Aggregate Demand & Supply: The AD-AS Framework That Drives the Economy
Aggregate Demand (AD)
Aggregate demand is the total demand for all goods and services in an economy at a given price level. It is essentially the GDP expenditure formula viewed as a demand curve:
The AD curve slopes downward: when the general price level falls, real wealth increases (wealth effect), interest rates tend to fall (interest rate effect), and exports become more competitive (exchange rate effect) — all of which increase total spending.
What Shifts Aggregate Demand
| Factor | Shift Direction | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer confidence rises | AD shifts right (increases) | Consumers spend more at every price level |
| Fed cuts interest rates | AD shifts right | Cheaper borrowing stimulates investment and consumption |
| Government spending increases | AD shifts right | Direct increase in G component of GDP |
| Tax cuts | AD shifts right | Higher disposable income increases consumer spending (C) |
| Fed raises interest rates | AD shifts left (decreases) | Expensive borrowing reduces investment and consumption |
| Export decline (strong dollar) | AD shifts left | Net exports fall, reducing total demand |
| Household wealth decline | AD shifts left | Stock or housing crash reduces consumer spending |
Aggregate Supply (AS)
Aggregate supply represents the total output that firms are willing to produce at each price level. Economists distinguish between two timeframes:
Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) slopes upward: as prices rise, firms produce more because input costs (especially wages) are sticky in the short run. Higher prices mean higher profit margins, so output increases.
Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS) is vertical at potential GDP: in the long run, output depends on real factors — technology, capital stock, labor force, and productivity — not the price level. The economy gravitates toward this potential output over time.
What Shifts Aggregate Supply
| Factor | Shift Direction | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Oil price spike | SRAS shifts left (decreases) | Higher energy costs raise production costs across all sectors |
| Technology improvement | SRAS and LRAS shift right | More output per unit of input — productivity gains |
| Wage increases | SRAS shifts left | Higher labor costs reduce output at each price level |
| Supply chain disruption | SRAS shifts left | Input shortages raise costs and reduce capacity |
| Immigration / labor force growth | LRAS shifts right | More workers = more potential output |
| Deregulation | SRAS and LRAS shift right | Lower compliance costs increase production efficiency |
AD-AS Equilibrium and Macro Scenarios
| Scenario | AD Shift | AS Shift | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demand-driven growth | Right | No change | Higher GDP AND higher prices (inflation) |
| Demand-driven recession | Left | No change | Lower GDP AND lower prices (deflation risk) |
| Supply shock (stagflation) | No change | Left | Lower GDP AND higher prices — the worst combo |
| Productivity boom | No change | Right | Higher GDP AND lower prices — the best combo |
| Stimulus + supply shock | Right | Left | Prices surge; GDP effect uncertain |
AD-AS and Policy
Monetary policy primarily shifts AD. When the Fed cuts rates or buys bonds, it increases credit availability and consumer/business spending — shifting AD right. When it tightens, AD shifts left.
Fiscal policy also shifts AD. Government spending increases are a direct boost to AD (the G component). Tax cuts increase disposable income (boosting C). Fiscal contraction shifts AD left.
Supply-side policies — deregulation, infrastructure investment, education, tax incentives for business investment — shift AS right. These policies increase the economy’s productive capacity over time, potentially raising GDP without causing inflation.
Why the AD-AS Model Matters for Investors
Every major market debate — “Will the Fed cause a recession?”, “Is this inflation transitory?”, “Are we heading for stagflation?” — is fundamentally an AD-AS question. Understanding whether the current environment is driven by demand shifts or supply shifts tells you which assets will perform and what the Fed is likely to do.
Demand-driven inflation responds to rate hikes (the Fed can fix it). Supply-driven inflation does not respond easily to monetary tightening — and aggressive hikes risk triggering a recession without solving the inflation problem. This distinction drove the entire “transitory vs persistent” inflation debate of 2021-2023.
Key Takeaways
- Aggregate demand is total spending (C + I + G + NX); aggregate supply is total output at each price level.
- The AD-AS intersection determines equilibrium GDP and price level for the economy.
- Demand shifts are driven by consumer confidence, interest rates, government spending, and trade. Supply shifts are driven by input costs, technology, and productivity.
- Demand shocks cause GDP and prices to move together; supply shocks cause them to move in opposite directions (stagflation).
- Understanding whether inflation is demand-driven or supply-driven is the key to predicting Fed policy and market outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is aggregate demand?
Aggregate demand is the total amount of goods and services that all buyers in an economy (consumers, businesses, government, and foreign buyers) want to purchase at each price level. It is the demand side of the entire economy, represented by AD = C + I + G + (X − M).
What is the difference between aggregate demand and aggregate supply?
Aggregate demand represents total spending in the economy. Aggregate supply represents total production. Their intersection determines the economy’s equilibrium — the actual level of GDP and the general price level. Shifts in either curve change economic outcomes.
What happens when aggregate demand increases?
When AD shifts right (increases), both real GDP and the price level rise in the short run. The economy produces more and prices go up. If the economy was already near full capacity, the price increase (inflation) will be larger and the GDP increase smaller.
What causes a negative supply shock?
A negative supply shock occurs when production costs rise suddenly — oil price spikes, supply chain disruptions, natural disasters, or sudden regulatory changes. This shifts SRAS left, causing prices to rise while output falls — the classic stagflation setup.
How does the AD-AS model explain Fed policy?
The Fed shifts AD by changing interest rates and conducting open market operations. Rate cuts shift AD right (stimulate spending), rate hikes shift AD left (cool spending). The Fed aims to keep the economy near its LRAS (potential GDP) with stable prices — essentially managing AD to match the economy’s productive capacity.