ECN 204 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Aggregate Supply, Aggregate Demand, Government Spending

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Aggregate demand is a schedule or curve that shows the amounts of real output (real gdp) that domestic and foreign buyers desire to purchase at each possible price level. Figure 10-1: inverse relationship between the price level and domestic output. Slopes downward because of the following effects of a change in price level: Real balances effect: when p falls, the purchasing power of existing financial balances rises which can increase spending. Interest rate effect: a decline in p means lower interest rates which can increase spending. Foreign trade effect: when p falls, domestic prices will fall relative to foreign prices. This will tend to increase spending on domestic exports and decrease imports. Government spending increases, aggregate demand increases (as long as interest rates and tax rates do not change) Changes in net export spending (unrelated to the price level) Dollar depreciation: encourages domestic exports; discourages imports.

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