1 ECON 102.004 – Principles of Microeconomics S&W, Chapter 9 Capital Markets Instructor: Mehmet S. Tosun, Ph.D. Department of Economics University of Nevada,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
23 CHAPTER At Full Employment: The Classical Model.
Advertisements

Impacts of inflation.
MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS Suppliers are people who save money;Suppliers are people who save money; Demanders are people who borrow money;Demanders are.
Office Hours: Monday 3:00-4:00 – LUMS C85
Investment and Saving Decisions
A closed economy, market-clearing model
Demand for goods & services
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education Canada Fiscal Policy 24 CHAPTER.
Financial Sector: Loanable Funds Market
Capital Markets Savings, Investment, and Interest Rates.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich macro © 2002 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved CHAPTER THREE National.
Ch. 17: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets Objectives – The firm’s choice of the quantities of labor and capital to employ. – People’s choices of the.
CH. 8: THE ECONOMY AT FULL EMPLOYMENT: THE CLASSICAL MODEL
Introduction In the last lecture we defined and measured some key macroeconomic variables. Now we start building theories about what determines these key.
1 Aggregate Expenditure Components Chapter 24 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Saving, Investment, and the Financial System
Capital Markets. Interest Rates What are some major interest rates in financial markets? Be as specific as possible.
Consumption, Saving, and Investment
Defns: Physical capital : tools, instruments, machines, buildings,ect. Financial capital is the funds that firms use to buy and operate physical capital.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Chapter 4. 2 The Theory of Production Representative Agent Economy: all output is produced from labor and capital and in.
Ch. 18: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets
Pension systems during the financial and economic crisis Edward Whitehouse Social Policy division, OECD.
Source: Mankiw (2000) Macroeconomics, Chapter 3 p Determinants of Demand for Goods and Services Examine: how the output from production is used.
Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model
Chapter 8 The Classical Long-Run Model Part 1 CHAPTER 1.
... are the markets in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment. ... move the economy’s scarce resources.
Chapter 6 Measuring the price level
Chapter 9 Economic Growth and Rising Living Standards
Loanable Funds Market Chapter 24. TIPS Bond The US Treasury offers bonds whose principal and coupon payments increase with the inflation rate. Investors.
Chapter 13 We have seen how labor market equilibrium determines the quantity of labor employed, given a fixed amount of capital, other factors of production.
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
Basic Macroeconomic Relationships Chapter 10 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 ECON – Principles of Microeconomics S&W, Chapter 6 The Firm’s Costs Instructor: Mehmet S. Tosun, Ph.D. Department of Economics University of.
LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET. SUPPLY and DEMAND for LOANABLE FUNDS  Saving is the source of the supply of loanable funds. -For example, when a household makes.
1 Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model The relationship between the quantity of labor employed and real GDP What determines the full-employment.
The economy at Full Employment Lecture notes 4 Instructor: MELTEM INCE.
The Market for Loanable Funds  For the economy as a whole, savings always equals investment spending  In a closed economy, savings is equal to national.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 15 Government Spending and its Financing.
Slide 0 CHAPTER 3 National Income Outline of model A closed economy, market-clearing model Supply side  factor markets (supply, demand, price)  determination.
CHAPTER 3 National Income slide 0 In this chapter you will learn:  what determines the economy’s total output/income  how the prices of the factors of.
Chapter Saving, Investment, and the Financial System 18.
Chapter 10 Choices Involving Time Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written.
Review of the previous lecture 1. Total output is determined by  how much capital and labor the economy has  the level of technology 2. Competitive firms.
Household Behavior and Consumer Choice
1 THE ECONOMY AT FULL EMPLOYMENT: THE CLASSICAL MODEL 8 CHAPTER.
AMBA MACROECONOMICS LECTURER: JACK WU Financial System.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Provide a technical definition of recession and.
AS - AD and the Business Cycle CHAPTER 13 C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Provide.
Economics 202 Principles Of Macroeconomics Lecture 10 Investment, Savings and the Real Interest Rate The role of the Government Savings and Investment.
Introduction to Business © Thomson South-Western ChapterChapter Chapter 2 Measuring Economic Activity Economic Conditions Other Measures of Business Activity.
MACROECONOMICS © 2011 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved S E V E N T H E D I T I O N PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw C H A P.
124 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand. 125  What is the purpose of the aggregate supply-aggregate demand model?  What determines aggregate supply.
Aggregate Demand BY AARON, SEB AND ELENA. Definition of Aggregate Demand  Aggregate Demand is the total demand for goods and services produced in an.
Chapter 5 Consumer surplus Household choice in input markets.
Test Review Econ 322 Test Review Test 1 Chapters 1,2,8,3,4,7.
Macroeconomics Econ 2301 Dr. Frank Jacobson Coach Stuckey Chapter 11.
Chapter 9 Growth McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
MACROECONOMICS © 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw National Income: Where It Comes From.
1 ECON – Principles of Microeconomics S&W, Chapter 8 Labor Markets Instructor: Mehmet S. Tosun, Ph.D. Department of Economics University of Nevada,
TEST REVIEW MACRO UNIT-3.
5-1 Economics: Theory Through Applications. 5-2 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano 6 Chapter Household Behavior.
Rent, Interest, and Profit Rent, Interest, and Profit.
THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS. FINANCIAL MARKETS... are the markets in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment....
Outline Assumption of the model The labor market The aggregate production function The simple circular flow model Say’s law Leakages and injections The.
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Chapter 6 Consumer Choices PowerPoint Image Slideshow.
Module 29 The Market for Loanable Funds KRUGMAN'S
National Income: Where it Comes From and Where it Goes
Presentation transcript:

