Home > Terms > English (EN) > aggregate demand
aggregate demand
Also more accurately referred to as aggregate expenditure, this is one of the key concepts introduced by John Maynard Keynes that still today is at the heart of most macroeconomic theories about the determination of the overall level of employment (and thus the level of national income produced) in a country's economy during a given year. Although there have turned out to be a number of logical problems and ambiguities in making the analogy work, Keynes's original basic notion was that “aggregate demand” represented a sort of grand total or summarization of all the various demand schedules for all the millions of different goods and services produced in a country's national economy. Thus, Keynes reasoned, just as the microeconomic theorist can fruitfully analyze the relationship between the various quantities of a particular good or service that will be purchased by consumers at various prices on a single market by means of a demand schedule or demand curve, the macroeconomic theorist can make similarly good use of an aggregate demand schedule or aggregate demand curve as a means for analyzing the relationship between the various possible grand totals of all goods and services purchased in the national economy (as measured by their total monetary value in the form of a national product estimate like GNP or GDP) and the general price level (as measured by some sort of comprehensive price index rather like those whose yearly rates of change are commonly used to measure inflation). Once he had the brainstorm that one could sum up all the demand schedules for individual goods into a single grand total “aggregate demand schedule,” it was not much of a mental leap for Keynes to conclude that it might be useful first to divide up aggregate demand into a small number of “subtotal” aggregate demand schedules whose interrelationships might help explain such large-scale macroeconomic phenomena as the business cycle, inflation, economic growth and the like. Thus Keynes invented most of the basic ideas of what is today the macroeconomists' conventional system of national income accounting when he formulated his famous aggregate demand identity Y = C + I + G + (X - M) which simply means that a single country's aggregate demand for national product (Y) is always equal to the total demands of its households for Consumer goods and services (C), plus the total demands of its firms for Investment goods (I), plus the total demands of its various Government agencies for goods and services (G), plus the net demands of foreign consumers, firms and governments for the country's goods and services (exports minus imports).
Other Languages:
Member comments
Terms in the News
Billy Morgan
Sports; Snowboarding
The British snowboarder Billy Morgan has landed the sport’s first ever 1800 quadruple cork. The rider, who represented Great Britain in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, was in Livigno, Italy, when he achieved the man-oeuvre. It involves flipping four times, while body also spins with five complete rotations on a sideways or downward-facing axis. The trick ...
Marzieh Afkham
Broadcasting & receiving; News
Marzieh Afkham, who is the country’s first foreign ministry spokeswoman, will head a mission in east Asia, the state news agency reported. It is not clear to which country she will be posted as her appointment has yet to be announced officially. Afkham will only be the second female ambassador Iran has had. Under the last shah’s rule, Mehrangiz Dolatshahi, a ...
Weekly Packet
Language; Online services; Slang; Internet
Weekly Packet or "Paquete Semanal" as it is known in Cuba is a term used by Cubans to describe the information that is gathered from the internet outside of Cuba and saved onto hard drives to be transported into Cuba itself. Weekly Packets are then sold to Cuban's without internet access, allowing them to obtain information just days - and sometimes hours - after it ...
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB)
Banking; Investment banking
The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is an international financial institution established to address the need in Asia for infrastructure development. According to the Asian Development Bank, Asia needs $800 billion each year for roads, ports, power plants or other infrastructure projects before 2020. Originally proposed by China in 2013, a signing ...
Spartan
Online services; Internet
Spartan is the codename given to the new Microsoft Windows 10 browser that will replace Microsoft Windows Internet Explorer. The new browser will be built from the ground up and disregard any code from the IE platform. It has a new rendering engine that is built to be compatible with how the web is written today. The name Spartan is named after the ...
Featured Terms
A hollow grind is a type of bevel that can be allied to a knife, like FFG or convex. The cross section of the knife would show two concave parabola ...
Contributor
Featured blossaries
Silentchapel
0
Terms
95
Blossaries
10
Followers
Mergers and Aquisitions by Google
Browers Terms By Category
- Wireless networking(199)
- Modems(93)
- Firewall & VPN(91)
- Networking storage(39)
- Routers(3)
- Network switches(2)
Network hardware(428) Terms
- Chocolate(453)
- Hard candy(22)
- Gum(14)
- Gummies(9)
- Lollies(8)
- Caramels(6)
Candy & confectionary(525) Terms
- Architecture(556)
- Interior design(194)
- Graphic design(194)
- Landscape design(94)
- Industrial design(20)
- Application design(17)
Design(1075) Terms
- Bread(293)
- Cookies(91)
- Pastries(81)
- Cakes(69)
Baked goods(534) Terms
- General architecture(562)
- Bridges(147)
- Castles(114)
- Landscape design(94)
- Architecture contemporaine(73)
- Skyscrapers(32)