In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Two Sets of Hands on the Economy's Controls
Demand-side policies manage the total spending in an economy. The government uses its budget (fiscal policy); the central bank uses interest rates (monetary policy). Both aim to keep the economy near full employment with stable prices - speeding it up in a slump, slowing it down when it overheats.
Picture the economy as a shower. The GOVERNMENT controls the flow with fiscal policy - turning the tap on (spending more, taxing less) fills the room faster; turning it down (spending less, taxing more) slows it. The CENTRAL BANK controls the temperature with monetary policy - lowering interest rates makes borrowing cheaper and spending 'hotter'; raising them cools everything down. Get either wrong and you are scalded by inflation or left shivering in recession.
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Diagnose the gap. A deflationary (recessionary) gap means output is below full employment and unemployment is high; an inflationary gap means output is above full employment and prices are rising.
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Pick the policy and the stance. Government -> fiscal (spending, taxes); central bank -> monetary (interest rates). Use EXPANSIONARY policy to fight a slump, CONTRACTIONARY policy to fight inflation.
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Trace it through AD/AS. Expansionary policy shifts AD right (raising output and the price level); contractionary policy shifts AD left (lowering the price level and output).
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Evaluate. No tool is perfect - weigh strengths against limitations (lags, crowding out, debt, the liquidity trap, political pressure) before judging which policy fits the situation.
Explore the concept
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Fiscal policy: the government's budget as a lever
Fiscal policy is the government changing its own spending and taxation to influence aggregate demand. Recall that AD = C + I + G + (X - M). Government spending (G) is a component of AD directly, while taxation (T) works indirectly by changing the disposable income households have to consume (C) and the profits firms retain to invest (I). Because the government controls both G and T through its budget, it can push AD in whichever direction the economy needs.
The stance of fiscal policy depends on the problem. To close a DEFLATIONARY (recessionary) gap, the government uses EXPANSIONARY fiscal policy - raising G and/or cutting T - shifting AD to the right. To close an INFLATIONARY gap, it uses CONTRACTIONARY fiscal policy - cutting G and/or raising T - shifting AD to the left.
Government spending (G): on infrastructure, healthcare, education, public-sector wages and transfer payments. Raising it injects demand directly.
Taxation (T): direct taxes (income, corporation) and indirect taxes (VAT/GST). Cutting taxes leaves households and firms with more to spend and invest.
The budget balance: if G > T the government runs a DEFICIT (borrowing to cover the gap); if T > G it runs a SURPLUS; if G = T the budget is balanced. Expansionary fiscal policy tends to widen a deficit; contractionary policy moves toward surplus.
Who decides: the GOVERNMENT, through the budget process (e.g. the finance ministry / treasury and the legislature). This is the key contrast with monetary policy.
Automatic stabilisers soften the cycle with no new decision at all. In a downturn, incomes fall so tax revenue automatically drops, while spending on unemployment benefits automatically rises - both cushion the fall in AD. In a boom the reverse happens, restraining AD. Because they need no legislation, they have no decision lag.
Discretionary fiscal policy, by contrast, is a deliberate new choice to change spending or taxes - more powerful but slower, because it must be decided and passed.
HL — the multiplier. An initial injection does not stop where it lands. New government spending becomes someone's income; they spend a fraction of it (the marginal propensity to consume, MPC), which becomes another person's income, and so on. The multiplier is k = 1 / (1 - MPC) = 1 / MPS, so the final rise in real GDP is LARGER than the initial injection. The multiplier is HL content; SL students should still understand that fiscal injections have knock-on effects.
Monetary policy: the central bank and the interest rate
Monetary policy is run by the central bank, which in most modern economies is independent of the elected government. Its main tool is the policy (base) interest rate - the rate at which commercial banks borrow from it. Because every other borrowing and saving rate in the economy is built on top of the policy rate, moving it ripples out to mortgages, business loans and savings returns. The central bank usually targets a stated inflation rate (commonly around 2%) and adjusts the policy rate to hit it.
How a rate change actually reaches aggregate demand is the transmission mechanism - a chain worth spelling out in an exam because examiners reward the explanation of WHY, not just the direction. A CUT in the policy rate: (1) lowers market lending rates on loans and mortgages; (2) makes borrowing cheaper and saving less rewarding, so households borrow and spend more (C rises) and firms find more investment projects profitable (I rises); (3) can lift asset prices and confidence, and weaken the exchange rate, boosting net exports; (4) the combined effect shifts AD to the right, raising real output and the price level. A rate RISE runs the same chain in reverse.
Independence: decisions sit with the central bank, not politicians. This stops the government cutting rates for a pre-election boom at the cost of later inflation, and makes the bank's commitment to low inflation credible - which itself helps anchor expectations.
Expansionary (loose) monetary policy: to close a deflationary gap, the bank LOWERS the policy rate. Cheaper borrowing encourages consumption (C) and investment (I), shifting AD right.
Contractionary (tight) monetary policy: to close an inflationary gap, the bank RAISES the policy rate. Dearer borrowing and better returns to saving reduce C and I, shifting AD left.
Closing the gaps on the AD/AS diagram
The whole point of demand-side policy is to shift AD to close a gap. Being able to describe the diagram precisely - in words, since these lessons render text - is what earns diagram marks.
Deflationary (recessionary) gap: short-run equilibrium sits to the LEFT of the full-employment level Yf, so there is spare capacity and unemployment. EXPANSIONARY policy (higher G, lower T, or lower interest rates) shifts AD RIGHT, from AD1 to AD2, moving output up toward Yf. The price level rises somewhat as output recovers.
