Chapter 13.1 Using the AD-AS Model
The position of the SRAS curve depends on:
expected rate of inflation
A decrease in the growth rate of the money supply causes a short-run departure from the long-run equilibrium because:
prices and wages are sticky
The AD curve is:
the combination of inflation rates and real growth rates that add up to a constant amount.
If the AD curve shifts to the left as a result of a decrease in the money supply growth rate:
the economy will temporarily depart from its long-run growth rate
The vertical axis in the AD-AS model shows:
the economy's inflation rate (π)
The horizontal axis in the AD-AS model shows:
the economy's real GDP growth rate
The AD curve will shift when there is a change in:
the money growth rate or the velocity growth rate
The combination of inflation and real growth shown by the AD curve give:
the same level of nominal GDP growth
The economy's normal, long-run growth rate is shown in the AD-AS model as:
the vertical LRAS curve
Economic models like the AD-AS model tell us:
what to expect if we know what is happening
