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Aggregate Expenditures

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Aggregate Expenditures Say s Law: supply creates its own demand Keynes: not all income spent on output produced underspending unsold inventories up ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aggregate Expenditures


1
Aggregate Expenditures
2
  • Says Law supply creates its own demand
  • Keynes not all income spent on output produced?
    underspending? unsold? inventories up? production
    cut? jobs cut? underspending
  • Not self-regulating, uninterrupted prosperity
  • Keynesian Economics Aggregate Expenditure Model

3
  • Keys
  • 1) U and I caused by saving and investment
    decisions
  • 2) Prices and wages downwardly inflexible
  • Costs, unions, expectations, tradition
  • 3) Internal and external factors affect

4
Simplifications
  • 1) Closed economy
  • 2) Ignore govt for now
  • 3) All saving personal
  • 4) Ignore depreciation and net foreign factor
    income (assume 0)
  • GDPNIPIDI

5
Consumption and Saving
  • Saving not spending DI C S
  • (not same as investment)
  • DI S (45 degree line)
  • Saving and Consumption Schedules
  • Break-Even Income (DIC S0)

6
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7
Propensities to Consume and Save
  • Average propensity to consume APC
    consumption/income APS saving/income
  • APS APC 1
  • Marginal Propensity to Consume MPC change
    consumption/ change in income
  • MPS MPC 1

8
Nonincome Determinants of Consumption and Saving
  • Wealth
  • Real and financial assets save to generate
    wealth increase w? C up and S down
  • Expectations
  • Will I have a job tomorrow? Will there by
    inflation, shortages?
  • Household Debt
  • Increase consumption past income home equity
    loans and refinancing
  • Taxation
  • GDP not equal DI? plot C and S against GDP taxes
    shift C and S in same direction

9
Shifts and Stability
  • Movement from one point to another change in
    amount consumed
  • Shift entire schedule change in the consumption
    schedule
  • Wealth, expectations, and debt shift schedules in
    opposite directions
  • Taxes shift both down

10
Investment
  • Private spending on new plant, capital equipment,
    machinery, etc.
  • Marginal benefit expected (real) rate of return
  • Marginal cost real interest rate on borrow money

11
Investment Demand Curve
  • How many dollars worth of investment projects
    have an expected rate of return of (cummulative)
  • Financial price of investment

IR
Investment
12
Shifts
  • Acquisition, Maintenance, and Operating Costs (of
    capital goods)
  • Higher costs? lower rate of return
  • Business Taxes
  • Reduces rate of return
  • Tech Changes
  • Typewriter? computer
  • Stock of Capital Goods on Hand
  • Excess capacity? ID down
  • Expectations
  • Expected rate of return

13
Investment Schedule
  • The amounts business firms collectively intend to
    invest at each possible level of GDP
  • Independent current DI or real output
  • Simplification level of GDP may induce more or
    less investment
  • Derived from investment demand curve and current
    real IR

14
IR
Inv
20
8
20
GDP
Inv
15
Instability of Investment
  • Durability
  • Indefinite useful life
  • Irregularity of Innovation
  • 1920s automobile
  • Variability of Profits
  • Current profits predict future
  • Variability of Expectations
  • Project current forward, often wrong

16
Equilibrium GDP
  • C I GDP
  • Output whose production will create total
    spending just sufficient to purchase that output
  • Unintended investment () or disinvestment (-) in
    inventories
  • Surpluses and shortages
  • Total spending (demand) lt total output (supply) ?
    GDP down
  • Total spending gt total output? GDP up

17
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18
Leakages-Injections Approach
  • Less direct, explains reason CIg?GDP except at
    equil.
  • Saving leakage (withdrawal from spending)?
    spending lt output
  • Not all output for consumption (capital goods)?
    investment injection
  • Leakage gt injection? C I ltGDP? above eq ? GDP
    falls
  • Injection gt leakage? C I gtGDP? below eq ?GDP
    rises
  • Other injections Exports and G

19
Unplanned Inventory increase
Unplanned Inventory decrease
S
S I
E
I
RGDP
20
Planned vs. Actual Investment
  • Planned investment and saving (not necessarily
    equal) and Actual investment and saving (which
    are definitionally equal)
  • Actual planned unplanned
  • Unplanned changes in inventory balance the
    equation saving and investment

21
  • The equality of planned investment and saving
    determine equilibrium level of GDP
  • How achieve e GDP?1) Diff S and PI? diff
    production and spending
  • 2) Diff production plans spending plans?
    unintended (dis)investment
  • 3) As long as unintended (dis)investment? revise
    production plans (up or down)
  • 4) e GDP where 0 (dis)investment
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