Finance Theory and MMT

| journal = Folia Oeconomica Stetinensia
For example, a shock increase in the price of oil is felt by producers as an increase in the factors of production. This shifts the supply curve upward by raising expected inflation. This slows the adjustment of the AS curve back to its steady state. As the inflation slowly falls, so will the AS curve back to its steady state.
| volume = 23
| date = June 2023
| vauthors = ((Tanaka, Y.))
}}
</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 96: Line 120:


== Further reading ==
== Further reading ==
* {{cite book |first=Olivier |last=Blanchard |author-link=Olivier Blanchard |title=Macroeconomics |edition=Fourth |publisher=Pearson Education |year=2006 |isbn=0-13-186026-7 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Blanchard |first1=Olivier |author-link=Olivier Blanchard |title=Macroeconomics |date=2021 |publisher=Pearson |location=Harlow, England |isbn=978-0-134-89789-9 |edition=Eighth, global}}
* {{cite journal |first1=Amitava K. |last1=Dutt |last2=Skott |first2=Peter |title=Keynesian Theory and the Aggregate-Supply/Aggregate-Demand Framework: A Defense |journal=[[Eastern Economic Journal]] |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=313–331 |year=1996 }}
* {{cite journal |first1=Amitava K. |last1=Dutt |last2=Skott |first2=Peter |title=Keynesian Theory and the Aggregate-Supply/Aggregate-Demand Framework: A Defense |journal=[[Eastern Economic Journal]] |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=313–331 |year=1996 }}
* {{cite book |first1=Amitava K. |last1=Dutt |first2=Peter |last2=Skott |year=2006 |chapter=Keynesian Theory and the AD-AS Framework: A Reconsideration |editor1-first=Carl |editor1-last=Chiarella |editor2-first=Reiner |editor2-last=Franke |editor3-first=Peter |editor3-last=Flaschel |editor4-first=Willi |editor4-last=Semmler |title=Quantitative and Empirical Analysis of Nonlinear Dynamic Macromodels |series=Contributions to Economic Analysis |volume=277 |publisher=Emerald Group |pages=149–172 |doi=10.1016/S0573-8555(05)77006-1 |s2cid=16009286 }}
* {{cite book |first1=Amitava K. |last1=Dutt |first2=Peter |last2=Skott |year=2006 |chapter=Keynesian Theory and the AD-AS Framework: A Reconsideration |editor1-first=Carl |editor1-last=Chiarella |editor2-first=Reiner |editor2-last=Franke |editor3-first=Peter |editor3-last=Flaschel |editor4-first=Willi |editor4-last=Semmler |title=Quantitative and Empirical Analysis of Nonlinear Dynamic Macromodels |series=Contributions to Economic Analysis |volume=277 |publisher=Emerald Group |pages=149–172 |doi=10.1016/S0573-8555(05)77006-1 |isbn=978-0-444-52122-4 |s2cid=16009286 }}
* {{cite book |last=Mankiw |first=N. Gregory |author-link=N. Gregory Mankiw |year=2007 |title=Macroeconomics |publisher=Worth Publishers |location=New York |edition=Sixth |isbn=978-0-7167-6213-3 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/macroeconomics0000mank }}
* {{cite book |last1=Mankiw |first1=Nicholas Gregory |author-link=Greg Mankiw |title=Macroeconomics |date=2022 |publisher=Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-1-319-26390-4 |edition=Eleventh, international}}
* {{cite journal |first=Thomas I. |last=Palley |title=Keynesian Theory and AS/AD Analysis |journal=Eastern Economic Journal |volume=23 |issue=4 |year=1997 |pages=459–468 |jstor=40325806 }}
* {{cite journal |first=Thomas I. |last=Palley |title=Keynesian Theory and AS/AD Analysis |journal=Eastern Economic Journal |volume=23 |issue=4 |year=1997 |pages=459–468 |jstor=40325806 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Romer |first1=David |title=Advanced macroeconomics |date=2019 |publisher=McGraw-Hill |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-1-260-18521-8 |edition=Fifth}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sørensen |first1=Peter Birch |last2=Whitta-Jacobsen |first2=Hans Jørgen |title=Introducing advanced macroeconomics: growth and business cycles |date=2022 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford, United Kingdom New York, NY |isbn=978-0-19-885049-6 |edition=Third}}


