ECON 1115 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Aggregate Supply, Potential Output, Aggregate Demand

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Econ 1115 lecture 18 revision of aggregate concepts. Mostly aggregate supply demand examples were discussed in the class. We need to clearly understand the difference between sas and las. Long-run aggregate supply: the long-run aggregate supply (las) represents the relationship between the price level and output in the long-run. The las curve is vertical because it shows potential output and when this happens all prices, even input prices, rise when a rise in price level occurs. A typical short-run aggregate supply curve, labelled sas or sras, is presented in this graph. Consider a few highlights: first, note that the price level is measured on the vertical axis and real production is measured on the horizontal axis. The price level is usually measured by the gdp price deflator and real production is measured by real gdp: second, note that the short-run aggregate supply curve, labelled sras, has a positive slope.

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