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    Current Subject
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    Principles of Macroeconomics
    ECON1116
    Progress0 / 31 topics
    Topics
    1. Introduction: Economics, Micro-economics, Macro-economics2. The Miracle of Modern Economic Growth3. Measuring Domestic Output: Gross Domestic Product4. The Expenditure Approach to GDP5. The Income Approach to GDP6. Other National Accounts7. Nominal GDP versus Real GDP8. Shortcomings of GDP Measurement9. Economic Growth: Modern economic growth10. Determinants of Economic Growth11. Production Possibility Analysis12. Business Cycles: Phases and characteristics13. Measurement of Unemployment14. Types of Unemployment15. Inflation: Meaning and measurement16. Facts about Inflation17. Basic Macroeconomic Relationships: Income-consumption-saving18. The Interest Rate-Investment Relationship19. The Multiplier Effect20. The Aggregate Expenditures Model: Assumptions21. Consumption and Investment Schedules22. Changes in Equilibrium GDP and the Multiplier23. Adding the Public Sector to the Model24. Equilibrium versus Full Employment GDP25. Recessionary and Inflationary Expenditure Gaps26. Aggregate Demand and Supply: Concepts27. Changes in Aggregate Demand28. Aggregate Supply and its Changes29. The Diamond-Water Paradox30. Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium31. Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy
    ECON1116›Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium
    Principles of MacroeconomicsTopic 30 of 31

    Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium

    3 minread
    499words
    Beginnerlevel

    ⚖️ Equilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium

    (in the context of Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply in Macroeconomics)


    🧠 1. What is Macroeconomic Equilibrium?

    In macroeconomics, equilibrium occurs when Aggregate Demand (AD) equals Aggregate Supply (AS).

    ✅ Definition:

    Macroeconomic equilibrium is the point where the total quantity of goods and services demanded equals the total quantity of goods and services supplied in the economy at a particular price level.

    It determines:

    • The equilibrium price level (overall price level in the economy)
    • The equilibrium real GDP (actual output or national income)

    🪙 Graphical Representation

    • Vertical axis: Price level
    • Horizontal axis: Real GDP (output)
    • AD curve: Downward sloping (as price level ↓, demand ↑)
    • SRAS curve: Upward sloping (as price level ↑, supply ↑)

    The point where AD intersects SRAS is the short-run equilibrium.


    📈 2. Short-Run vs Long-Run Equilibrium

    🔹 Short-Run Equilibrium

    • Occurs where AD intersects SRAS.
    • The economy may not be at full employment.
    • Can result in recessionary gap or inflationary gap.

    🔹 Long-Run Equilibrium

    • Occurs where AD = SRAS = LRAS.
    • The economy is producing at full employment output (potential GDP).
    • No output gap (unemployment is at the natural rate).

    🔁 3. Changes in Equilibrium

    When AD or AS shifts, the equilibrium output and price level also change.


    🟢 A. Change in Aggregate Demand (AD)

    ✅ AD Increases (shifts right):

    • Equilibrium price level rises (inflation)
    • Equilibrium real GDP increases
    • Unemployment ↓
    • Risk of demand-pull inflation

    ❌ AD Decreases (shifts left):

    • Equilibrium price level falls
    • Equilibrium real GDP falls
    • Unemployment ↑
    • Risk of recession

    🔵 B. Change in Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS)

    ✅ SRAS Increases (shifts right):

    • Price level falls
    • Real GDP rises
    • Unemployment ↓
    • Usually due to improved productivity or lower input costs

    ❌ SRAS Decreases (shifts left):

    • Price level rises (cost-push inflation)
    • Real GDP falls
    • Unemployment ↑
    • Often caused by negative supply shocks (e.g., oil price spike)

    🟡 C. Change in Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS)

    ✅ LRAS Increases (shifts right):

    • Economic growth
    • Higher potential GDP
    • Long-run output increases without increasing inflation

    ❌ LRAS Decreases (shifts left):

    • Decline in productive capacity
    • May be caused by war, natural disasters, or loss of labor force

    📊 Summary Table

    Change Price Level Output (Real GDP) Unemployment
    ↑ AD ↑ ↑ ↓
    ↓ AD ↓ ↓ ↑
    ↑ SRAS ↓ ↑ ↓
    ↓ SRAS ↑ ↓ ↑
    ↑ LRAS No change (long-run) ↑ ↓ (in long term)

    💡 Real-World Example

    🦠 COVID-19 Pandemic (2020):

    • AD dropped sharply due to lockdowns and fear → ↓ GDP, ↑ unemployment
    • Governments increased spending and central banks lowered interest rates to boost AD → equilibrium slowly restored

    🛢️ Oil Price Shock (1970s):

    • SRAS decreased due to higher input costs → stagflation (↓ GDP, ↑ inflation, ↑ unemployment)

    ✅ Key Takeaways

    • Equilibrium occurs where AD = AS.
    • Changes in AD or AS shift the equilibrium output and price level.
    • Short-run equilibrium may differ from full employment.
    • Policy tools (fiscal and monetary) aim to restore or maintain equilibrium.

    Previous topic 29
    The Diamond-Water Paradox
    Next topic 31
    Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy

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      Word count499
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      DifficultyBeginner