Causes of Changes & AD/AS Analysis (Cambridge (CIE) A Level Economics): Revision Note
Exam code: 9708
Causes of changes in a floating exchange rate
Changes in a floating exchange rate are caused by shifts in the demand for or supply of a currency on the FOREX market
Factors that increase demand for a currency (causing appreciation)
Rising interest rates
Higher interest rates attract foreign investors seeking better returns on savings and investments, increasing demand for the currency
Increased demand for exports
Foreign buyers must purchase the domestic currency to pay for exports, increasing demand
Speculation
If investors expect a currency to rise in value, they buy it now in anticipation of future gain, increasing demand
Relative inflation
If a country has lower inflation than its trading partners, its goods become more price competitive, increasing export demand and therefore currency demand
Factors that increase supply of a currency (causing depreciation)
Falling interest rates
Lower returns on domestic assets cause investors to move funds abroad, selling the domestic currency and increasing its supply on FOREX
Increased demand for imports
Domestic buyers must sell the domestic currency to obtain foreign currency to pay for imports, increasing supply
Speculation
If investors expect a currency to fall, they sell it before the fall, increasing supply
Higher relative inflation
Domestic goods become less competitive, export demand falls, and less foreign currency flows in to buy the domestic currency
Factor | Effect on exchange rate | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
Rise in interest rates | Appreciation |
|
Fall in interest rates | Depreciation |
|
Increase in exports | Appreciation |
|
Increase in imports | Depreciation |
|
Speculation (expected rise) | Appreciation |
|
Speculation (expected fall) | Depreciation |
|
Lower relative inflation | Appreciation |
|
Higher relative inflation | Depreciation |
|
AD/AS analysis of the impact of exchange rate changes
Exchange rate changes affect the domestic economy through their impact on the price of exports and imports, which feeds through into AD, the price level, real output and employment
Impact of a depreciation
A depreciation makes exports cheaper for foreign buyers and imports more expensive for domestic buyers
Net exports (X-M) rise as export demand increases and import demand falls - AD shifts right
Import prices rise, increasing the cost of imported raw materials and finished goods - contributing to cost-push inflation
The rightward shift in AD also generates demand-pull inflation if the economy is near full capacity

Diagram analysis
The initial short-run equilibrium is at AP1Y1 with AD1 intersecting SRAS
A depreciation makes exports cheaper and imports more expensive - net exports rise
The rise in net exports (X-M) increases AD, shifting the curve rightward from AD1 → AD2
The average price level rises from AP1 → AP2 - reflecting both demand-pull and cost-push inflationary pressure
Real GDP rises from Y1 → Y2
Employment rises as firms increase output to meet higher export demand
Impact of an appreciation
An appreciation makes exports more expensive for foreign buyers and imports cheaper for domestic buyers
Net exports (X-M) fall as export demand decreases and import demand rises - AD shifts left
Import prices fall, reducing cost-push inflationary pressure and lowering the average price level
Real output and employment fall as domestic firms face reduced demand for exports

Diagram analysis
The initial short-run equilibrium is at AP and Y with AD1 intersecting SRAS
An appreciation makes exports more expensive and imports cheaper - net exports fall
The fall in net exports (X-M) reduces AD, shifting the curve leftward from AD1 → AD2
The average price level falls from AP → AP1
Real GDP falls from Y → Y1
Employment falls as firms reduce output in response to lower export demand
Examiner Tips and Tricks
When analysing the impact of an exchange rate change, always work through three stages:
identify whether the exchange rate has appreciated or depreciated;
state the effect on export and import prices;
then trace the impact through AD onto the price level, real output and employment.
A common error is to state only that AD shifts without explaining the transmission mechanism - always link the exchange rate change explicitly to net exports (X-M).
Note that depreciation generates inflationary pressure through two channels simultaneously - demand-pull from the rightward AD shift and cost-push from higher import prices - making the inflationary effect of depreciation typically stronger than the deflationary effect of appreciation.
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