ECON103 Chapter Notes - Chapter ECON103: Exchange Rate, Aggregate Demand, Money Supply

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2 May 2018
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The Aggregate-Demand Curve
Why the Aggregate-Demand Curve Slopes Downward
o The Wealth Effect: A lower price level increases real wealth, which stimulates
spending on consumption.
o The Interest-Rate Effect: A lower price level reduces the interest rate, which stimulates
spending on investment.
o The Exchange-Rate Effect: A lower price level causes the real exchange rate to
depreciate, which stimulates spending on net exports.
Why the Aggregate-Demand Curve Might Shift
o Shifts Arising from Changes in Consumption: An event that makes consumers spend
more at a given price level (a tax cut, a stock-market boom) shifts the aggregate-
demand curve to the right. An event that makes consumers spend less at a given price
level (a tax hike, a stock market decline) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the left.
o Shifts Arising from Changes in Investment: An event that makes firms invest more at
a given price level (optimism about the future, a fall in interest rates due to an increase
in the money supply) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the right. An event that
makes firms invest less at a given price level (pessimism about the future, a rise in
interest rates due to a decrease in the money supply) shifts the aggregate-demand
curve to the left.
o Shifts Arising from Changes in Government Purchases: An increase in government
purchases of goods and services (greater spending on defense or highway
construction) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the right. A decrease in
government purchases on goods and services (a cutback in defense or highway
spending) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the left.
o Shifts Arising from Changes in Net Exports: An event that raises spending on net
exports at a
given price level (a boom overseas, speculation that causes an exchange-rate
depreciation) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the right. An event that reduces
spending on net exports at a given price level (a recession overseas, speculation that
causes an exchange-rate appreciation) shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the left.
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