Chapter 9
AGGREGATE SUPPLY
                              AND MACROECONOMIC
                              EQUILIBRIUM
Ifeanyi Uzoka, Sheridan College
                                  Copyright © 2020 Nelson Education Ltd.
Chapter 9 Preview
9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   The section will answer the following key questions:
    ◦ What is the aggregate supply curve?
    ◦ Why is the short-run aggregate supply curve positively
     sloped?
    ◦ Why is the long-run aggregate supply curve vertical at
     the natural rate of output?
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   What is the aggregate supply curve?
    ◦ Aggregate supply (AS) curve is a graphical
     representation that shows the positive relationship
     between the price level and RGDP supplied.
    ◦ There are two aggregate supply curves:
      Short-run aggregate supply curve (SRAS), and
      Long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS)
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   What is the aggregate supply curve? [cont’d]
    ◦ Short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curve is the
     graphical relationship between RGDP and the price level
     when output prices can change but input prices are
     unable to adjust.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   What is the aggregate supply curve? [cont’d]
    ◦ Long-run aggregate supply curve (LRAS) is the
     graphical relationship between RGDP and the price level
     at which output prices and input prices can fully adjust
     to economic changes.
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9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
Exhibit 1: The Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
◦ SRAS is upward sloping
◦ Suppliers are willing to
  supply more RGDP at
  higher price levels and
  less at lower price
  levels, ceteris paribus.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Why is the short-run aggregate supply curve
    positively sloped?
    ◦ Two reasons producers are willing to supply more output
     when the price level increases:
      the profit effect, and
      the misperception effect.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Short-run profit effect:
    ◦ Input costs are slow to adjust due to long-term contracts.
    ◦ When price level rises, producers are able to increase
     output prices relative to cost.
    ◦ This increases producers’ short-run profit margins, making
     it profitable to expand production and sales at higher price
     levels.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   The Misperception effect:
    ◦ Producers can be fooled into thinking the relative price
     of their product has increased, so they supply more
     based on the short-run misperception of relative prices.
    ◦ However, it may simply be that the general price level
     has increased.
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9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
Exhibit 2a: The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
o   An economy’s stock of
    resources and level of
    technology define the
    position of its production
    possibilities curve (PPC),
    as illustrated in part (a).
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Why is the long-run aggregate supply curve vertical at
    the natural rate of output?
    ◦ In the long-run:
      the level of RGDP that producers are willing to supply is not
       affected by changes in the price level.
      firms will always produce at the maximum level allowed by
       their resources, regardless of the price level.
    ◦ Therefore, the LRAS curve is vertical.
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9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
Exhibit 2b: The Long-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
o   The position of the LRAS curve
    is determined by the natural
    rate of output, RGDPNR, which
    reflects the levels of capital,
    land, labour, and technology in
    the economy.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check
    ◦ The aggregate supply curve is the relationship between the
     overall price level and the total quantity of final goods and
     services that suppliers are able and willing to produce.
    ◦ The short-run aggregate supply curve measures how much
     RGDP suppliers are willing to produce at different price
     levels when input prices are unable to adjust.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ For this reason, producers can make a profit by
     expanding production when the price level rises.
    ◦ Producers may be fooled into thinking that the
     relative price of the item they produce is rising, so
     they increase production.
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    9.1 The Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ In the long run, the aggregate supply curve is vertical.
    ◦ In the long run, input prices change proportionally with
     output prices.
    ◦ The position of the LRAS curve is determined by the level
     of capital, land, labour, and technology at the natural rate
     of output, RGDPNR.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   This section will answer the following key questions:
    ◦ What factors of production affect the short-run and the
     long-run aggregate supply curves?
    ◦ What factors exclusively shift the short-run aggregate
     supply curve?
    ◦ Can we review the determinants that change aggregate
     supply?
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   What factors of production affect the short-run
    and long-run aggregate supply curves?
    ◦ Any change in the quantity of any factor of production
     (capital, land, labour, or technology) can shift both the
     long-run and short-run aggregate supply curves.