==External links==
==External links==
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{{Economics}}
{{Economics}}
{{United States – Commonwealth of Nations recessions}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:AD-AS model}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:AD-AS model}}

Latest revision as of 16:48, 2 September 2024

Aggregate supply/demand graph

The AD–AS or aggregate demand–aggregate supply model (also known as the aggregate supply–aggregate demand or AS–AD model) is a widely used macroeconomic model that explains short-run and long-run economic changes through the relationship of aggregate demand (AD) and aggregate supply (AS) in a diagram. It coexists in an older and static version depicting the two variables output and price level, and in a newer dynamic version showing output and inflation (i.e. the change in the price level over time, which is usually of more direct interest).

The AD–AS model was invented around 1950 and became one of the primary simplified representations of macroeconomic issues toward the end of the 1970s when inflation became an important political issue. From around 2000 the modified version of a dynamic AD–AS model, incorporating contemporary monetary policy strategies focusing on inflation targeting and using the interest rate as a primary policy instrument, was developed, gradually superseding the traditional static model version in university-level economics textbooks.

The dynamic AD–AS model can be viewed as a simplified version of the more advanced and complex dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models which are state-of-the-art models used by central banks and other organizations to analyze economic fluctuations. Unlike DSGE models, the dynamic AD–AS model does not provide a microeconomic foundation in the form of optimizing firms and households, but the macroeconomic relationships ultimately posited by the optimizing models are similar to those emerging from the modern-version AD–AS model. At the same time, the latter is much simpler and consequently more easily accessible for students, making it a widespread tool for teaching purposes.

History

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Origins

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According to economic historian A.K. Dutt, the AD–AS diagram first made its appearance in 1948 in a contribution by O.H. Brownlee to a textbook on applied economics. Also a textbook by Kenneth E. Boulding in the same year presented a diagram in output-price space, but unlike Brownlee's version without trying to solve the model; Boulding rather uses the diagram to warn about the dangers of aggregative thinking. Brownlee, on the contrary, went on working on the diagram and in 1950 published an article in Journal of Political Economy, which is allegedly the first published version of a full AD–AS model in Y-P space. In 1951, Jacob Marschak published lecture notes providing the first full textbook treatment of the AD–AS model, presenting the same model as Brownlee's 1948 version, though not citing neither Brownlee nor anyone else.[1]

Growing popularity in 1970s

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In the course of time, the model spread to several textbooks, becoming a standard modelling tool in principles and intermediate economics textbooks.[1] In particular, after inflation became important in the late 1960s and 1970s, there was a need to complement the IS–LM model, which had been a dominant model for teaching purposes until that time, but assumed a constant price level, with a model that incorporated aggregate supply and consequently could provide an explanation of changes in the price level. Thus, the "IS–LM–AS model", graphically depicted as an aggregate supply curve together with a curve combining the IS and LM curves and called an aggregate demand curve, became a standard teaching model only after the inflationary supply shocks of the 1970s.[1][2] In particular, two intermediate textbooks appearing in 1978 and later to be widely used, one by Rudi Dornbusch and Stanley Fischer, and one by Robert J. Gordon, together with William Hoban Branson's texbook from its second edition in 1979, all presented an AD–AS model.[1]

