Transcript
Page 1: Expenditure Multipliers

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Expenditure Multipliers

PART 8 Aggregate Demand and Inflation

23CHAPTER

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Objectives

After studying this chapter, you will able to Explain how expenditure plans and real GDP are

determined when the price level is fixed

Explain equilibrium expenditure at a fixed price level

Explain the expenditure multiplier and how recessions and expansions begin

Explain the relationship between aggregate expenditure and aggregate demand and how the multiplier gets smaller as the price level changes

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Economic Amplifier or Shock Absorber?

A voice can be a whisper or fill Toronto’s Molson Amphitheatre, depending on the amplification.

A limousine with good shock absorbers can ride smoothly over terrible potholes.

Investment and exports can fluctuate like the amplified voice, or the terrible potholes; does the economy react like a limousine, smoothing out the bumps, or like an amplifier, magnifying the fluctuations?

These are the questions this chapter addresses.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

The components of aggregate expenditure sum to real GDP.

That is,

Y = C + I + G + X – M

Two of the components of aggregate expenditure, consumption and imports, are influenced by real GDP.

So there is a two-way link between aggregate expenditure and real GDP.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

The two-way link between aggregate expenditure and real GDP:

An increase in real GDP increases aggregate expenditure

An increase in aggregate expenditure increases real GDP

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Consumption and Saving Plans

Consumption expenditure is influenced by many factors but the most direct one is disposable income.

Disposable income is aggregate income or real GDP, Y, minus net taxes, NT.

Call disposable income YD.

The equation for disposable income is

YD = Y – NT

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Disposable income is either spent on consumption goods and services, C, or saved, S.

That is,

YD = C + S.

The relationship between consumption expenditure and disposable income, other things remaining the same, is the consumption function.

The relationship between saving and disposable income, other things remaining the same, is the saving function.

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Expenditure Plansand GDP

Figure 23.1 illustrates the consumption function and the saving function.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Marginal Propensity to Consume

The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is the fraction of a change in disposable income spent on consumption.

It is calculated as the change in consumption expenditure, C, divided by the change in disposable income, YD, that brought it about.

That is:

MPC = C/YD

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Figure 23.2(a) shows that the MPC is the slope of the consumption function.

Along this consumption function, when disposable income increases by $100 billion, consumption expenditure increases by $75 billion and the MPC is 0.75.

Expenditure Plans and GDP

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Marginal Propensity to SaveThe marginal propensity to save (MPS) is the fraction of a change in disposable income that is saved.

It is calculated as the change in saving, S, divided by the change in disposable income, YD, that brought it about.

That is:

MPS = S/YD

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Figure 23.2(b) shows that the MPS is the slope of the saving function.

Along this saving function, when disposable income increases by $100 billion, saving increases by $25 billion and the MPC is 0.25.

Expenditure Plansand GDP

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

The MPC plus the MPS equals one.

To see why, note that,

C + S = YD.

Divide this equation by YD to obtain,

C/YD + S/YD = YD/YD,

or

MPC + MPS = 1.

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Other Influences on Consumption Expenditure and Saving

When an influence other than disposable income changes—the real interest rate, wealth, or expected future income—the consumption function and saving function shift.

Figure 23.3 illustrates these effects.

Expenditure Plansand GDP

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

The Canadian Consumption Function

In 1961, the Canadian consumption function was CF61.

The dots show consumption and disposable income for each year from 1961 to 2004.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

The consumption function has shifted upward over time because economic growth has created greater wealth and higher expected future income.

The assumed MPC in the figure is 0.85.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Consumption as a Function of Real GDP

Disposable income changes when either real GDP changes or when net taxes change.

If tax rates don’t change, real GDP is the only influence on disposable income, so consumption expenditure is a function of real GDP.

We use this relationship to determine equilibrium expenditure.

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Expenditure Plans and GDP

Import Function

In the short run, Canadian imports are influenced primarily by Canadian real GDP.

The marginal propensity to import is the fraction of an increase in real GDP spent on imports.

In recent years, NAFTA and increased integration in the global economy have increased Canadian imports.

