Economics HL
Economics HL
4
Chapters
117
Notes
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unlocking National Income Stats: What They Reveal About Economies
GNI vs. GDP: Which Better Measures Economic Well-Being?
Understanding Aggregate Demand Beyond GDP
Understanding Aggregate Supply Monetarist Vs. Keynesian Views
Understanding Equilibrium Monetarist Vs Keynesian Models Explained
Understanding Macroeconomic Equilibrium: A Deep Dive
Economic Growth Blessing or Curse for Living Standards
Understanding Unemployment Myths, Measurements, and Meaning
Deflation Demystified: Why Lower Prices Aren't Always Better!
Understanding Inflation Insights & Implications For Economies
Understanding Equality Vs. Equity In Income Distribution
Understanding Economic Inequality Income vs. Wealth
Unveiling Income Inequality The Power of Lorenz Curve & Gini Coefficient
Understanding 2018's Lorenz Curve Income Quintile Insights
Understanding Poverty Absolute Vs. Relative Explained
Understanding Poverty Beyond Just Income Measures
Understanding Globalization, Technology, and Income Inequality Impact
Understanding Taxes From Direct To VAT Explained!
Understanding Tax Rates ATR vs MTR Explained
Unlocking Equity: How Taxation Curbs Income Inequalities
Strategies To Combat Poverty Beyond Traditional Taxation
Unraveling Money From Basics To Banking & Policy Mechanics
Understanding The Demand For Money: A Deep Dive
Central Bank's Tools Steering Money Supply & Interest Rates
Impact of Contractionary Monetary Policy on Aggregate Demand
Monetary Policy Key Strengths and Limitations Explained
Mastering Fiscal Policy How Government Spending Influences Economy
Unlocking The Power Of The Keynesian Multiplier
Unveiling Fiscal Policy: Key Advantages & Notable Disadvantages
Unlocking Economic Growth: The Power of Supply-Side Policies
Boosting Growth: The Power of Supply-Side Policies
Unveiling Supply-Side Policies: Market-Based Vs. Interventionist Insights
Unlocking Macroeconomic Objectives: Tools & Tactics for Policymakers
Mastering Price Stability: Fiscal vs. Monetary Policies
Effective Policies To Counter Different Types Of Unemployment
Macroeconomic Dilemma: Unemployment Vs. Inflation
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
IB Resources
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 3 - Macroeconomics

Understanding Equilibrium Monetarist Vs Keynesian Models Explained

Word Count Emoji
626 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Aggregate supply- a party overview 🎉

Imagine the economy is a giant pizza party. Aggregate supply is like the number of pizzas that can be cooked and served at different costs. Let's dive into this pizza-themed party and explore different schools of economic thought!

Monetarist new classical school 🍕

Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS): The Early Party Hours

In the short run, the number of pizzas we can serve depends on ingredients' costs (like cheese and pepperoni) and workers' wages. Here's how it goes:

  • Money Wages: Think of money wages as how many slices of pizza a chef gets paid. If a chef gets paid 60 slices but then the cost of ingredients doubles, the real wage is cut in half, and the chef can only afford 30 slices! This is the real wage.

  • Why It Matters: If the cost of ingredients rises but chefs' wages stay the same, the chefs are "cheaper" for the pizza place, and they make more pizzas. If the cost of ingredients drops, chefs become "pricier," and they make fewer pizzas. The SRAS curve slopes upwards!

  • What Can Change SRAS

    • Money Wages Change: If chefs demand more pizza slices as wages, it costs more to make a pizza. SRAS decreases (left shift).
    • Energy Prices Change: Think of the oven's gas price! Higher price means fewer pizzas, and vice versa.
    • Taxes or Subsidies Change: If the government adds a "pepperoni tax," costs rise, and fewer pizzas are made. If they give a "cheese subsidy," more pizzas are made!

Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS): The Late Party Hours

In the long run, everything adjusts, including wages. The chefs demand more slices as wages if ingredient prices rise, so there's no change in the number of pizzas made. It's a straight line!

  • Why It's Vertical: The LRAS is a wall. You've reached the full pizza-making capacity!
  • What Can Change LRAS
    • More Chefs (Labour): More chefs mean more pizzas!
    • Better Ovens (Technology): Faster ovens mean more pizzas!
    • More Efficient Cooking (Efficiency): Better cooking methods mean more pizzas!
    • Easier Pizza Laws (Institutional Changes): Less red tape means more pizzas!

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IB Resources
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 3 - Macroeconomics

Understanding Equilibrium Monetarist Vs Keynesian Models Explained

Word Count Emoji
626 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Aggregate supply- a party overview 🎉

Imagine the economy is a giant pizza party. Aggregate supply is like the number of pizzas that can be cooked and served at different costs. Let's dive into this pizza-themed party and explore different schools of economic thought!

Monetarist new classical school 🍕

Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS): The Early Party Hours

In the short run, the number of pizzas we can serve depends on ingredients' costs (like cheese and pepperoni) and workers' wages. Here's how it goes:

  • Money Wages: Think of money wages as how many slices of pizza a chef gets paid. If a chef gets paid 60 slices but then the cost of ingredients doubles, the real wage is cut in half, and the chef can only afford 30 slices! This is the real wage.

  • Why It Matters: If the cost of ingredients rises but chefs' wages stay the same, the chefs are "cheaper" for the pizza place, and they make more pizzas. If the cost of ingredients drops, chefs become "pricier," and they make fewer pizzas. The SRAS curve slopes upwards!

  • What Can Change SRAS

    • Money Wages Change: If chefs demand more pizza slices as wages, it costs more to make a pizza. SRAS decreases (left shift).
    • Energy Prices Change: Think of the oven's gas price! Higher price means fewer pizzas, and vice versa.
    • Taxes or Subsidies Change: If the government adds a "pepperoni tax," costs rise, and fewer pizzas are made. If they give a "cheese subsidy," more pizzas are made!

Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS): The Late Party Hours

In the long run, everything adjusts, including wages. The chefs demand more slices as wages if ingredient prices rise, so there's no change in the number of pizzas made. It's a straight line!

  • Why It's Vertical: The LRAS is a wall. You've reached the full pizza-making capacity!
  • What Can Change LRAS
    • More Chefs (Labour): More chefs mean more pizzas!
    • Better Ovens (Technology): Faster ovens mean more pizzas!
    • More Efficient Cooking (Efficiency): Better cooking methods mean more pizzas!
    • Easier Pizza Laws (Institutional Changes): Less red tape means more pizzas!

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟

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