The 'Sweet Spot' Equilibrium as a Baseline for Shock Analysis
When analyzing economic shocks, it is useful to assume the economy begins in a 'sweet spot'—a sustainable supply-side equilibrium. While in practice it is rare for all characteristics of this ideal state to be met simultaneously, it serves as a practical baseline because the economy is expected to satisfy these conditions on average. This stable starting point, where all economic actors are optimizing and have no incentive to change their behavior, allows for a clear analysis of how a shock disrupts the system.
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.5 Macroeconomic policy: Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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The 'Sweet Spot' Equilibrium as a Baseline for Shock Analysis
A macroeconomist is analyzing the effects of a sudden, significant increase in the global price of oil on a country's economy. To provide a complete picture of the resulting changes in national output, employment, and the overall price level, why must the economist use a framework that combines both supply-side and demand-side elements?
Diagnosing an Economic Downturn
Limitations of Single-Sided Economic Analysis
Inadequacy of a Single-Sided Economic Model
A purely demand-side shock, such as a sudden collapse in consumer confidence, can be fully analyzed to understand its impact on output, employment, and inflation using only a demand-side model because the shock does not directly alter the economy's productive capacity.
To understand how an economy behaves, it's necessary to consider both its productive capabilities and the total level of spending. Match each economic event or concept to the primary side of the economic framework it represents or directly influences.
An economy experiences a significant, positive technological innovation that boosts productivity. Arrange the following events in the most likely chronological order to trace how this initial supply-side shock is transmitted through the economy, leading to a new equilibrium.
The synthesis of supply-side and demand-side models provides a comprehensive framework for analyzing ____ ____, which are the characteristic fluctuations in aggregate output, employment, and inflation.
Analyzing a Policy Intervention
A government enacts a major, unexpected fiscal stimulus program when the economy is already operating close to its maximum productive capacity. Using a framework that combines both the spending (demand) and production (supply) sides of the economy, what is the most likely sequence of outcomes?
Learn After
Analyzing Shocks to Understand Inflation
Process for Analyzing an Aggregate Demand Shock
Sustainable Macroeconomic Equilibrium
Evaluating the 'Sweet Spot' Equilibrium Model
When studying the effects of sudden economic events, analysts often begin by assuming the economy is in a state where output is sustainable, inflation is stable, and all individuals and firms are satisfied with their current choices. Why is this idealized starting point a useful tool for analysis, even though real-world economies are rarely in such a perfect state?
The primary reason economists assume an economy starts in a 'sweet spot' equilibrium before a shock is that this state accurately reflects the typical, day-to-day condition of most developed economies.
Rationale for Using an Idealized Equilibrium
Fall in Business Confidence as a Negative Aggregate Demand Shock