Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics
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Transcript Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics
Eco 200 – Principles of
Macroeconomics
Chapter 10:Aggregate Expenditures
Consumption and Saving
Yd = C+S
S = Yd – C
C = a + bYd
a = intercept
b = slope
(= DC/DYd)
Saving and Dissaving
C > Yd: S < 0
C < Yd: S > 0
C = Yd: S = 0
MPC and MPS
MPC = marginal propensity to consume =
additional consumption resulting from an
additional dollar of disposable income
MPC = DC/DYd = slope of the consumption
function (b in the example above)
MPS = marginal propensity to save =
additional saving resulting from an additional
dollar of disposable income = DS/DYd
MPC + MPS = 1
C = a + bYd
S=?
S = -a + (1-b) Yd
APC and APS
Average propensity to consume (APC) =
C / Yd
Average propensity to save (APS) =
S / Yd
APC + APS = 1
When C > Yd, APC > 1, APS < 0
C = Yd, APC=1, APS = 0
C < Yd, APC < 1, APS > 0
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
0
40
100
120
200
200
300
280
400
360
500
440
S
APC
APS
MPC
MPS
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
S
0
40
-40
100
120
-20
200
200
0
300
280
20
400
360
40
500
440
60
APC
APS
MPC
MPS
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
S
APC
0
40
-40
-
100
120
-20
1.20
200
200
0
1.00
300
280
20
0.93
400
360
40
0.90
500
440
60
0.88
APS
MPC
MPS
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
S
APC
APS
0
40
-40
-
-
100
120
-20
1.20
-0.20
200
200
0
1.00
0.00
300
280
20
0.93
0.07
400
360
40
0.90
0.10
500
440
60
0.88
0.12
MPC
MPS
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
S
APC
APS
MPC
0
40
-40
-
-
-
100
120
-20
1.20
-0.20
0.8
200
200
0
1.00
0.00
0.8
300
280
20
0.93
0.07
0.8
400
360
40
0.90
0.10
0.8
500
440
60
0.88
0.12
0.8
MPS
Example: Consumption
function
Yd
C
S
APC
APS
MPC
MPS
0
40
-40
-
-
-
-
100
120
-20
1.20
-0.20
0.8
0.2
200
200
0
1.00
0.00
0.8
0.2
300
280
20
0.93
0.07
0.8
0.2
400
360
40
0.90
0.10
0.8
0.2
500
440
60
0.88
0.12
0.8
0.2
Determinants of consumption
The consumption function (as a
function of real GDP) will shift due to
changes in:
taxes and transfer payments
wealth
expectations
demographics
Investment
Investment is autonomous (it is
assumed that investment doesn’t
change when real GDP changes)
Determinants of investment
Investment spending is affected by:
the interest rate
profit expectations
technological change
cost of capital goods
capacity utilization
Volatility of investment
Investment is the most volatile component of
aggregate expenditures as a result of:
large fluctuations in interest rates
sudden changes in expectations
uneven rates of technological change
changes in tax policy
fluctuations in capacity utilization over the
business cycle
Government spending
autonomous
Net Exports
Exports – assumed to be autonomous
Imports – increase with GDP
X – declines as GDP rises
MPI
Marginal propensity to import = change
in imports that result from a one-dollar
increase in income = Dimports / DY
Y
Exports
Imports
X
0
20
0
20
100
20
10
10
200
20
20
0
300
20
30
-10
MPI = ?
Aggregate expenditures
AE = C + I + G + X
AE
AE
45-degree line
45-degree line
C+I+G
C+I
C
Y
C+I+G
C+I+G+X
Y