Removing the effects of these influences, the Canadian marginal propensity to import is probably about 0.3.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

The Aggregate Implications of Fixed Prices

Fixed prices have two implications for the economy as a whole:

1. Because each firm’s price is fixed, the price level is fixed.

2. Because demand determines the quantities that each firm sells, aggregate demand determines the aggregate quantity of goods and services sold, which equals real GDP.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

To understand how real GDP is determined when the price level is fixed, we must understand how aggregate demand is determined.

Aggregate demand is determined by aggregate expenditure plans.

Aggregate planned expenditure is planned consumption expenditure plus planned investment plus planned government expenditures plus planned exports minus planned imports.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

We’ve seen that planned consumption expenditure and planned imports are influenced by real GDP.

When real GDP increases, planned consumption expenditure and planned imports increase.

Planned investment plus planned government expenditures plus planned exports are not influenced by real GDP.

We’re going to study the aggregate expenditure model that explains how equilibrium expenditure is determined.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

The Aggregate Expenditure Model

The relationship between aggregate planned expenditure and real GDP can be described by an aggregate expenditure schedule, which lists the level of aggregate expenditure planned at each level of real GDP.

The relationship can also be described by an aggregate expenditure curve, which is a graph of the aggregate expenditure schedule.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

Aggregate Planned Expenditure and Real GDP

Figure 23.5 shows how the aggregate expenditure curve is built from its components.

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

Consumption expenditure minus imports, which varies with real GDP, is induced expenditure.

The sum of investment, government purchases, and exports, which does not vary with GDP, is autonomous expenditure.

(Consumption expenditure and imports can have an autonomous component.)

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Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

Actual Expenditure, Planned Expenditure, and Real GDPActual aggregate expenditure is always equal to real GDP.

Aggregate planned expenditure may differ from actual aggregate expenditure because firms can have unplanned changes in inventories.

Equilibrium Expenditure

Equilibrium expenditure is the level of aggregate expenditure that occurs when aggregate planned expenditure equals real GDP.

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Figure 23.6 illustrates equilibrium expenditure.

Equilibrium occurs at the point at which the aggregate expenditure curve crosses the 45° line in part (a).

Equilibrium occurs when there are no unplanned changes in business inventories in part (b).

Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

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Convergence to Equilibrium

Figure 23.6 also illustrates the process of convergence toward equilibrium expenditure.

Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

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If aggregate planned expenditure is greater than real GDP (the AE curve is above the 45° line), an unplanned decrease in inventories induces firms to hire workers and increase production, so real GDP increases.

Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

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If aggregate planned expenditure is less than real GDP (the AE curve is below the 45° line), an unplanned increase in inventories induces firms to fire workers and decrease production, so real GDP decreases.

Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

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If aggregate planned expenditure equals real GDP (the AE curve intersects the 45° line), no unplanned changes in inventories occur, so firms maintain their current production and real GDP remains constant.

Equilibrium Expenditureat a Fixed Price Level

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The Multiplier

The multiplier is the amount by which a change in autonomous expenditure is magnified or multiplied to determine the change in equilibrium expenditure and real GDP.

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The Multiplier

The Basic Idea of the Multiplier

An increase in investment (or any other component of autonomous expenditure) increases aggregate expenditure and real GDP and the increase in real GDP leads to an increase in induced expenditure.

The increase in induced expenditure leads to a further increase in aggregate expenditure and real GDP.

So real GDP increases by more than the initial increase in autonomous expenditure.

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The Multiplier

Figure 23.7 illustrates the multiplier.

The amplified change in real GDP that follows an increase in autonomous expenditure is the multiplier effect.

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The Multiplier

When autonomous expenditure increases, inventories make an unplanned decrease, so firms increase production and real GDP increases to a new equilibrium.

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The Multiplier

Why Is the Multiplier Greater than 1?

The multiplier is greater than 1 because an increase in autonomous expenditure induces further increases in expenditure.

The Size of the Multiplier

The size of the multiplier is the change in equilibrium expenditure divided by the change in autonomous expenditure.

