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The Aggregate Expenditures Model 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Presentation on theme: "The Aggregate Expenditures Model 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Aggregate Expenditures Model 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

2 Assumptions and Simplifications Use the Keynesian aggregate expenditures model Prices are fixed GDP = DI Begin with private, closed economy Consumption spending Investment spending LO1 11-2

3 Consumption and Investment r and i (percent) Investment (billions of dollars) (a) Investment demand curve ID 20 8 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) (b) Investment schedule 20 Investment (billions of dollars) IgIg Investment Demand CurveInvestment Schedule 20 Investment demand curve Investment schedule 20 LO1 11-3

4 Equilibrium GDP Determination of the Equilibrium Levels of Employment, Output, and Income: A Private Closed Economy (1) Possible Levels of Employment, Millions (2) Real Domestic Output (and Income) (GDP = DI),*Billio ns (3) Consumption (C), Billions (4) Saving (S), Billions (5) Investment (I g ), Billions (6) Aggregate Expenditure (C+I g ), Billions (7) Unplanned Changes in Inventories, (+ or -) (8) Tendency of Employment, Output, and Income (1) 40 $370$375$-5$20$395$-25Increase (2) 45 390 0 20 410 -20Increase (3) 50 410 405 5 20 425 -15Increase (4) 55 430 420 10 20 440 -10Increase (5) 60 450 435 15 20 455 -5Increase (6) 65 470 450 20 470 0Equilibrium (7) 70 490 465 25 20 485 +5Decrease (8) 75 510 480 30 20 500 +10Decrease (9) 80 530 495 35 20 515 +15Decrease (10) 85 550 510 40 20 530 +20Decrease * If depreciation and net foreign factor income are zero, government is ignored and it is assumed that all saving occurs in the household sector of the economy, then GDP as a measure of domestic output is equal to NI,PI, and DI. Household income = GDP LO1 11-4

5 Equilibrium GDP 530 510 490 470 450 430 410 390 370 45° 370 390 410 430 450 470 490 510 530 550 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures, C + I g (billions of dollars) C I g = $20 billion Aggregate expenditures C = $450 billion C + I g (C + I g = GDP) Equilibrium point LO1 11-5

6 Planned and Unplanned Expenditures Aggregate expenditure equals aggregate income and real GDP. But aggregate planned expenditure might not equal real GDP because firms can end up with larger or smaller inventories than they had intended.

7 Production takes time Production “for contract” and “production “for market.” Production InventoriesSales + -

8 Aesop’s Bottles B.C. 400 Investment Plans Planned spending on buildings, equipment, and tools 20,000 drachmas Planned inventory investment 0 drachmas Value of inventories on Dec. 31, 401 B. C. 11,000 drachmas Value of inventories on Dec. 31, 400 B.C. 13,500 drachmas Unplanned inventory investment in 400 B.C. 2,500 drachmas Actual investment in 400 B.C. 22,500 drachmas

9 Other Features of Equilibrium GDP Saving equals planned investment Saving is a leakage of spending Investment is an injection of spending No unplanned changes in inventories Firms do not change production LO2 11-9

10 Changes in Equilibrium GDP 510 490 470 450 430 45° 430 450 470 490 510 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) Increase in investment (C + I g ) 0 Decrease in investment (C + I g ) 2 (C + I g ) 1 LO3 11-10

11 Adding International Trade Include net exports spending in aggregate expenditures Private, open economy Exports create production, employment, and income Subtract spending on imports X n can be positive or negative LO4 11-11

12 The Net Export Schedule Two Net Export Schedules (in Billions) (1) Level of GDP (2) Net Exports, X n1 (X > M) (3) Net Exports, X n2 (X < M) $370$+5$-5 390 +5 -5 410 +5 -5 430 +5 -5 450 +5 -5 470 +5 -5 490 +5 -5 510 +5 -5 530 +5 -5 550 +5 -5 LO4 11-12

13 Net Exports and Equilibrium GDP Real GDP +5 0 -5 Net exports, X n (billions of dollars) Real domestic product GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) 510 490 470 450 430 45° 430 450 470 490 510 Aggregate expenditures with positive net exports C + I g Aggregate expenditures with negative net exports C + I g +X n2 C + I g +X n1 X n1 X n2 Positive net exports Negative net exports 450470490 LO4 11-13

14 International Economic Linkages Prosperity abroad Can increase U.S. exports Exchange rates Depreciate the dollar to increase exports A caution on tariffs and devaluations Other countries may retaliate Lower GDP for all LO4 11-14