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 9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
 Exhibit 1: Shifts in Both Short-Run and Long-Run
 Aggregate Supply
◦ Increases in any of the factors
 of production (capital, land,
 labour, or entrepreneurship)
 can shift both the LRAS and
 SRAS curves to the right.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How capital affects aggregate supply
    ◦ Changes in the stock of capital will alter the amount of
     goods and services the economy can produce.
    ◦ Investment in capital improves the quantity and quality
     of capital stock and lowers the cost of production in the
     short run.
    ◦ Allows output to be permanently greater than before.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How capital affects aggregate supply [cont’d]
    ◦ Changes in human capital can also alter the AS curve.
    ◦ Investment in education or on-the-job training causes
     productivity to rise.
    ◦ Shifts both SRAS and LRAS to the right.
      More skilled workforce lowers cost and shifts SRAS.
      LRAS shifts rightwards because greater output is
      achieved on a permanent/sustainable basis.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How Land Affects Aggregate Supply
    ◦ Land includes all natural resources.
    ◦ Increase in available natural resources will lower
     production costs and expand output.
    ◦ This will shift both SRAS and LRAS rightwards.
    ◦ Decrease in natural resources reduces output.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How Labour Force Affects Aggregate Supply.
    ◦ Increases in labour force tend to depress wages and
     increase short-run aggregate supply.
    ◦ An expanded labour force also increases the economy’s
     potential output, which increases the long-run aggregate
     supply.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How Technology and Entrepreneurship Affect
    Aggregate Supply.
    ◦ Innovative technology leads to cost savings and expanded
     output possibilities.
    ◦ Shifts both SRAS and LRAS to the right.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   What factors of production affect the short-run and
    long-run aggregate supply curves? [cont’d]
    ◦ Government Regulations:
    ◦ A reduction in government regulations lowers the costs
     of production.
    ◦ Potential real output expands, causing both the SRAS
     and LRAS curves to shift to the right.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   What factors of production affect the short-run and
    long-run aggregate supply curves? [cont’d]
    ◦ Some factors shift SRAS but do not impact the LRAS:
       Wages and other input prices
       Productivity
       Unexpected supply shocks
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  9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
  Exhibit 2: Shifts in SRAS but Not LRAS
◦ A change in input prices that
 does not reflect a permanent
 change in the supply of those
 inputs will shift the SRAS
 curve but not the LRAS curve.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How wages and other input prices shift the SRAS curve
    ◦ Supply and demand in factor markets cause input prices
     to change.
    ◦ Change in input price will affect only SRAS if they don’t
     reflect permanent changes in the supplies of some factors
     of production.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How wages and other input prices shift the SRAS curve
    [cont’d]
    ◦ For example, a wage hike without a corresponding increase
     in productivity will make production more costly.
    ◦ SRAS shifts left.
    ◦ With the same supply of labour as before, potential output
     (LRAS) does not change.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How temporary supply shocks shift the SRAS curve
    ◦ Unexpected temporary events can either increase or
     decrease aggregate supply.
    ◦ Negative supply shocks can increase production costs and
     shift SRAS to the left.
    ◦ Positive supply shocks (e.g., favourable weather) can
     reduce production costs and shift SRAS to the right.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   How temporary supply shocks shift the SRAS curve
    [cont’d]
    ◦ Once the temporary effects have been felt, no real change
     in the economy’s productive capacity has occurred.
    ◦ As a result, the long-run aggregate supply curve does not
     shift.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   Exhibit 3: Factors That Shift Either the SRAS Curve, the
    LRAS Curve, or Both
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   Exhibit 3: Factors That Shift Either the SRAS Curve, the
    LRAS Curve, or Both
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check
    ◦ Any increase in the quantity of any of the available factors
     of production (capital, land, labour, or entrepreneurship)
     will cause both the long-run and short-run aggregate
     supply curves to shift to the right.
    ◦ A decrease in any of these factors will shift both of the
     aggregate supply curves to the left.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ Changes in wages and other input prices, productivity,
     and temporary supply shocks shift the short-run
     aggregate supply curve but do not affect the long-run
     aggregate supply curve.
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    9.2 Shifts in the Aggregate Supply Curve
   Section Check
    [cont’d]
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   This section will answer the following key questions:
    ◦ How is macroeconomic equilibrium determined?
