ECON 2010 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Keynesian Cross, Real Interest Rate, Aggregate Demand

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Keynesian model of demand: firms meet demand at preset prices: they produce just enough to satisfy consumers at that price. 4 expenditure components: consumption, investment, government purchases, net exports. 2 types of spending: planned spending: total planned spending on final goods and services, actual spending: what is actually spent. In the short run where prices are preset firms produce an amount equal to aggregate expenditure. Multiplier effect: the effect of a one unit increase in autonomous expenditure on short run equilibrium. Recessionary gap: output less than potential output: leads to unemployment. Expansionary gap: output greater than potential output: leads to increased inflation. Keynesian cross: short run equilibrium output, expenditure line intersects with the equilibrium condition (y=pae) Aggregate demand: how much someone wants to purchase at each inflation rate, prices are not fixed. Aggregate supply: how much someone wants to supply at each inflation rate, prices are not fixed.

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