equilibrium level of national income
(f) The equilibrium level of real national income and the price level will change if there is a shift in the aggregate demand schedule. For example, if aggregate demand rises from AD to AD1, this results in an increase in the equilibrium real income level from E to E1 and an increase in the price level from P to P 1 .
(d) The equilibrium level of national income will change if there is a shift in either the injections or withdrawals schedules. For example, an increase in investment spending will shift the injections schedule from 1 to 1 1, resulting in an increase in the equilibrium income level from E to E1 (See also PARADOX OF THRIFT).
(b) The equilibrium level of national income will change if there is a shift in the aggregate demand schedule. For example, if aggregate demand rises from AD to AD1 this results in an increase in the equilibrium income level from E to E1. (See MULTIPLIER.)
equilibrium level of national income
- the level of NATIONAL INCOME at which the purchasing and production plans of the economy are synchronized. This occurs at the point of intersection of the AGGREGATE DEMAND SCHEDULE with the AGGREGATE SUPPLY SCHEDULE, which is point E in Fig. 58 Equilibrium income is not necessarily the level of income at which FULL EMPLOYMENT is attained, for an equilibrium level of income can occur at any level of economic activity. Full employment equilibrium is a special case where aggregate demand exactly corresponds with POTENTIAL GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT, leaving no INFLATIONARY GAP or DEFLATIONARY GAP. For example, aggregate demand 2 in Fig. 58 (b) represents a full employment equilibrium where E2 corresponds with full employment output.
- the level of national income at which total INJECTIONS (investment + government expenditure + exports) is exactly equal to WITHDRAWALS (saving + taxes + imports). Also called injections-withdrawals approach to national income determination. In the CIRCULAR FLOW OF NATIONAL INCOME MODEL, income = consumption + withdrawals, spending = consumption + injections. See Fig. 58 (c) and (d).
- the level of real national income at which aggregate demand is exactly equal to aggregate supply as shown by the intersection of the aggregate demand curve and the aggregate supply curve at a particular PRICE LEVEL. See Fig. 58 (e), (f) and (g).