15 Global Perspective Source: World Trade Organization, http://www.wto.org.http://www.wto.org LO4 11-15

16 Adding the Public Sector Government purchases and equilibrium GDP Government spending is subject to the multiplier Taxation and equilibrium GDP Lump sum tax Taxes are subject to the multiplier DI = GDP LO4 11-16

17 Government Purchases and Eq. GDP The Impact of Government Purchases on Equilibrium GDP (1) Real Domestic Output and Income (GDP=DI), Billions (2) Consumption (C), Billions (3) Saving (S), Billions (4) Investment (I g ), Billions (5) Net Exports (X n ), Billions (6) Government Purchases (G), Billions (7) Aggregate Expenditures (C+I g +X n +G), Billions (2)+(4)+(5)+(6) Exports (X) Imports (M) (1) $370$375$-5$20$10 $20$415 (2) 390390 0 20 10 20 430 (3) 410405 5 20 10 20 445 (4) 430420 10 20 10 20 460 (5) 450435 15 20 10 20 475 (6) 470450 20 10 20 490 (7) 490465 25 20 10 20 505 (8) 510480 30 20 10 20 520 (9) 530495 35 20 10 20 535 (10) 550510 40 20 10 20 550 LO4 11-17

18 Government Purchases and Eq. GDP 45° 470 550 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) C Government spending of $20 billion C + I g + X n C + I g + X n + G LO4 11-18

19 Taxation and Equilibrium GDP Determination of the Equilibrium Levels of Employment, Output, and Income: Private and Public Sectors (1) Real Domestic Output and Income (GDP=DI), Billions (2) Taxes (T), Billions (3) Disposable Income (DI), Billions, (1)-(2) (4) Consump- tion (C), Billions (5) Saving (S), Billions (6) Invest- ment (I g ), Billions (7) Net Exports (X n ), Billions (8) Govern- ment Pur- chases (G), Billions (9) Aggregate Expendi- tures (C+I g +X n +G), Billions (4)+(6)+(7) +(8) Export s (X) Import s (M) (1) $370$20$350$360$-10$20$10 $20$400 (2) 39020370375 -5 20 10 20 415 (3) 41020390 0 20 10 20 430 (4) 430204104055 20 10 20 445 (5) 4502043042010 20 10 20 460 (6) 4702045043515 20 10 20 475 (7) 4902047045020 10 20 490 (8) 5102049046525 20 10 20 505 (9) 5302051048030 20 10 20 520 (10) 5502053049535 20 10 20 535 LO4 11-19

20 Taxation and Equilibrium GDP 45° 490 550 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) $15 billion decrease in consumption from a $20 billion increase in taxes C a + I g + X n + G C + I g + X n + G LO4 11-20

21 Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Recessionary expenditure gap Insufficient aggregate spending Spending below full-employment GDP Increase G and/or decrease T Inflationary expenditure gap Too much aggregate spending Spending exceeds full-employment GDP Decrease G and/or increase T LO5 11-21

22 Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Real GDP (a) Recessionary expenditure gap Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) 530 510 490 45° 490 510 530 AE 0 AE 1 Full employment Recessionary expenditure gap = $5 billion LO5 11-22

23 Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Real GDP (b) (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) 530 510 490 45° 490 510 530 AE 0 AE 2 Full employment Inflationary expenditure gap = $5 billion LO5 11-23

24 Application: The Recession of 2007-09 December 2007 recession began Aggregate expenditures declined Consumption spending declined Investment spending declined Recessionary expenditure gap LO5 11-24

25 Application: The Recession of 2007-09 Federal government undertook Keynesian policies Tax rebate checks $787 billion stimulus package LO5 11-25

26 Say’s Law, Great Depression, Keynes Classical economics Say’s Law Economy will automatically adjust Laissez-faire Keynesian economics Cyclical unemployment can occur Economy will not correct itself Government should actively manage macroeconomic instability 11-26

27 “Supply creates its own demand.” By producing goods and services, firms create a total demand for goods and services equal to what they have produced. Say’s Law 1 1 J.B. Say. Treatise on Political Economy, 1803. Say’s law apparently rules out the possibility of a widespread glut of goods.

28 Resource Markets Product Markets Households Firms Factor Payments Income S C Keynes: No guarantee that S will be offset by Planned I

29 The Classical view Market industrialized economies are inherently stable and tend automatically to full employment. Government policies that aim to improve the performance of the economy do more harm than good. “Laissez-faire.”

30 The Keynesian View John Maynard Keynes (1936). The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money Market, industrialized economies are inherently unstable and do not automatically tend to full employment. Private spending (and most importantly, investment spending) is volatile—causing business cycle fluctuations. “The economy needs to be stabilized, the economy can be stabilized, the economy should be stabilized” (Franco Modigliani). Keynesian economics is an attack on the Classical theory. J.M. Keynes


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