ECON 101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 12: Aggregate Supply, Aggregate Demand, Government Spending

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30 Aug 2017
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Consumer spending: consumer wealth, household borrowing, consumer expectations, personal taxes. Investment spending: real interest rates, expected returns, expectations about future business conditions, technology, degree of excess capacity, business taxes. Government spending: government spending increases, aggregate demand increases (as long as interest rates and tax rates do not change, more transportation projects, government spending decreases, aggregate demand decreases, less military spending. Net export spending: national income abroad, exchange rates, dollar depreciation, dollar appreciation. Aggregate supply: total real output produced at each price level, relationship depends on time horizon, immediate short run, short run, long run. Changes is aggregate supply: determinants of aggregate supply, shift factors, collectively position the as curve, changes raise or lower per-unit production costs. Input prices: domestic resource prices labor capital land, prices of imported resources imported oil exchanged rates. Decreases in ad: recession: prices are downwardly inflexible. Stimulus and the great recession: housing collapse triggers bank failures which leads to recession, federeal reserve intervenes.

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