1 ECON – Principles of Microeconomics S&W, Chapter 9 Capital Markets Instructor: Mehmet S. Tosun, Ph.D. Department of Economics University of Nevada, Reno

2 Lecture Outline Households’ saving decision Time value of money Income and substitution effects Firm’s demand for capital Education and human capital

3 The Capital Market Where individuals, firms, and the government save and borrow money The savings decision is a choice between two goods: –goods today and goods in the future

4

5 Present and Future Consumption (continued) Consume w during the working period or w(1+r) in retirement or any compensation in between. Consume less now or more later, but must wait to consume. The relative cost of consuming earlier is 1+r

6 Example If the length of time between deposit and withdrawal of funds is 35 years and the real interest rate is 4%, then the amount received is –principal  (1 +.04)35 = 3.95 –A consumer receives $3.95 in 35 years for every $1 she deposits now. If the interest rate rises to 6% –A dollar saved today will grow into $7.69 in 35 years This means when the interest rate rises today's consumption is more expensive relative to future consumption.

7 The Time Value of Money Nominal interest rates are never negative. At an interest rate of 5%, $1 today is worth $1.05 next year: $1( ) = $1.05 = (1 + r). –Future Value = Present Value *(1 + r) We can turn this around. –$1 next year is worth less than $1 today since a value less than $1 will grow (at 5% interest) to exactly $1 next year. –This value is the present value of receiving $1 next year and is equal to $1/(1.05) = $.95. –Present Value = Future Value/(1 + r) –The present value is the value in today's money of $1 in the future.

8

9 The Time Value of Money Suppose an investment promises to give you the following returns: $10,000 one year from now followed by $15,000 two years from now and $50,000 three years from now. What is the most you should pay for this investment? (Notice that the total payments add up to $75,000 you should pay considerably less than this due to the time value of money) Never pay more than the present discounted value of the investment. We calculate this on the next slide as $59,054.

10

11 Saving and Changes in Interest Rates If the interest rate increases, the budget constraint rotates outward and gets steeper. As with any price change, an increase in the interest rate causes income and substitution effects.

12 Savings and Interest Rates

13 The Income and Substitution Effects for Savings For a saver the income and substitution effects work in opposite directions on savings. –The income effect: When r rises, a saver is richer and can afford more present and more future consumption. When present consumption increases, saving falls. –The substitution effect: When r rises, the price of present consumption increases relative to future consumption. Consumers reduce present consumption, so saving increases. Studies find that the substitution effect is stronger, so the supply of saving curve is upward sloping.

