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Consumption
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1
Chapter 12: Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier
End of Chapter 10
1
ECON 151 – PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS
Materials include content from Pearson Addison-Wesley which has been modified by the instructor and displayed with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model To simplify the income determination model
1. Businesses pay no indirect taxes (sales tax)
2. Businesses distribute all profits to shareholders
3. There is no depreciation
4. The economy is closed; no foreign trade
12-2
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model (cont'd) Real Disposable Income
Real GDP minus net taxes, or after-tax real income
Consumption Spending on new goods and services out of a household’s
current income
Whatever is not consumed is saved.
Consumption includes such things as buying food and going to a concert.
12-3
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model (cont'd) Saving
The act of not consuming all of one’s current income
Whatever is not consumed is, by definition, saved.
Saving is an action measured over time (a flow).
Savings are a stock, an accumulation resulting from the act of saving in the past.
Dissaving
Negative saving; a situation in which spending exceeds income
12-4
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model (cont'd) Consumption plus saving equals
disposable income.
Saving equals disposable income minus consumption.
12-5
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model (cont'd) Consumption Goods
Goods bought by households to use up, such as food and movies
Capital Goods
Producer durables; nonconsumable goods that firms use to make other goods
12-6
Some Simplifying Assumptions in a Keynesian Model (cont'd) Investment
Spending by businesses on things such as machines and buildings, which can be used to produce goods and services in the future
The investment part of real GDP is the portion that will be used in the process of producing goods in the future.
12-7
Spending on Human Capital: Investment or Consumption? Economists define human capital as the
accumulation of investments and training in education.
From this perspective, educational expenses should be regarded as a form of investment spending.
Nevertheless, in official U.S. government statistics, household spending on education is classified as consumption.
12-8
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving
In the classical model, the supply of saving was determined by the rate of interest.
The higher the rate, the more people wanted to save, the less they wanted to consume.
Keynes argued that real saving and consumption decisions depend primarily on a household’s real disposable income.
12-9
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Keynes was concerned with changes in AD as reflected in planned expenditures.
His initial focus was on Consumption.
12-10
AD = C + I + G + X
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Consumption Function
The relationship between amount consumed and disposable income
A consumption function tells us how much people plan to consume at various levels of disposable income.
12-11
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Dissaving
Negative saving; a situation in which spending exceeds income
Dissaving can occur when a household is able to borrow or use up existing assets.
12-12
Table 12-1 Real Consumption and Saving Schedules: A Hypothetical Case
12-13
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
45-Degree Reference Line
The line along which planned real expenditures equal real GDP per year
On the following graph, DPI is labeled as YD. However, under the Keynesian simplifying assumptions, when all components of AD are reflected, the label becomes Y for real GDP.
12-14
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Autonomous Consumption
The part of consumption that is independent of the level of disposable income
Changes in autonomous consumption shift the consumption function.
12-15
Figure 12-1 The Consumption and Saving Functions
12-16
Figure 12-1 The Consumption and Saving Functions (cont'd)
12-17
Figure 12-1 The Consumption and Saving Functions (cont'd)
12-18
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Average Propensity to Consume (APC)
Real consumption divided by real disposable income
The proportion of total disposable income that is consumed
12-19
APC =Real consumption
Real disposable income
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Average Propensity to Save (APS)
Real saving divided by real disposable income (DI)
Saved proportion of real DI
12-20
APS =Real saving
Real disposable income
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)
The ratio of the change in real consumption to the change in real disposable income
12-21
MPC =Change in real consumption
Change in real disposable income
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)
The ratio of the change in saving to the change in disposable income
12-22
MPS =Change in real saving
Change in real disposable income
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Some relationships
Average propensity to consume and average propensity to save must sum to 100% of total income. (APC + APS = 1)
Marginal propensity to consume and marginal propensity to save must sum to 100% of the change in income. (MPC + MPS = 1)
12-23
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Causes of shifts in the consumption function
A change besides real disposable income will cause the consumption function to shift.
Non-income determinants of consumption Population
Wealth
12-24
Determinants of Planned Consumption and Planned Saving (cont'd)
Wealth
The stock of assets owned by a person, household, firm or nation
For a household, wealth can consist of a house, cars, personal belongings, stocks, bonds, bank accounts, and cash.
12-25
Determinants of Investment
Investment, you will remember, consists of expenditures on new buildings and equipment.
Gross private domestic investment has been volatile.
Consider the planned investment function, and shifts in the function.
12-26
Figure 12-2 Planned Real Investment, Panel (a)
12-27
Figure 12-2 Planned Real Investment, Panel (b)
12-28
Determining Equilibrium Real GDP (cont'd) Adding the investment function
12-29
AD = C + I + G + X
Figure 12-4 Combining Consumption and Investment
12-30
Determining Equilibrium Real GDP (cont'd) Saving and investment: planned
versus actual
Only at equilibrium real GDP will planned saving equal actual saving.
