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Shifting the Economy's Equilibrium.
Macroeconomic variables and aggregates, such as national income and product, consumers' expenditures and savings, producers' output of products and producers' investment in capital, government revenues (taxes) and expenditures, exports and imports, the level and composition (by age, sex, and region) of employment, and the quantity of money in circulation, fluctuate constantly.
Consumers changing their spending behaviour, firms investing more or less in capital as their expectations of profitable opportunities change, and the government adjusting the supply of money to accommodate variations in its expenditures and tax revenues are examples of shifts in the underlying parameters of the IS-LM model. Such changes in the parameters will induce a shift in the economy's equilibrium.
On this web page, I permit you to adjust the model's parameters to see how the equilibrium macroeconomic variables and aggregates change. For example, suppose the government decides to drastically curtail its expenditures. What does the IS-LM model predict will happen to the macroeconomic variables and aggregates?
The diagrams on this web page show the macroeconomic functions for the two systems and corresponding IS-LM equilibriums. I express all aggregates in billions of dollars.
System 1 (in blue): the parameters of the macroeconomic functions reflect the average values of the macroeconomic aggregates of the Canadian economy during the years of 2001 - 2003. Government expenditures g = 210 and the money supply ms = 200.
System 2 (in red): you set the parameters of the macroeconomic functions to whatever values you want, within limits. Try to replicate the macroeconomic aggregates for some year. Initially, I set government expenditures g = 170, and the money supply ms = 190.
Set the parameters for the consumers, producers, and the government as desired
and CLICK ON THE SUBMIT PARAMETERS BUTTON BELOW!
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