Inflationary gap: short-run equilibrium sits to the RIGHT of Yf; the economy is overheating and the price level is rising. CONTRACTIONARY policy (lower G, higher T, or higher interest rates) shifts AD LEFT, from AD1 to AD2, easing the price level back down toward Yf.
Always label: axes (Price Level; Real GDP), the curves (AD, SRAS, and LRAS or Yf for full employment), the shift (AD1 -> AD2) and the change in equilibrium (price level and real output). Then explain in words WHY AD moved - that explanation is the difference between describing and analysing.
Evaluating the two policies: strengths and limitations
No demand-side policy is a free lunch. Effectiveness depends on the circumstances, and a strong evaluation weighs each strength against a matching limitation rather than listing them separately.
Fiscal - strengths: directly and quickly injects demand through G; can be TARGETED at the sectors, regions or groups that need it most; works even when interest rates are already near zero and monetary policy has run out of room.
Fiscal - limitations: long DECISION lags (budgets and legislation take time), so the boost can arrive after the slump has passed; deficits add to GOVERNMENT DEBT and future interest costs; CROWDING OUT - borrowing can raise interest rates and squeeze private investment; and it is exposed to POLITICAL constraints (tax rises are unpopular; spending is hard to reverse).
Monetary - strengths: decided FAST by an independent committee and easily reversible; free of the political pressure that distorts fiscal choices; credible inflation targeting helps anchor expectations.
Monetary - limitations: a BLUNT instrument that hits the whole economy rather than specific sectors; loses traction near the ZERO LOWER BOUND / in a LIQUIDITY TRAP when confidence is low; its IMPACT lag on AD can be many months; and rate rises to curb inflation can raise unemployment (the inflation-output trade-off).
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Mixing up who does what - interest rates are MONETARY (central bank); spending and taxes are FISCAL (government). Saying 'the government cuts interest rates' throws away easy marks.
Wrong stance for the situation - using EXPANSIONARY policy in a boom (or contractionary policy in a recession). Match the stance to the gap: expansionary for a deflationary gap, contractionary for an inflationary gap.
Naming a policy but not tracing the mechanism - 'lower interest rates raise AD' with no chain in between. Always explain WHY: cheaper borrowing -> more C and I -> AD shifts.
Drawing the diagram but not explaining it - an unlabelled or unexplained AD/AS diagram sits in a lower band. Label axes, curves and the shift, then say in words what it shows.
One-sided 'evaluation' - listing only strengths (or only weaknesses). A part (b) answer that lacks balance is capped in the middle bands, however fluent it is.
Forgetting the multiplier is HL, and misusing it - SL answers do not need the multiplier formula; HL answers should note that leakages and crowding out shrink its real value.
Key concepts in this lesson
This lesson advances two of the course's nine key concepts. Intervention runs through everything here: fiscal and monetary policy are deliberate government and central-bank actions to correct a market outcome - a slump or an overheating boom - that the economy would not fix quickly on its own. Change is the mechanism by which they work: every policy shifts aggregate demand, changing real output, employment and the price level. Keep both in view - the internal assessment rewards linking a key concept to real-world material, and 'intervention' and 'change' recur through every macro policy debate that follows. This content is common to SL and HL; only the multiplier is HL.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
[HL] An economy is in a deflationary gap. The government raises spending on transport infrastructure by $20 billion. The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is 0.75. (a) Calculate the value of the multiplier. (b) Calculate the maximum total increase in real GDP. (c) State one reason the actual increase might be smaller.
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(a) The multiplier. k = 1 / (1 - MPC) = 1 / (1 - 0.75) = 1 / 0.25 = 4. So every $1 of new spending can raise total GDP by up to $4.
Inflation is running at 7%, well above the central bank's 2% target, and the economy has an inflationary gap. State the appropriate monetary policy and analyse, step by step, its effect on aggregate demand, the price level and real output, referring to an AD/AS diagram.
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Market rates rise. Commercial banks pass the higher policy rate on, so mortgages, loans and credit become more expensive and saving more rewarding.
Paper 1, part (b): Evaluate the use of expansionary fiscal policy, rather than monetary policy, to close a deflationary (recessionary) gap. [15 marks]
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MODEL ANSWER
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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Demand-side (demand management) policies
Policies that deliberately shift aggregate demand to influence output, employment and the price level. They come in two families: fiscal (government) and monetary (central bank).
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Government spending (G): on infrastructure, healthcare, education, public-sector wages and transfer payments. Raising it injects demand directly.
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Taxation (T): direct taxes (income, corporation) and indirect taxes (VAT/GST). Cutting taxes leaves households and firms with more to spend and invest.
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The budget balance: if G > T the government runs a DEFICIT (borrowing to cover the gap); if T > G it runs a SURPLUS; if G = T the budget is balanced. Expansionary fiscal policy tends to widen a deficit; contractionary policy moves toward surplus.
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Who decides: the GOVERNMENT, through the budget process (e.g. the finance ministry / treasury and the legislature). This is the key contrast with monetary policy.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 1 (b) evaluation marked: evaluate expansionary fiscal versus monetary policy to close a deflationary gap
Get a Paper 1 (b) evaluation marked: evaluate expansionary fiscal versus monetary policy to close a deflationary gap
Extra simulations & links
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Frequently asked
Checkpoint
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Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Get a Paper 1 (b) evaluation marked: evaluate expansionary fiscal versus monetary policy to close a deflationary gap on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.