Planned investment equals actual investment.
Hence planned saving is equal to planned investment.
12-31
Figure 12-5 Planned and Actual Rates of Saving and Investment
12-32
Determining Equilibrium Real GDP (cont'd) Unplanned increases in business inventories
Consumers purchase fewer goods and services than anticipated
This leaves firms with unsold products
Unplanned decreases in business inventories
Business will increase production of goods and services and increase employment
12-33
Keynesian Equilibrium with Government and the Foreign Sector Added
To this point we have ignored the role of government in our model.
We also left out the foreign sector of the economy in our model.
Let’s think about what happens when we add these elements.
12-34
Keynesian Equilibrium with Government and the Foreign Sector Added (cont'd)
Government (G): C + I + GFederal, state, and local
Does not include transfer payments Is autonomous Lump-sum taxes = G
Lump-Sum TaxA tax that does not depend on income or the
circumstances of the taxpayer
12-35
Keynesian Equilibrium with Government and the Foreign Sector Added (cont'd)
The Foreign Sector: C + I + G + X
Net exports (X) equals exports minus imports
Depends on international economic conditions
Autonomous—independent of real national income
12-36
Table 12-2 The Determination of Equilibrium Real GDP with Government and Net Exports Added
12-37
Keynesian Equilibrium with Government and the Foreign Sector Added (cont'd)
Determining the equilibrium level of GDP per year
We are now in a position to determine the equilibrium level of real GDP per year.
Remember that equilibrium always occurs when total planned real expenditures equal real GDP.
12-38
Figure 12-6 The Equilibrium Level of Real GDP
12-39
Recall that planned AD = C + I + G + X
Although not identified as such by Keynes, the 45-degree reference line can be thought of as actual expenditures or AS.
Equilibrium will occur where AD = AS.
The Equilibrium Level of Real GDP Observations
If C + I + G + X = Y Equilibrium GDP
If C + I + G + X > Y Unplanned drop in inventories Businesses increase output Y returns to equilibrium
If C + I + G + X < Y Unplanned rise in inventories Businesses cut output Y returns to equilibrium
12-40
The Multiplier
Multiplier
The ratio of the change in the equilibrium level of real national income to the change in autonomous expenditures
The number by which a change in autonomous real investment or autonomous real consumption is multiplied to get the change in equilibrium real GDP
12-41
Table 12-3 The Multiplier Process
12-42
The Multiplier (cont'd)
The multiplier formula
12-43
Multiplier = 11 - MPC
= 1MPS
The Multiplier (cont'd)
By taking a few numerical examples, you can demonstrate to yourself an important property of the multiplier.
The smaller the MPS, the larger the multiplier.
The larger the MPC, the larger the multiplier.
12-44
The Multiplier (cont'd)
Measuring the change in equilibrium income from a change in autonomous spending
12-45
Change in equilibrium real GDP = Multiplier x Change in autonomous spending
The Multiplier (cont'd) Significance of the
multiplier It is possible that a
relatively small change in consumption or investment can trigger a much larger change in real GDP.
12-46
How a Change in Real Autonomous Spending Affects Real GDP When the Price Level Can Change
So far our examination of how changes in real autonomous spending affects equilibrium real GDP has considered a situation in which the price level remains unchanged.
Our equilibrium analysis has only considered how AD shifts in response to autonomous consumption, investment, government spending, net exports.
12-47
How a Change in Real Autonomous Spending Affects Real GDP When the Price Level Can Change (cont'd)
When we take into account the aggregate supply curve, we must also consider responses of the equilibrium price level to a multiplier-induced change in AD.
12-48
Figure 12-7 Effect of a Rise in Autonomous Spending on Equilibrium Real GDP
12-49
The Relationship Between Aggregate Demand and the C + I + G + X Curve
There is clearly a relationship; aggregate demand consists of consumption, investment, government, and the foreign sector.
12-50
The Relationship Between Aggregate Demand and the C + I + G + X Curve (cont'd)
There is a major difference
C + I + G + X curve drawn with price level constant
AD curve drawn with the price level changing
12-51
The Relationship Between Aggregate Demand and the C + I + G + X Curve (cont'd)
To derive the aggregate demand curve from the C + I + G + X curve, we must now allow the price level to change.
Since we know that at higher prices, real spending is diminished, we can show two C + I + G + X curves at different price levels.
We can then plot the equilibrium outcomes of each as AD at the two price levels as reflected on the AS-AD model graph.
12-52
Figure 12-8 The Relationship Between AD and the C + I + G + X Curve
12-53
5454
Chapter 12: Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier
End of Chapter 10
54
ECON 151 – PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS
Materials include content from Pearson Addison-Wesley which has been modified by the instructor and displayed with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.