Full-employment output (YF), also called potential output, is the level of real GDP an economy produces when unemployment equals the natural rate of unemployment. On AP Macro graphs, YF is the benchmark line you compare actual output to when identifying recessionary and inflationary gaps.
Full-employment output (YF) is the level of real GDP the economy produces when unemployment sits at the natural rate. Per EK MEA-2.A.5, it goes by another name too, potential output. Same concept, two labels, and the exam uses both.
Here's the part that trips people up. "Full employment" does not mean zero unemployment. At YF, frictional and structural unemployment still exist (people between jobs, skills mismatches). What's gone is cyclical unemployment, the kind caused by a weak economy. Think of YF as the economy's sustainable cruising speed. The economy can temporarily run above it (overheating) or fall below it (recession), and the distance between actual output and YF is the output gap (EK MEA-2.A.4). That single comparison, actual GDP versus YF, is the backbone of half the graphs you'll draw in this course.
YF lives in Topic 2.7 (Business Cycles) in Unit 2, supporting learning objectives 2.7.A and 2.7.B, which ask you to define and explain the phases and turning points of the business cycle using graphs and data. You literally cannot define an output gap, a recession's depth, or an overheated economy without YF as the reference point. But its real payoff comes later. In Unit 3, YF becomes the vertical LRAS curve on the AD-AS model, and in Units 4 and 5, fiscal and monetary policy questions are almost always about pushing actual output back toward YF. It's the single most reused benchmark in AP Macro.
Keep studying AP® Macroeconomics Unit 2
Output Gap (Unit 2)
The output gap is just the difference between actual output and YF (EK MEA-2.A.4). YF is the measuring stick; the gap is the measurement. If actual GDP is below YF, the gap is negative (recessionary). Above YF, it's positive (inflationary).
Recession (Unit 2)
A recession pulls actual output below YF, creating cyclical unemployment on top of the natural rate. When you explain a business cycle trough on the exam, anchoring it relative to YF is what earns the point.
Inflationary Gap (Units 2-3)
When short-run equilibrium output exceeds YF, the economy is producing beyond its sustainable level. Unemployment dips below the natural rate, and upward pressure on wages and prices follows. YF tells you when 'good' growth has tipped into overheating.
Long-Run Aggregate Supply (Unit 3)
On the AD-AS graph, YF is where the vertical LRAS curve sits. The same Unit 2 idea (potential output) gets drawn as a line in Unit 3, and every gap-closing policy question in Units 4-5 is about moving equilibrium back to that line.
YF shows up constantly in graph-based multiple choice. A typical stem shows an AD-AS diagram with equilibrium E₁ and a vertical line labeled Yf, then asks what 'the position of E₁ relative to full-employment output' illustrates. Your job is to read the graph and name the situation, like a recessionary gap (E₁ left of Yf), an inflationary gap (E₁ right of Yf), or long-run equilibrium (E₁ on Yf). Other stems shift AD and ask which business cycle phase the movement represents, which means tracking where equilibrium lands relative to YF. On FRQs, you're expected to draw YF as a labeled vertical line, plot current equilibrium correctly relative to it, and then show how a policy or shock moves the economy toward or away from it. Mislabeling YF or putting equilibrium on the wrong side of it is one of the most common ways to lose graph points.
Full employment does not mean everyone has a job. At YF, unemployment equals the natural rate, which still includes frictional and structural unemployment. What's eliminated is cyclical unemployment only. If an MCQ says the economy is at full employment, the unemployment rate is positive (the natural rate), not zero. Saying 'unemployment is 0% at YF' is an instant wrong answer.
Full-employment output (YF) and potential output are two names for the exact same thing, the GDP level where unemployment equals the natural rate.
At YF, frictional and structural unemployment still exist; only cyclical unemployment is zero, so the unemployment rate is positive, not 0%.
The output gap is actual output minus potential output, so YF is the benchmark every gap is measured against.
Equilibrium below YF means a recessionary gap; equilibrium above YF means an inflationary gap; equilibrium at YF means long-run equilibrium.
On the AD-AS model in Unit 3, YF is where the vertical LRAS curve is drawn, so labeling Yf correctly is a standard graphing point on FRQs.
Full-employment output (YF) is the level of real GDP produced when unemployment equals the natural rate of unemployment. The CED (EK MEA-2.A.5) also calls it potential output, and it's the benchmark used to identify output gaps in Topic 2.7.
No. At YF, unemployment equals the natural rate, which still includes frictional and structural unemployment. Only cyclical unemployment is gone, so the actual unemployment rate at full employment is positive.
YF is the benchmark level of GDP itself, while the output gap is the difference between actual output and YF (EK MEA-2.A.4). An economy below YF has a negative (recessionary) gap; above YF, a positive (inflationary) gap.
Yes. The CED states directly that potential output is also called full-employment output. Exam questions use both labels interchangeably, often writing it as Yf on graphs.
Yes, temporarily. In an inflationary gap, actual output exceeds YF and unemployment falls below the natural rate, but this isn't sustainable because rising wages and prices eventually pull the economy back toward YF.
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