Also known as the... Macro – Unit 3 – part 8. 2 primary models that represent our macro-economy: (2) The Keynesian model / Multiplier model which can.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 CHAPTER.
Advertisements

AE = [ W + Y e – PL – r – mpc ∙ T + I + G + X ] + { mpc – mpm } Y Y = [ W + Y e – PL – r – mpc ∙ T + I + G + X ] + { mpc – mpm } Y PL = [ W + Y e – r –
The Multiplier Effect.
Income and Expenditures Equilibrium. 2 Equilibrium Real GDP: mpc =.7, mpi =.1 (1) Real GDP (Y) (2) Consumption (C) (3) Investment (I) (4) Gov’t Spending.
© 2010 Pearson Education Canada. A voice can be a whisper or fill Toronto’s Molson Amphitheatre, depending on the amplification. A limousine with good.
Economic Instability: A Critique Of The Self Regulating Economy.
Aggregate Demand - Aggregate Supply Equilibrium. The Fixed-Price Keynesian Model: An Economy Below Full – Employment Focus on the Demand Side.
28 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
Aggregate Expenditure
Keynesian Expansionary Fiscal Policy
The Keynesian Theory C, S & I  Aggregate Consumption (C)  Aggregate Saving (S)  Planned Investment (I)  The Determination of Equilibrium Output/Income.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. The Multiplier Model Chapter 10.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
AD’s Role in a Recession and Recovery
EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL
Chapter Twenty Four Aggregate Expenditure and Equilibrium Output.
The Investment Function and Consumption as a Function of Real National Income J.A.SACCO.
Eco 6351 Economics for Managers Chapter 12. Fiscal Policy Prof. Vera Adamchik.
The Keynesian Model in Action To complete the Keynesian model by adding the government and the foreign sector.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano 21 Chapter PART V THE GOODS.
AGGREGATE EXPENDITURE AND EQUILIBRIUM OUTPUT
Government Policies to Address… Macro – Unit 5 – part 2 and.
Lecture 5 Business Cycles (1): Aggregate Expenditure and Multiplier 1.
Module 16- Consumption, Income, and the Multiplier J.A.SACCO.
Capter 16 Output and Aggregate Demand 1 Chapter 16: Begg, Vernasca, Fischer, Dornbusch (2012).McGraw Hill.
1 ECON203 Principles of Macroeconomics Topic: Expenditure Multipliers: The Keynesian Model Dr. Mazharul Islam 9W/10/2013.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich CHAPTER TEN Aggregate Demand I macro © 2004 Worth Publishers, all rights.
Income and Expenditure Chapter 11 THIRD EDITIONECONOMICS andMACROECONOMICS.
1 Chapter 18 The Keynesian Model Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002South-Western College Publishing.
In his classic "The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money" Keynes telling about two important things: If you find your income going up,
Unit 3 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply: Fluctuations in Outputs and Prices.
Income and Expenditure. As people earn more income, they spend more, but also save more In percentage terms, people with higher incomes spend less and.
Marginal Propensity to Consume ● Measures the ratio of the change in consumption to the change in disposable income that produces the change in consumption.
Chapter 21 The determination of national income David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 6th Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2000 Power Point.
1 Chapter 18 Tutorial The Keynesian Model ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Consumption & Savings MPC, MPS & Multiplier Analysis.
Learning Objectives: Aggregate Expenditures LO4: See how government’s budget balance and the balance of trade both relate to national income LO5: Understand.
Aggregate Expenditures
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Chapter 20 Output and aggregate demand David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 9th Edition, McGraw-Hill,
11 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS © 2014 Pearson Addison-Wesley After studying this chapter, you will be able to:  Explain how expenditure plans are determined.
National Income and Price Determination Macro Unit III.
The Multiplier The Multiplier and the Marginal Propensities to Consume and Save Ignoring imports and income taxes, the marginal propensity to consume determines.
1. DETERMINING THE LEVEL OF CONSUMPTION Learning Objectives 1.Explain and graph the consumption function and the saving function, explain what the slopes.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright  2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. THE MULTIPLIER MODEL THE MULTIPLIER MODEL Chapter 10.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada Chapter 6 Determination of National Income.
ECN 202: Principles of Macroeconomics Nusrat Jahan Lecture-10 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply.
Topic 3: Fiscal Policy Circular Flow Investment Taxes and Government Spending 1.
Fiscal Policy Chapter 12 Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist CHAPTER 9 The Multiplier Model Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
The Aggregate Expenditures Model. Aggregate Expenditure Model (Also known as the “Keynesian cross model” The amount of goods and services produced and.
Unit-3 Macro Review Consumption, Saving & AD/AS Model.
Practice Question #1 full employment government spending (G) increases Assume the economy is in equilibrium at full employment. If government spending.
1 Sect. 4 - National Income & Price Determination Module 16 - Income & Expenditure What you will learn: The nature of the multiplier The meaning of the.
 Disposable is your net income Your save or spend that income  Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC) Is the increase in consumer spending when disposable.
1 The Keynesian Model in Action. 2 What is the purpose of this chapter? To complete the Keynesian model by adding the government (G) and the foreign sector.
Student-Centered Learning. Module Income and Expenditure 16.
UNIT 3- Aggregate Supply and Demand. AD Basics AD = C + I + G +Xn What causes a movement along the curve? What causes a shift in the curve?
Agenda, Check Module 17/18 **During notes check, watch video on multiplier effect Go over concepts Practice HW: 19/20.
Chapter 13 – Private Sector Components of Aggregate Demand Read pages I Determining the Level of Consumption A)Consumption and Disposable Personal.
1 FINA 353 Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 8 Topic: Expenditure Multipliers: The Keynesian Model Dr. Mazharul Islam.
Intro to Macro Unit III (Acronyms & Symbols)
Classical economic thought was widely accepted prior to the 1930’s
A Basic Model of the Determination of GDP in the Short Term Chapter 16
Income and Expenditure
28 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS C l i c k e r Q u e s t i o n s.
CHAPTER 11 LECTURE EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL
Mini Quiz Which of the following is the formula for Aggregate Expenditures? a. ΔY/ΔI b. C + I + G + NX c. 1/(1-MPC) d. ΔC/ΔDI (multiplier) (multiplier)
Introduction to the Keynesian System
Aggregate demand and aggregate supply
Presentation transcript:

