Macroeconomics activity and demand/adassimulation
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Further reading
Now read Chapter 7: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply from Principles of Macroeconomics. This reading will provide you with the details and examples needed to master aggregate demand and aggregate supply.
Simulation
Now you get to have a try: go to Javier Carrillo's "Interactive Graph of the Aggregate Supply and Demand Model" and follow the instructions for this simulation to explore how Aggregate Demand (AD) and Aggregate Supply (AS) interact in theory and in reality. The demonstration provides you with three real world economic issues:
- The 1973 Oil Crisis: The price of oil quadrupled after OPEC countries, in a show of strength, drastically reduced production.
- The "New Economy" of the 1990s: A time of optimism and as Alan Greenburg famously said, “irrational exuberance."
- Deflation in Japan: Deflation is just a damaging as inflation, and this case study explores that phenomena.
- To complete each case, try to find the "right" answer (appropriate AD and AS policies (expansionary or contractory) BUT also explore how other options would impact our economy. As you will learn from the various options in the cases, we didn’t always get it right the first time!
- During the Great Depression, the government, in good faith, unknowingly applied the very opposite policies of those which were needed and exacerbated the depression, pushing us into the Great Depression. It was only after Keynes wrote his seminal work in 1936 that we started to develop the tools needed to prevent another Great Depression. We are still perfecting those tools. It worth noting that "deflation" is a relatively new phenomena, and Japan’s struggle with it (ongoing since 1997) continues.
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