In the Keynesian cross diagram, the upward sloping blue line represents the aggregate expenditure for goods and services by all households and firms as a function of their income. The 45-degree line represents an aggregate supply curve which embodies the idea that, as long as the economy is operating at less than full employment, anything demanded will be supplied. Aggregate expenditure and aggregate income are measured by dividing the money value of all goods produced in the economy in a given year by a price index. The resulting construct is referred to as
Real Gross Domestic Product. The sum of all incomes earned in the economy in a given period of time is identically equal to the sum of all expenditures, an identity resulting from the
circular flow of income. But not all expenditures are planned. For example, if an automobile plant produces 1,000 cars, but not all of them are sold, the unsold cars are labelled as
inventory investment in the GDP accounts. The income earned by the people who produced those cars is part of aggregate income and the value of all of the cars produced is part of total expenditure. But only the value of the cars that are sold is part of planned aggregate expenditure. In the diagram, the
equilibrium level of income and expenditure is determined where the aggregate demand curve intersects the 45-degree line. At this point there is no unintended accumulation of inventories. The equilibrium point is labelled as
Y. Under standard assumptions about the determinants of aggregate expenditure, the AD curve is flatter than the 45-degree line and the equilibrium level of income,
Y, is stable. If income is less than
Y, aggregate expenditure exceeds aggregate income and firms will find that their inventories are falling. They will hire more workers, and incomes will increase causing a movement back towards
Y. Conversely, if income is greater than
Y, aggregate expenditure is less than aggregate income and firms will find that inventories are increasing. They will fire workers, and incomes will fall.
Y is the only level of income at which there is no desire on the part of firms to change the number of people they employ. Aggregate employment is determined by the demand for labor as firms hire or fire workers to recruit enough labor to produce the goods demanded to meet aggregate expenditure. In Keynesian economic theory, equilibrium is typically assumed to occur at less than full employment, an assumption that is justified by appealing to the empirical connection between employment and output known as
Okun's law. Aggregate expenditure can be broken down into four component parts. These consist of consumption expenditure
C, planned investment expenditure,
Ip, government expenditure on goods and services,
G and exports net of imports,
NX. In the simplest exposition of Keynesian theory, the economy is assumed to be
closed (which implies that
NX = 0), and planned investment is exogenous and determined by the
animal spirits of investors. Consumption is an
affine function of income,
C = a + bY where the slope coefficient
b is called the
marginal propensity to consume. If any of the components of aggregate demand,
a, Ip or
G rises, for a given level of income,
Y, the aggregate demand curve shifts up and the intersection of the AD curve with the 45-degree line shifts right. Similarly, if any of these three components falls, the AD curve shifts down and the intersection of the AD curve with the 45-degree line shifts left. In the
General Theory, Keynes explained the
Great Depression as a downward shift of the AD curve caused by a loss of business confidence and a collapse in planned investment. ==Original formulation==