Fluctuations in Aggregate Demand and Supply

Fluctuations in Aggregate Demand and Supply

Economists believe that business cycles and fluctuations in GDP levels result from a shift in the aggregate demand or supply curve.

The Business Cycle

The business cycle (economic expansions and contractions) is mainly caused by changes in the short-run value of GDP. During expansion periods, real GDP increases, resulting in a lower unemployment rate and higher capacity utilization (the extent to which an enterprise or a nation uses its installed productive capacity).

During contractions, the value of real GDP decreases, resulting in higher unemployment, hence reducing capacity utilization. Cyclical changes in real GDP and price levels are caused by fluctuations in the aggregate demand and supply in the ways discussed below.

Recessionary Gap

A reduction in aggregate demand causes a leftward shift in the aggregate demand curve. This reduction lowers the GDP and price levels. This leads to economic contractions, making demand fall below the economy’s potential GDP, thereby causing a recession. Real GDP then falls, and so does the aggregate price level. Due to a reduction in demand and price levels, businesses cut their workforce, increasing the unemployment rate.

A recessionary gap occurs if the aggregate demand curve intersects the SRAS curve at a short-run equilibrium level below potential GDP. Due to a decrease in aggregate demand, the economy goes into recession and suffers decline of corporate profits, commodity prices, interest rates, and the demand for credit.

Look at the graph below. When the aggregate demand (AD) decreases, the equilibrium moves from point A to point B; the real GDP drops from Y2 to Y1 and prices from P1 to P2. The recession is measured between Y1 and Y2, which is the amount by which the real GDP is below GDP.

recessionary-gap

Inflationary Gap

Increase of aggregate demand leads to higher employment and the economic expansion of real GDP. If the economic expansion takes the economy ahead of its production capacity, it will lead to inflation. Increased government spending, a decline in taxes, and an increase in money supply will shift the aggregate demand curve to the right. When the aggregate supply does not adjust to the increase in aggregate demand, there will be an increase in price levels and a rise in real output.

Study the graph below. When AD increases, the equilibrium shifts from A to B, real output increases from YF to Y1, and the prices rise from P1 to P2. The increase in price increases demand, thereby increasing workforce and production. The unemployment rate, therefore, declines. Upon attainment of the potential GDP, firms are required to pay higher wages and other input costs to further widen production power. Therefore, the economy faces the inflationary gap that emanates from the difference between YF and Y1. Thus, the inflationary gap occurs when the short-run level of the economy is above the potential GDP, which results in upward pressure on prices.

inflationary-gap

Due to the increase in aggregate demand, corporate profits, commodity prices, interest rates, and inflationary pressures rise.

Stagflation

A steady decline in aggregate supply results in stagflation. In economic theory, stagflation is a situation in which the inflation rate is high, the economic growth rate is slow, and unemployment remains steadily high. This, in fact, is what constitutes the “perfect storm” of economic bad news.

Study the graph below. When the aggregate supply declines, the equilibrium level of the GDP shifts from A to B. The GDP falls from Y1 to Y2, and prices rise from P1 to P2. Over time, the reduced output and employment exert downward pressure on wages and input prices, resulting in a shift of the SRAS curve to the right and back to full employment at point A.

stagflation

Stagflation leads to slow economic growth and is very expensive and difficult to address.

Question

Among the following phenomena, which one is least likely caused by a shift in aggregate demand?

A. Stagflation.

B. A recession gap.

C. An inflationary gap.

Solution

The correct answer is A.

Stagflation happens during a decline in output and an increase in price. This is mainly due to a decline in aggregate supply, not aggregate demand.

Shop CFA® Exam Prep

Offered by AnalystPrep

Featured Shop FRM® Exam Prep Learn with Us

    Subscribe to our newsletter and keep up with the latest and greatest tips for success
    Shop Actuarial Exams Prep Shop Graduate Admission Exam Prep


    Sergio Torrico
    Sergio Torrico
    2021-07-23
    Excelente para el FRM 2 Escribo esta revisión en español para los hispanohablantes, soy de Bolivia, y utilicé AnalystPrep para dudas y consultas sobre mi preparación para el FRM nivel 2 (lo tomé una sola vez y aprobé muy bien), siempre tuve un soporte claro, directo y rápido, el material sale rápido cuando hay cambios en el temario de GARP, y los ejercicios y exámenes son muy útiles para practicar.
    diana
    diana
    2021-07-17
    So helpful. I have been using the videos to prepare for the CFA Level II exam. The videos signpost the reading contents, explain the concepts and provide additional context for specific concepts. The fun light-hearted analogies are also a welcome break to some very dry content. I usually watch the videos before going into more in-depth reading and they are a good way to avoid being overwhelmed by the sheer volume of content when you look at the readings.
    Kriti Dhawan
    Kriti Dhawan
    2021-07-16
    A great curriculum provider. James sir explains the concept so well that rather than memorising it, you tend to intuitively understand and absorb them. Thank you ! Grateful I saw this at the right time for my CFA prep.
    nikhil kumar
    nikhil kumar
    2021-06-28
    Very well explained and gives a great insight about topics in a very short time. Glad to have found Professor Forjan's lectures.
    Marwan
    Marwan
    2021-06-22
    Great support throughout the course by the team, did not feel neglected
    Benjamin anonymous
    Benjamin anonymous
    2021-05-10
    I loved using AnalystPrep for FRM. QBank is huge, videos are great. Would recommend to a friend
    Daniel Glyn
    Daniel Glyn
    2021-03-24
    I have finished my FRM1 thanks to AnalystPrep. And now using AnalystPrep for my FRM2 preparation. Professor Forjan is brilliant. He gives such good explanations and analogies. And more than anything makes learning fun. A big thank you to Analystprep and Professor Forjan. 5 stars all the way!
    michael walshe
    michael walshe
    2021-03-18
    Professor James' videos are excellent for understanding the underlying theories behind financial engineering / financial analysis. The AnalystPrep videos were better than any of the others that I searched through on YouTube for providing a clear explanation of some concepts, such as Portfolio theory, CAPM, and Arbitrage Pricing theory. Watching these cleared up many of the unclarities I had in my head. Highly recommended.