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NotesEconomicsTopic 3.5The transmission mechanism
Back to Economics Topics
3.5.21 min read

The transmission mechanism

IB Economics β€’ Unit 3

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Contents

  • How interest rates affect the economy
  • The contractionary chain
  • Showing monetary policy on AD/AS diagrams

πŸ”— How Interest Rates Affect the Economy

The transmission mechanism describes how monetary policy works in practice.


Lower interest rates β†’ (expansionary)

  • Consumption (C) β€” borrowing is cheaper (mortgages, credit cards) β†’ households spend more. Savings earn less β†’ incentive to save falls β†’ spend more.
  • Investment (I) β€” firms borrow to invest at lower cost β†’ more projects become profitable β†’ I rises.
  • Net exports (X βˆ’ M) β€” lower rates β†’ less foreign capital inflow β†’ exchange rate depreciates β†’ exports cheaper, imports dearer β†’ (X βˆ’ M) rises.
  • Asset prices β€” lower rates push up house and share prices β†’ wealth effect β†’ more spending.
  • Overall: AD shifts right β†’ real GDP rises, unemployment falls. If economy near capacity, prices rise too.

⬆️ The Contractionary Chain

Higher interest rates β†’ (contractionary)

  • C falls β€” borrowing costs rise β†’ mortgage payments increase β†’ less disposable income β†’ spending drops. Higher savings returns β†’ incentive to save more.
  • I falls β€” cost of borrowing rises β†’ fewer investment projects are profitable β†’ firms cut back.
  • Exchange rate appreciates β€” higher rates attract foreign capital β†’ currency strengthens β†’ exports more expensive, imports cheaper β†’ (X βˆ’ M) falls.
  • Asset prices fall β€” higher rates reduce demand for houses and shares β†’ negative wealth effect.
  • Overall: AD shifts left β†’ real GDP growth slows, inflation falls. Risk of overdoing it β†’ recession.

In exams, always trace the full chain: interest rate change β†’ effect on C / I / (Xβˆ’M) β†’ AD shift β†’ effect on price level and real GDP. This structured approach earns full marks.

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✏️ Monetary Policy on AD/AS Diagrams

Expansionary monetary policy (rate cut)

  • AD shifts right (from AD₁ to ADβ‚‚).
  • Short-run equilibrium: higher real GDP (Y₁ β†’ Yβ‚‚) and higher price level (P₁ β†’ Pβ‚‚).
  • If economy was in a deflationary gap, the gap narrows β€” unemployment falls.

Contractionary monetary policy (rate hike)

  • AD shifts left (from AD₁ to ADβ‚‚).
  • Short-run equilibrium: lower real GDP and lower price level.
  • If economy was in an inflationary gap, the gap narrows β€” inflation falls.
Monetary policy shifts AD β€” it does NOT shift AS. It's a demand-side tool. To shift LRAS, you need supply-side policies (topic 3.7).

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
3.2.1Aggregate demand
View all Economics topics

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IB Exam Questions on The transmission mechanism

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How The transmission mechanism 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 The transmission mechanism.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in The transmission mechanism.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY β€” cause and effect within The transmission mechanism.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in The transmission mechanism.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide β†’

Previous
3.5.1Central banks and interest rates
Next
Evaluation and limitations3.5.3

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