Rise of the dynamic AD–AS version

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From around the turn of the century, the traditional AD–AS diagram, as well as the traditional version of the IS–LM diagram, upon which the derivation of the AD curve rests, has been criticized for being obsolete. One reason is that the traditional IS–LM diagram and, consequently, AD curve rested upon the assumption of the central bank targeting money supply as its central policy variable. In contrast, central banks since around 1990 have largely abandoned controlling money supply, instead attempting to target inflation, using the policy interest rate as their main policy instrument, possibly via a Taylor rule-like strategy. Another reason is that for real-world policy purposes, it is generally not interesting to analyze the interaction between output and the price level per se, which is what the traditional AD–AS diagram illustrates, but rather between output and the change in the price level, i.e. inflation.[2][3][4]

Because of that, the original AD–AS model has increasingly been supplanted in textbooks by a dynamic version which directly analyzes equilibria in output and inflation levels, showing these variables along the axes of the diagram.[3][4][5] In some textbooks, the dynamic AD–AS version is referred to as the "three-equation New Keynesian model",[6] the three equations being an IS relation, often augmented with a term that allows for expectations influencing demand, a monetary policy (interest) rule and a short-run Phillips curve.[7] Olivier Blanchard in his widely-used[8] intermediate-level textbook uses the term IS–LM–PC model (PC standing for Phillips curve) for the same basic construction.[9]: 195–201 

A stepping stone towards DSGE models

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The dynamic AD–AS model can be viewed as a simplified version of the more advanced and complex dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models which are state-of-the-art models used by central banks and other organizations to analyze economic fluctuations. Unlike DSGE models, the dynamic AD–AS model does not provide a microeconomic foundation in the form of optimizing firms and households, but the macroeconomic relationships ultimately posited by the optimizing models are similar to those emerging from the modern-version AD–AS model.[5]: 427–428 

Static AD–AS model

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The traditional or static AD/AS model illustrates the relationship between output and the price level of the economy under the assumptions of the model, containing both a short-run and a long-run aggregate supply curve (abbreviated SRAS and LRAS, respectively). In the short run wages and other resource prices are sticky and slow to adjust to new price levels. This gives way to an upward sloping or, in the extreme case of completely fixed prices, horizontal SRAS. In the long-run, resource prices adjust to the price level bringing the economy back to its structural output level along a vertical LRAS.[10] Movements of the two curves can be used to predict the effects that various exogenous events will have on two variables: real GDP and the price level.

Aggregate demand curve

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AD–AS diagram, with real income plotted horizontally and the price level plotted vertically

The AD (aggregate demand) curve in the static AD–AS model is downward sloping, reflecting a negative correlation between output and the price level on the demand side. It shows the combinations of the price level and level of the output at which the goods and assets markets are simultaneously in equilibrium.

The equation for the AD curve in general terms can be written as:

,

where Y is real GDP, M is the nominal money supply, P is the price level, G is real government spending, T is real taxes levied, and Z1 any other variables that affect aggregate demand.[11]

Aggregate supply curve

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The aggregate supply curve in the static AD–AS model illustrates the relationship between the supply of goods and services on the one hand and the price level on the other hand.[5]: 266  Under the premise that the price level is flexible in the long run, but sticky or even completely fixed under shorter time horizons, it is usual to distinguish between a long-run and a short-run aggregate supply curve. Whereas the long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is vertical, the short-run aggregate supply curve will have a positive slope[5]: 377  or, in the extreme case of a completely constant price level, be horizontal.[5]: 268 

The equation for the aggregate supply curve in general terms may be written as

,

where W is the nominal wage rate (exogenous due to stickiness in the short run), Pe is the anticipated (expected) price level, and Z2 is a vector of exogenous variables that can affect the position of the labor demand curve.

A horizontal aggregate supply curve (sometimes called a "Keynesian" aggregate supply curve) implies that the firm will supply whatever amount of goods is demanded at a particular price level. One possible justification for this is that when there is unemployment, firms can readily obtain as much labour as they want at that current wage, and production can increase without any additional costs (e.g. machines are idle which can simply be turned on). Firms' average costs of production therefore are assumed not to change as their output level changes.