    ◦ What are recessionary and inflationary gaps?
    ◦ How can the economy self-correct to a recessionary gap?
    ◦ How can the economy self-correct to an inflationary gap?
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How is Macroeconomic Equilibrium Determined?
    ◦ The short-run equilibrium levels of real output and price
      are shown by the intersection of the AD and SRAS curves.
    ◦ When this equilibrium occurs at the potential output level,
      the economy is operating at full employment on the LRAS.
    ◦ Only at this point is the economy in a long-run equilibrium.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
    Exhibit 1: Long-Run Macroeconomic Equilibrium
◦   Long-run macroeconomic
    equilibrium occurs at the
    level where the SRAS
    and Aggregate Demand
    curves intersect at a
    point on the LRAS curve.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How is macroeconomic equilibrium determined?
    ◦ Short-run equilibrium can change when the AD or SRAS
     curve shifts right or left.
    ◦ the long-run equilibrium level of RGDP only changes when
     the LRAS curve shifts.
    ◦ Shocks: Unexpected changes to aggregate supply or
     aggregate demand.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Exhibit 2: Actual and Potential RGDP, Canada 1981–2017
o Point A: Economic Boom
    Actual RGDP > Potential RGDP
o Point B: Recession
    Actual RGDP < Potential RGDP
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   What are recessionary and inflationary gaps?
    ◦ Equilibrium can occur at less than the potential output of
      the economy.
    ◦ Recessionary gap: An output gap that occurs when the
      actual output is less than the potential output.
    ◦ AD is insufficient to fully employ all of society’s resources.
    ◦ Unemployment is above the natural rate.
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 9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
 Exhibit 3a: Recessionary Gap
◦ The economy is currently in
  short-run equilibrium at ESR.
◦ At this point, RGDP0 is less than
  RGDPNR; that is, the economy is
  producing less than its potential
  output and the economy is in a
  recessionary gap.
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  9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
  Exhibit 3b: Long-Run Equilibrium
◦ The economy is producing its
 potential output at RGDPNR.
◦ At this point, the economy is in
 long-run equilibrium and is not
 experiencing an inflationary or
 recessionary gap.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   What are recessionary and inflationary gaps? [cont’d]
    ◦ Inflationary gap: An output gap that occurs when the
     actual output is greater than the potential output.
    ◦ AD is so high that the economy is temporarily operating
     beyond full capacity.
    ◦ Leads to inflationary pressure.
    ◦ Unemployment is below the natural rate.
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 9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
 Exhibit 3c: Inflationary Gap
◦ The economy is currently in
 short-run equilibrium at ESR.
◦ The economy is temporarily
 producing more than its
 potential output and we have
 an inflationary gap.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   What are recessionary and inflationary gaps? [cont’d]
    ◦ Demand-pull inflation: A price level increase due to an
     increase in aggregate demand.
      Causes an increase in the price level and an increase in real
      output.
      Leads to an expansionary gap in the short run; unsustainable
      in the long run.
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9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Exhibit 4: Demand-Pull Inflation
◦ Demand-pull inflation
 occurs when the aggregate
 demand curve shifts to the
 right along the short-run
 aggregate supply curve.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   What are recessionary and inflationary gaps? [cont’d]
    ◦ Cost-push inflation: A price level increase due to a
     negative supply shock or increased input prices.
    ◦ Stagflation: Lower growth and higher prices occurring
     together.
      Can be caused by a leftward shift in SRAS resulting from
      supply shock.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
    Exhibit 5: Cost-Push Inflation
◦   Cost-push inflation is
    caused by a leftward
    shift in the short-run
    aggregate supply curve,
    from SRAS0 to SRAS1.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   What are recessionary and inflationary gaps? [cont’d]
    ◦ A decrease in AD can also cause a recessionary gap.
      If consumer confidence plunges, households will buy
      fewer goods and services at every price level.
      This fall in AD will cause output and price level to fall.
      Unemployment will increase.
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9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Exhibit 6: Short-Run Decrease in Aggregate Demand
◦   A fall in aggregate
    demand from a drop in
    consumer confidence
    can cause a short-run
    change in the economy.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How can the economy self-correct to a recessionary
    gap?