also known as the... Macro – Unit 3 – part 8

2 primary models that represent our macro-economy: (2) The Keynesian model / Multiplier model which can make numeric predictions. (1) The AS/AD model – which provides us with expected outcomes in general in terms of increases/decreases

How much can $50 buy in this economy? $50 3 of 21

Let’s say you choose the pedicure. $50 The $50 you spend there is taken by the pedicurist to the Chinese restaurant.

Then the chef at the Chinese restaurant takes that same $50 to buy an I-Pod Shuffle. $50

This is the idea behind the Multiplier Model …. $1.00 in expenditures can increase total income for your economy by $4.00 Households Demand G&S $ Firms Supply G&S $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Demand Resources Land, Labor, Capital, Entrepreneurship resources Supply Resources

Let’s examine...Aggregate expenditures - - total amount of spending on goods & services in the economy. Consists of... 1) Autonomous expenditures (AE O ) – expenditures that do not vary with income. We would have spent this money even if we had no income. 2) Induced expenditures – expenditures that change as Y changes. A. 7 of 21

Aggregate Expenditures Function: Aggregate Expenditure s = autonomous expenditure s induced expenditure s +...represented mathematically.... AE =AE O + mpeY

We consumers have an mpe - marginal propensity to expend – or mpc - marginal propensity to consume. B. For each additional dollar we get we can … or

1. Let’s say Anne gets $100 for her birthday and she tends to spend around ¾ of all she gets. 3. mpc =.5  Y = $1000 What will be the change in aggregate expenditures? $100 2.mpe =.2  Y = $500 What will be the change in agg expend? 4. mpc =.8  Y = -$800 What will be the change in aggregate expenditures? Her mpe =.____ Her new expenditures will be $_____ $ $640$500

The marginal propensity to expend is an aggregation of the components of aggregate expenditures. What are the components....what are our expenditures? ____ + ____ + ____ + ( ____ - ____ ) CIGXM There is a marginal propensity for each of these...mp to import...mp to invest...etc. C. 11 of 21

____ + ____ + ____ + ( ____ - ____ ) CIGXM The mp of which component is the most important to determine the mpe? mpc = marginal propensity to consume (b/c consumption is the biggest part of expenditures) mps = marginal propensity to save mpc + mps = 1 because when people get additional income they either __________ it or ________ it. spendsave

5. mpc =.7  Y = $100 How much of the additional income will the consumer spend? save? Practice 6. mps =.25  Y = $4000 How much of the additional income will the consumer spend? 7. mpc =.9  Y = -$1000 What will consumer do? Consumer will cut spending by $900 Save $30Spend $70 Spend $3,000

Multiplier Equation equilibrium Y = Multiplier x Autonomous Expenditures Expenditures Multiplier – tells us how much income will change in response to a change in autonomous expenditures Multiplier = __1___ (1 - mpe) If mpe =.5, what is the multiplier? 2 D. Knowing the mpc allows you to calculate what will be the GDP or equilibrium Y for an economy

Multiplier Equation equilibrium Y = Multiplier x Autonomous Expenditures If the multiplier = 2, autonomous expenditures = $7,000, what is equilibrium Y? $14, mpc =.75, autonomous expenditures = $10,000, what is equilibrium Y? 9. mps =.2, autonomous expenditures = $5,000, what is equilibrium Y? Practice $40,000 $25, of 21

D. There are multiplier equations for all possible types of spending in an economy …. Investment Multiplier – for when there’s new spending on investment such as new factory, machinery, etc. Government Spending Multiplier – for when there’s new gov’t spending such as new bridge, school, etc. = __1___ (1 - mpc) = __1___ (1 - mpc)

Tax Multiplier – for when there’s a change in taxes = -- __mpc__ _ mps Note … (1) The tax multiplier is always negative. (2) The gov’t spending multiplier & investment multiplier are equal. (3) The tax multiplier has a weaker impact than the gov’t spending multiplier.

PL Q=realGDP=Y LRAS YFYF AD 1 SRAS Y1Y1 AD PL So if you’re told the government would like to increase spending but not shift _____ thus causing ____________ …. Then would the gov’t need to increase taxes or decrease taxes to counteract the increase in gov’t spending? inflation AD Increase taxes so cosumers will have less disposable income

And should the gov’t increase taxes by …. … the same amount … more than the increase in gov’t spending … less than the increase? PL Q=realGDP=Y LRAS YFYF AD 1 SRAS Y1Y1 AD PL 0 19 of 21

There are often questions “what would Keynesian model say about..?” Your answer should not contain PL or inflation. E. Keynesian Model does not make any consideration of PL; prices are considered constant.

1. An important assumption in Keynesian theory is that (A) Prices are rigid downward and decreases in aggregate demand will lead to an increase in unemployment. (B) Prices rigidity will cause downturns in the economy to auto-correct. (C) When aggregate demand is inadequate, prices will fall. (D) When interest rates are high, many businesses borrow money. (E) Changes in the money supply are the major cause of changes in real output and price level Which choices can we rule out automatically? 21 of 21