The long-run aggregate supply curve refers not to a time frame in which the capital stock is free to be set optimally (as would be the terminology in the micro-economic theory of the firm), but rather to a time frame in which wages are free to adjust in order to equilibrate the labor market and in which price anticipations are accurate. A vertical long-run aggregate supply curve (sometimes called a "classical" aggregate supply curve) illustrates a situation where the level of output does not depend on the price level, but is exclusively determined by the supply of production factors like the capital and the labour force, employment being at its structural ("natural") level.[5]: 267 

Dynamic AD–AS model

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The modern or dynamic AD/AS model illustrates the connection between output and inflation, combining an IS relation (i.e., a relation describing aggregate demand as a function of various demand components, some of which are negatively related to the interest rate), a monetary policy rule determining the policy interest rate (which together form the AD curve) and a Phillips curve relationship from which the aggregate supply curve is derived.[3]: 263 [4]: 593–600 

Aggregate demand curve

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The AD curve slopes downward, illustrating a negative correlation between output and inflation. When the central bank observes increased inflation, it will raise its policy interest rate sufficiently to increase the real interest rate of the economy, dampening aggregate demand and consequently the overall activity level of the economy.[3]: 263 [5]: 411 

Aggregate supply curve

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The dynamic AS curve slopes upward, reflecting the mechanisms of the Phillips curve: Other things equal, higher levels of activity reflect higher increases in wages and other marginal costs of production, causing higher inflation through the firms' price-setting mechanisms[3]: 263 [5]: 409  as they induce firms to raise their prices at a higher rate.[4]: 594  There will be a vertical long-run aggregate supply curve at the level of structural (natural) output.[4]: 595 

Shifts of aggregate demand and aggregate supply

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The following summarizes the exogenous events that could shift the aggregate supply or aggregate demand curve to the right. Exogenous events happening in the opposite direction would shift the relevant curve in the opposite direction.

Shifts of aggregate demand

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The dynamic aggregate demand curve shifts when either fiscal policy or monetary policy is changed or any other kinds of shocks to aggregate demand occur.[5]: 411  Changes in the level of potential Y also shifts the AD curve, so that this type of shocks has an effect on both the supply and the demand side of the model.[5]: 412 

Rightward aggregate demand shifts can be caused by any shock to one of the autonomous components of aggregate demand, e.g.:

  • An exogenous increase in consumer spending
  • An exogenous increase in investment spending on physical capital
  • An exogenous increase in intended inventory investment
  • An exogenous increase in government spending on goods and services
  • An exogenous increase in transfer payments from the government to the people
  • An exogenous decrease in taxes levied
  • An exogenous increase in purchases of the country's exports by people in other countries
  • An exogenous decrease in imports from other countries

Shifts of aggregate supply

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The dynamic aggregate supply curve is drawn for a given value of inflation expectations and level of potential output. Changes in either of these variables as well as a number of possible supply shocks will shift the dynamic aggregate supply curve.[5]: 409 [12]

The long-run aggregate supply curve is affected by events that affect the potential output of the economy. These include the following shocks which would shift the long-run aggregate supply curve to the right:

  • An increase in population
  • An increase in the physical capital stock
  • Technological progress

