ECON 1110 Chapter Notes - Chapter 25: Output Gap, Potential Output, Aggregate Demand

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When studying long-run trends in gdp, economists focus on the change in potential output. When studying short-run fluctuations, economists focus on the change in output gap. Any change in gdp can be decomposed conceptually into a change in factor supply, a change in factor utilization, and a change in productivity. Changes in the economy"s supply of labour and capital occur gradually, but over periods of many years their growth is considerable. Changes in factor supply are important for explaining long-run changes in output but relatively unimportant for explaining short-run changes. The economy"s level of productivity grows only gradually from year to year but increases substantially over periods of many years. Productivity growth is very important for explaining long-run changes in output and living standards but less important for explaining short-run changes. The factor utilization rate fluctuates in response to aggregate demand and aggregate supply shocks.

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