shock
(noun)
Sudden, heavy impact.
Examples of shock in the following topics:
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Shifts in investment due to shocks
- A positive demand shock increases the demand (not the quantity demanded), while a negative demand shock decreases the demand.
- In both cases, the shock impacts the price of the good or service.
- Demand shocks may originate from tax rates, money supply, and government spending.
- Demand shocks directly impact investment.
- Positive demand shocks increase consumer spending.
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Shifting the Phillips Curve with a Supply Shock
- Aggregate supply shocks, such as increases in the costs of resources, can cause the Phillips curve to shift.
- Stagflation caused by a aggregate supply shock.
- The stagflation of the 1970's was caused by a series of aggregate supply shocks.
- In this example of a negative supply shock, aggregate supply decreases and shifts to the left.
- Give examples of aggregate supply shock that shift the Phillips curve
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Impacts of Policies and Events on Equilibrium
- One type of event that can shift the equilibrium is a supply shock.
- A positive supply shock could be an advance in technology (a technology shock) which makes production more efficient, thus increasing output.
- One extreme case of a supply shock is the 1973 Oil Crisis.
- This supply shock in turn contributed to stagflation and persistent economic disarray.
- A supply shock shifts the aggregate supply curve.
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Recessions
- Recessions generally occur when there is a widespread drop in spending (an adverse demand shock).
- This may be triggered by various events, such as a financial crisis, an external trade shock, an adverse supply shock, or the bursting of an economic bubble .
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The Value of Diversification
- Systematic risk arises from market structure or dynamics which produce shocks or uncertainty faced by all agents in the market.
- For example, government policy, international economic forces, or acts of nature can shock the entire market.
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Reasons for and Consequences of Shift in Aggregate Supply
- If labor or another input suddenly becomes cheaper, there would be a supply shock such that supply curve may shift outward, causing the equilibrium price in to drop and the equilibrium quantity to increase.
- A supply shock could be caused by changing regulations or a sudden change in the price of an input, among other reasons.
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Introduction to Inflation
- One major reason for cost-push inflation are supply shocks.
- A supply shock is an event that suddenly changes the price of a commodity or service.
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Changes in Supply and Shifts in the Supply Curve
- A shift in supply from S1 to S2 affects the equilibrium point, and could be caused by shocks such as changes in consumer preferences or technological improvements.
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Using Monetary Policy to Target Inflation
- Supporters of a nominal income target also criticize the tendency of inflation targeting to ignore output shocks by focusing solely on the price level.
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The U.S. Trade Deficit
- But oil price shocks in 1973-1974 and 1979-1980 and the global recession that followed the second oil price shock caused international trade to stagnate.