Applications

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Functional finance theory

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AD-AS analysis are applied to Functional Finance Theory and/or MMT to study a relationship between inflation rate and economic growth rate. When a country's economy grows, the country needs deficit spending to maintain full employment without inflation. Inflation starts to occur when the interest rate of its government bond becomes larger than the growth rate, provided that the country maintains full employment. Also, when the country recovers from recession, it needs to increase government expenditure to achieve full employment. [13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Dutt, Amitava Krishna (1 June 2002). "Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply Analysis: A History". History of Political Economy. 34 (2): 321–364. doi:10.1215/00182702-34-2-321.
  2. ^ a b Romer, David (1 May 2000). "Keynesian Macroeconomics without the LM Curve". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 14 (2): 149–170. doi:10.1257/jep.14.2.149. ISSN 0895-3309. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e Romer, David (2019). Advanced macroeconomics (Fifth ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. pp. 262–264. ISBN 978-1-260-18521-8.
  4. ^ a b c d e Sørensen, Peter Birch; Whitta-Jacobsen, Hans Jørgen (2022). Introducing advanced macroeconomics: growth and business cycles (Third ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. vii. ISBN 978-0-19-885049-6. ...we apply and extend the modern AS-AD framework where the nominal variable is the rate of inflation rather than the price level, and where monetary policy is specified as a Taylor rule for the nominal interest rate. This set-up is gradually superseding the traditional IS-LM and AS-AD analysis and makes it easier to relate the model to real-world policy discussions.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Mankiw, Nicholas Gregory (2022). Macroeconomics (Eleventh, international ed.). New York, NY: Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning. ISBN 978-1-319-26390-4.
  6. ^ Davis, Leila E.; Gómez-Ramírez, Leopoldo (2 October 2022). "Teaching post-intermediate macroeconomics with a dynamic 3-equation model". The Journal of Economic Education. 53 (4): 348–367. doi:10.1080/00220485.2022.2111385. ISSN 0022-0485. S2CID 252249958. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  7. ^ de Araujo, Pedro; O’Sullivan, Roisin; Simpson, Nicole B. (January 2013). "What Should be Taught in Intermediate Macroeconomics?". The Journal of Economic Education. 44 (1): 74–90. doi:10.1080/00220485.2013.740399. ISSN 0022-0485. S2CID 17167083. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  8. ^ Courtoy, François; De Vroey, Michel; Turati, Riccardo. "What do we teach in Macroeconomics? Evidence of a Theoretical Divide" (PDF). sites.uclouvain.be. UCLouvain. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  9. ^ Blanchard, Olivier (2021). Macroeconomics (Eighth, global ed.). Harlow, England: Pearson. ISBN 978-0-134-89789-9.
  10. ^ Reed, Jacob (2016). "AP Macroeconomics Review: AS-AD Model". APEconReview.com. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  11. ^ Salter, Alexander W. "Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Keep It Simple, Stupid! | AIER". www.aier.org. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  12. ^ "The Great Recession: A Macroeconomic Earthquake | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis". www.minneapolisfed.org. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  13. ^ Tanaka, Y. (June 2023). "AD-AS Analysis from the Perspective of Functional Finance Theory and MMT". Folia Oeconomica Stetinensia. 23.

Further reading

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  • Blanchard, Olivier (2021). Macroeconomics (Eighth, global ed.). Harlow, England: Pearson. ISBN 978-0-134-89789-9.
  • Dutt, Amitava K.; Skott, Peter (1996). "Keynesian Theory and the Aggregate-Supply/Aggregate-Demand Framework: A Defense". Eastern Economic Journal. 22 (3): 313–331.
  • Dutt, Amitava K.; Skott, Peter (2006). "Keynesian Theory and the AD-AS Framework: A Reconsideration". In Chiarella, Carl; Franke, Reiner; Flaschel, Peter; Semmler, Willi (eds.). Quantitative and Empirical Analysis of Nonlinear Dynamic Macromodels. Contributions to Economic Analysis. Vol. 277. Emerald Group. pp. 149–172. doi:10.1016/S0573-8555(05)77006-1. ISBN 978-0-444-52122-4. S2CID 16009286.
  • Mankiw, Nicholas Gregory (2022). Macroeconomics (Eleventh, international ed.). New York, NY: Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning. ISBN 978-1-319-26390-4.
  • Palley, Thomas I. (1997). "Keynesian Theory and AS/AD Analysis". Eastern Economic Journal. 23 (4): 459–468. JSTOR 40325806.
  • Romer, David (2019). Advanced macroeconomics (Fifth ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-1-260-18521-8.
  • Sørensen, Peter Birch; Whitta-Jacobsen, Hans Jørgen (2022). Introducing advanced macroeconomics: growth and business cycles (Third ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-885049-6.
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