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NotesEconomicsTopic 3.2Aggregate demand
Back to Economics Topics
3.2.11 min read

Aggregate demand

IB Economics • Unit 3

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Contents

  • What is aggregate demand?
  • Shifts of the AD curve
  • Drawing AD correctly

📉 What Is Aggregate Demand?

Definition: Aggregate demand (AD).

The four components

  • C — Consumption — household spending on goods and services (the largest component in most economies, ~60–70% of AD).
  • I — Investment — business spending on capital goods (factories, machines, technology).
  • G — Government spending — public expenditure on goods and services (not transfer payments).
  • (X − M) — Net exports — exports minus imports. Positive if the country sells more abroad than it buys.

Why the AD curve slopes downward

  • Wealth effect — lower prices → money balances worth more → people feel wealthier → spend more.
  • Interest rate effect — lower prices → less demand for money → interest rates fall → borrowing increases → C and I rise.
  • International trade effect — lower domestic prices → exports cheaper, imports dearer → (X − M) rises.

➡️ Shifts of the AD Curve

A change in the price level causes a movement along AD. A change in any other factor shifts the entire AD curve. Here are the main shifters, organised by component:


Factors that shift AD right (increase)

  • C increases: rising consumer confidence, lower interest rates, higher wealth, tax cuts.
  • I increases: business optimism, lower interest rates, technological breakthroughs, tax incentives for investment.
  • G increases: expansionary fiscal policy (more government spending).
  • (X − M) increases: weaker exchange rate (exports cheaper), stronger foreign economies, trade agreements.

Factors that shift AD left (decrease)

  • Falling confidence (consumer or business), rising interest rates, higher taxes, austerity measures, stronger exchange rate, recession in trading partners.
For any AD shift question, identify which component (C, I, G, or X−M) is affected and why. This shows the examiner a clear chain of reasoning.

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✏️ Drawing AD Correctly

  • Y-axis: Average price level (APL or just 'Price level').
  • X-axis: Real GDP (or real output / real national income).
  • AD slopes downward from left to right.
  • Label the curve AD (or AD₁, AD₂ for shifts).
  • Show shifts with a new curve and an arrow indicating direction.

Common mistakes: (1) Labelling axes wrong (it's price level, not price). (2) Confusing movements along AD (price level change) with shifts of AD (non-price factor change). (3) Forgetting to label the new curve.
AD is the macroeconomic demand curve. Don't confuse it with the microeconomic demand curve for a single good. AD shows total spending in the economy at each price level.

Related Economics Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

3.1.1What is GDP and how is it measured?
3.1.2Real vs nominal GDP and comparisons
3.1.3The business cycle
3.2.2Aggregate supply
View all Economics topics

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Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Economics

IB Exam Questions on Aggregate demand

Practice with IB-style questions filtered to Topic 3.2.1. Get instant AI feedback on every answer.

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How Aggregate demand Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Aggregate demand.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Aggregate demand.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within Aggregate demand.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Aggregate demand.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide →

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3.1.3The business cycle
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Aggregate supply3.2.2

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