14 Inflation and the Real Rate of Interest The nominal interest rate tells us how savings grow in terms of dollars. The real interest rate tells us how savings grow in terms of purchasing power. The real interest rate r is the nominal interest rate R adjusted for inflation. – r = R   – r is a better measure of the rate of return on money since it measures the rate of return in terms of constant purchasing power.

15

16 Social Security and Savings Social Security –Affects need to save and has lowered overall level of saving On the other hand, private saving schemes have grown over the last 50 years as Social Security has become more generous. Why? –Increases in life expectancy have increased the need for retirement income faster than the generosity of Social Security. Age at which a worker qualifies to receive full Social Security benefits has increased from 65 years to 67 years. –Consumers want to enjoy more consumption during retirement years. –Young people are concerned their benefits will be cut so they save more during their working years.

17

18 The Demand for Loanable Funds Demand for funds is driven by firms that borrow savings to buy capital goods, plants, and so on. r is the price of loanable funds and also the price of capital goods. Firms hire or buy capital and borrow funds until the last unit of capital just pays for itself. The product of the last unit of capital is the MPK, which is downward sloping because capital is subject to diminishing returns. Firms borrow until MPK = the real interest rate. Firms borrow until the real returns equal the real costs of borrowing.

19 The Supply and Demand for Loanable Funds

20 The Supply and Demand for Loanable Funds Suppose a new technology increases firms' demand for capital. The demand for funds increases and its curve shifts right, and the interest rate rises.

21 Behavioral Perspective on Saving (a) The basic consumption smoothing model suggests households should save during peak earning years so that at retirement earnings fall but not consumption. –Evidence: when people retire both earnings and consumption fall. They have not saved enough for retirement.

22 Behavioral Perspective on Saving (b) Behavioral perspective on under-saving –Lack of self-control –For example: most smokers want to quit but say best time is tomorrow not today When tomorrow comes the best time to quit is still tomorrow and they never quit. –Behavioral perspective is supported by fact that much of U.S. saving is “forced saving,” or automatic savings: employer set aside for worker’s pension homeowners build up equity in house as they pay off mortgage income tax withholding generates refunds

23 Behavioral Perspective on Saving (c) High saving rates in some Asian countries ( % savings rates) explained by: –cultural factors –family size –age distribution of population

24 Behavioral Perspective on Saving (d) Behavioral insights may be especially useful in designing policies to affect savings. –Status quo effect suggests that the default option on saving plans is important. For 401(k) plans, if default is opt-in then people may save more.

25 Productivity (a) The output a firm or society produces depends on the number of hours worked and the productivity of those hours. Workers' productivity (and their wages) depend on education. Trade ‑ off: If in school, the student forgoes income or leisure in return for higher future income.

26 Productivity (b)

27 Human Capital (a) Human Capital –The costs of college include explicit outlays: tuition, room, board, books, and caffeine. –They also include the opportunity costs of time spent in school: forgone wages and leisure. –Investment in education is a form of human capital, similar to physical capital. –The United States invests an enormous amount in human capital, both publicly and privately. –The government alone spends a quarter of a trillion dollars a year on education. –Economists estimate that three ‑ quarters of all capital is human capital.

28

29 Education Expenditures in OECD Countries COUNTRIES Annual Expenditure on Educational Institutions per student (2002)* Annual Expenditure on Educational Institutions per student relative to GDP per capita (2002) Total Public Expenditure on Education as a percentage of Total Public Expenditure (2002) Total Public Expenditure on Education as a percentage of GDP (2002) Australia19, Austria28, Belgium13, Denmark15, France20, Germany21, Hungary11, Ireland15, Italy14, Japan13, Mexico3, Netherlands18, New Zealand10, Norway5, Poland5, m4.1 Portugal11, Spain10, Sweden18, Switzerland28, United Kingdom11, United States17, OECD Average14, *In equivalent US dollars converted using PPPs for GDP, based on full time equivalents Source: OECD Education at a Glance, 2005.

30