6. Page 224 Businesses are net borrowers in financial markets while households are net savers…
7. Page 224 Government receives net inflows of taxes from businesses and households and is a net borrower in financial markets…
8. Page 224 Businesses make investment expenditures, Governments makes expenditures, and Households make consumption expenditures
9. Page 224 Businesses receive funds from total expenditures in product markets while households, who own businesses, receive wages, rents, interest and business in resource markets profits where they provide labor and capital services…
23. Page 228 Autonomous or fixed consumption Planned Consumption Function The slope of the consumption function is the marginal propensity to consume (MPC), or C ÷ Y D where Y D represents disposable income.
24. Page 228 Planned Consumption Function The consumption function in this graph can be expressed graphically as shown below. C = A C + MPC(DPI)
25. Page 228 Consumer expenditures would be $3,600 if disposable income was equal to $3,000. Consumers would be dis-saving by $600. Planned Consumption Function C = $1,500 + .70($3,000) = $3,600
26. Page 228 An increase in dis- posable income to $4,000 would raise expenditures to $4,300. Dis-saving would fall to $300. Planned Consumption Function C = $1,500 + .70($4,000) = $4,300
27. Page 228 An increase in disposable income to $5,000 would raise expenditures to $5,000. Dis-saving would fall to zero. Planned Consumption Function C = $1,500 + .70($5,000) = $5,000
28. Savings vs. Consumption We said that the slope of the consumption function was the marginal propensity to consume , or: MPC = C ÷ DPI Savings is defined as S = DPI – C And, therefore, the marginal propensity to save is MPS = 1.0 – MPC Page 228 and 230
29. When the savings rate rises significantly, a recession is often near.
30. Page 228 A role for fiscal policy here: A cut in the tax rate increases consump- tion. An increase in the tax rate decreases consumption. Planned Consumption Function
31. Page 228 A role for fiscal policy here: A cut in the tax rate increases consump- tion. An increase in the tax rate decreases consumption. Planned Consumption Function
32. Page 230 Real Wealth Effect Suppose stock market prices rose, increasing real wealth of consumers by $700.
33. Page 230 Real Wealth Effect This would increase the intercept by $700,
34. Page 230 Real Wealth Effect C = $2,200 + .70($4,000) = $5,000 This shifts the curve upward for given income level, boosts consumer spending to $5,000. This raises dis-saving to $1,000, raises debt relative to income, and can be inflationary…..
35. Page 233 Planned Investment Function Level of autonomous investment spending I = A I – MEI(i)
36. Page 233 Planned Investment Function The slope of the investment function is the marginal efficiency of investment, or: MEI = I ÷ i I = A I – MEI(i)
37. Page 233 Planned Investment Function Level of investment expenditures would be $250 at an interest rate of 9 percent if MEI = 25. I = $475 – 25(9.0)
38. Page 233 Planned Investment Function Should interest rates fall to 7% as a result of events in the money market, investment expenditures would increase from $250 to $300. I = $475 – 25(7.0)
39. Page 233 Effects of Profit Expectations I = $525 – 25(7.0) An increase in profit expectations would cause businesses to expand their planned investment expenditures by $50 at the same interest rate
46. Aggregate Expenditures Aggregate expenditures equation: AE = $2,680+0.70(NI-Tax) where national output equals national income (NI) and Tax is based upon last year’s income (Tax = $400). Page 235
47. Aggregate Expenditures Aggregate expenditures equation: AE = $2,680+0.70(NI-Tax) where national output equals national income (NI) and Tax is based upon last year’s income (Tax = $400). If national income is $6,000, then AE = $2,680+0.70($6,000 - $400) = $6,600 which represents the first line in Table 12.4 Page 235
48. Aggregate Expenditures Aggregate expenditures equation: AE = $2,680+0.70(NI-Tax) where national output equals national income (NI) and Tax is based upon last year’s income (Tax = $400). If national income is $6,000, then AE = $2,680+0.70($6,000 - $400) = $6,600 which represents the first line in Table 12.4 Repeating this for other levels of income gives us the graph on page 235 Page 236
49. Page 236 Total autonomous domestic spending… Aggregate Expenditures Curve
50. Page 236 Point where spending equals output… Aggregate Expenditures Curve
52. Page 238 Aggregate Supply Curve Three distinct ranges of aggregate supply curve
53. Page 238 Aggregate Supply Curve Maximum potential output in the short run… End of depression or Keynesian range
54. Page 238 Y FE represents full employment output Y E represents current or actual output Y POT represents potential or maximum output Product Market Equilibrium
55. Page 238 Product Market Equilibrium Planned spending exceeds full employment output, causing higher inflationary pressures in economy. Planned spending less than full employment output, causing underutilization of economy’s resources. Y E > Y FE Y FE > Y E