Приклади вживання Aggregate supply Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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Aggregate supply in the long run.
This is our long run aggregate supply.
Aggregate supply in the short-run.
Aggregate supply" and"aggregate demand.".
Now in the last video,we looked a little bit at the long run aggregate supply.
Then we will consider aggregate supply, aggregate demand and macroeconomic equilibrium.
Now let's thinkabout what our plausible justifications for an upward sloping aggregate supply curve.
This, in turn, would increase the aggregate supply of goods and services and general health of the economy.
Aggregate supply in a macroeconomic context and just regular supply in a microeconomic context.
If the number of supiliers were to go down, then the aggregate supply would go down at any given price point.
The Lucas aggregate supply function states that economic output is a function of money or price"surprise.".
We're going to think about aggregate demand and aggregate, I will rewrite the word, aggregate supply.
And the reason why I draw aggregate supply in the short-run as this curve that keeps getting steeper and steeper.
With that out of the way, let's think about what would happen if the aggregate supply curve were to shift to the left.
Let Z be the aggregate supply price of the output from employing N men, the relationship between Z and N being written Z= φ(N),which can be called the Aggregate Supply Function.
What I want to do in this videois study a situation where the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts to the left and that causes inflation.
Let Z be the aggregate supply price of the output from employing N men, the relationship between Z and N being written Z= φ(N),which can be called the Aggregate Supply Function.
The value of D at the point of the aggregate demand function,where is intersected by the aggregate supply function, will be called the effective demand' 25, p.
Let Z be the aggregate supply price of the output from employing N men, the relationship between Z and N being written Z= φ(N),which can be called the Aggregate Supply Function.
We did think a little about that when we thought about aggregate demand,but when we think about aggregate supply, we're just thinking about their capability to produce.
The equalization of aggregate demand and aggregate supply can be either performed by changing prices with constant quantities, or by changing quantities with constant prices, or by changing quantities and prices simultaneously;
The third theory of why… or the third justification because economists like to have this downward sloping curve so that they can justify,and we will see how aggregate supply and demand can cause business cycles, the third effect is essentially.
The assumtion that economistsoften make when we think about aggregate supply and aggregate demand is, in the long-run, real GDP actually does not depend on prices in the long-run; so, what you have is, regardless of what the price is, you're going to have the same real GDP.
The other theory that you will read about in economic textbooks, another theory or explanation orjustification why we would have an upward sloping aggregate supply curve in the short run is sometimes it's called the sticky wages theory.
Now what we're going to talk about in this video is aggregate supply in the short run and what we're going to see is for this model to work, for the aggregate demand-aggregate supply model to work,we have to assume an upward sloping aggregate supply curve in the short run.
We will see we need it to be upward sloping for this model to provide a basis of explanation for economic cycles and there's a couple of explanations or a couple of, you could really view them as theories,for why we can justify an upward sloping aggregate supply curve.
I'm going to plot aggregate supply on the same axis as we plotted aggregate demand, and we're going to focus on the long-run now, and then we're going to think about what actually might happen in the short-run while we are in fixed-price contracts, or we already have spent money on something, or we have already, in some ways, there are sticky things that can't adjust as quickly.
Thus, we can compare the two possible outcomes for the economy either in terms of output andthe price level(using the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply) or in terms of unemployment and inflation(using the Phillips curve).