    ◦ Many recoveries from a recessionary gap occur because
     AD increases as a result of increased consumer/business
     confidence, lower taxes, and/or lower interest rates.
    ◦ A rightward shift of the AD curve takes the economy back
     to potential output.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How can the economy self-correct to a recessionary
    gap? [cont’d]
    ◦ The economy could self-correct through declining wages and
      prices.
    ◦ At lower output, firms lay off workers.
    ◦ They may cut prices to increase sales.
    ◦ Unemployed workers and other input suppliers may bid down
      wages and prices.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How can the economy self-correct to a recessionary
    gap? [cont’d]
    ◦ Reduced costs of production shift SRAS back to potential
     output.
    ◦ The economy eventually returns to a long-run equilibrium at
     a lower price level.
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9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Exhibit 7: Self-Correcting to a Recessionary Gap
◦   At point E1, the economy is in a
    recessionary gap.
◦   However, the economy may self-
    correct as labourers and other
    input suppliers are now willing to
    accept lower wages and prices for
    the use of their resources.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Self-correction to a recessionary gap can be slow
    ◦ Wage and price inflexibility: The tendency for downward
     wage and price adjustments to respond slowly to changes
     in the economy.
    ◦ This may lead to prolonged periods of a recessionary gap.
    ◦ Wages and prices are sticky downwards for several
     reasons.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Self-correction to a recessionary gap can be slow
    [cont’d]
    ◦ Firms may be unable to cut wages due to long-term
      contracts or minimum wage laws.
    ◦ Efficiency wages: Higher-than-equilibrium wages may
      attract more productive workers, reduce turnover, and
      improve morale.
    ◦ A higher wage causes a greater quantity of labour to be
      supplied, leading to more unemployment.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Self-correction to a recessionary gap can be slow
    [cont’d]
    ◦ Menu costs: The costs of changing posted prices.
    ◦ Some firms may change prices only gradually to minimize
     menu costs (price lists, catalogues, brochures, etc.).
    ◦ Their prices may, as a result, become too high.
    ◦ Sales and output fall.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   How can the economy self-correct to an inflationary
    gap?
    ◦ Workers’ and input suppliers’ purchasing power declines as
     output prices rise.
    ◦ They demand higher prices for their inputs.
    ◦ The SRAS curve shifts to the left until long-run equilibrium
     is restored at LRAS.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
    Exhibit 8: Self-Correction to an Inflationary Gap
o   The economy is in an inflationary
    gap at E1, where RGDP0 is greater
    than RGDPNR.
o   Because the price level is now
    higher than workers anticipated
    (i.e., it is PL1 rather than PL0),
    workers and other suppliers demand
    higher prices.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Price level and RGDP over time
    ◦ RGDP and price level have been rising due to increases in:
      Aggregate demand
          growing population, rising income, increased government
           purchases, and increased money supply
        Aggregate supply
          increased labour force and improvements in labour productivity
           and technology
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Exhibit 9: Canadian RGDP And Price Level, 1981–2017
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Section Check
    ◦ Short-run macroeconomic equilibrium is shown by the
     intersection of the aggregate demand curve and the
     short-run aggregate supply curve.
    ◦ A short-run equilibrium is also a long-run equilibrium
     only if it occurs at the potential output on the long-run
     aggregate supply curve.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ If short-run equilibrium occurs at less than the potential
      output of the economy, RGDPNR, there is a recessionary
      gap.
    ◦ If short-run equilibrium temporarily occurs beyond RGDPNR,
      there is an inflationary gap.
    ◦ It is possible for the economy to self-correct from a
      recessionary gap through declining wages and prices.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ The short-run aggregate supply curve eventually increases,
     returning the economy to the long-run equilibrium (RGDPNR)
     at a lower price level.
    ◦ It is possible for the economy to self-correct from an
     inflationary gap through increasing wages and prices.
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    9.3 Macroeconomic Equilibrium
   Section Check [cont’d]
    ◦ The short-run aggregate supply curve ultimately decreases,
     returning the economy to the long-run equilibrium (RGDPNR)
     at a higher price level.
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