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The Multiplier

The Multiplier and the Slope of the AE Curve

The slope of the AE curve determines the magnitude of the multiplier:

Multiplier = 1 ÷ (1 – Slope of AE curve)

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The Multiplier

To see why the multiplier = 1 ÷ (1 – Slope of AE curve), begin with the fact that:

Y = N + A

But

Slope of AE curve = N ÷ Y

so,

N = Slope of AE curve x Y

and

Y = Slope of AE curve x Y + A

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The Multiplier

Because

Y = Slope of AE curve x Y + A

you can see that

1 Slope of AE curve) x Y = A

and

Y = A ÷ 1 Slope of AE curve)

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The Multiplier

The multiplier is

Y ÷ A

So, divide both sides of

Y = A ÷ 1 Slope of AE curve)

by A to obtain

Y ÷ A = 1 ÷ 1 Slope of AE curve)

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The Multiplier

With the numbers in Figure 23.7, the slope of the AE curve is 0.75, so the multiplier is

Y ÷ A = 1 ÷ 1 0.75) = 1 ÷ 0.25) = 4.

When there are no income taxes and no imports, the slope of the AE curve equals the marginal propensity to consume, so the multiplier is

Multiplier = 1 ÷ 1 MPC).

But 1 – MPC = MPS, so the multiplier is also

Multiplier = 1 ÷ MPS.

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The Multiplier

Figure 23.8 illustrates the multiplier process and shows how the MPC determines the magnitude of the amount of induced expenditure at each round as aggregate expenditure moves toward equilibrium expenditure.

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The Multiplier

Imports and Income Taxes

Income taxes and imports both reduce the size of the multiplier.

Figure 23.9 shows how.

In part (a) with no taxes or imports, the slope of the AE curve is 0.75 and the multiplier is 4.

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The Multiplier

In part (b), with taxes and imports, the slope of the AE curve is 0.5 and the multiplier is 2.

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The Multiplier

Business Cycle Turning Points

Turning points in the business cycle—peaks and troughs—occur when autonomous expenditure changes.

An increase in autonomous expenditure brings an unplanned decrease in inventories, which triggers an expansion.

A decrease in autonomous expenditure brings an unplanned increase in inventories, which triggers a recession.

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The Multiplier and the Price Level

In the equilibrium expenditure model, the price level is constant.

But real firms don’t hold their prices constant for long.

When they have an unplanned change in inventories, they change production and prices.

And the price level changes when firms change prices.

The aggregate supply-aggregate demand model explains the simultaneous determination of real GDP and the price level.

The two models are related.

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The Multiplier and the Price Level

Aggregate Expenditure and Aggregate Demand

The aggregate expenditure curve is the relationship between aggregate planned expenditure and real GDP, with all other influences on aggregate planned expenditure remaining the same.

The aggregate demand curve is the relationship between the quantity of real GDP demanded and the price level, with all other influences on aggregate demand remaining the same.

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The Multiplier and the Price Level

Aggregate Expenditure and the Price Level

When the price level changes, a wealth effect and substitution effect change aggregate planned expenditure and change the quantity of real GDP demanded.

Figure 23.10 on the next slide illustrates the effects of a change in the price level on the AE curve, equilibrium expenditure, and the quantity of real GDP demanded.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

In Figure 23.10(a), a rise in price level from 110 to 130 …

Shifts the AE curve from AE0 downward to AE1 and …

Decreases the equilibrium expenditure from $1,000 billion to $900 billion.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

In Figure 23.10(b), the same rise in the price level that lowers equilibrium expenditure brings a movement along the AD curve to point A.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

A fall in price level from 110 to 90 …

Shifts the AE curve from AE0 upward to AE2 and…

Increases equilibrium expenditure from $1,000 billion to $1,100 billion.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

The same fall in the price level that increases equilibrium expenditure brings a movement along the AD curve to point C.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

Points A, B, and C on the AD curve correspond to the equilibrium expenditure points A, B, and C at the intersection of the AE curve and the 45° line.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

Figure 23.11 illustrates the effects of an increase in autonomous expenditure.

An increase in autonomous expenditure shifts the AE curve upward …

…and shifts the AD curve rightward by the multiplied increase in equilibrium expenditure.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

Equilibrium Real GDP and the Price Level

Figure 23.12 shows the effect of an increase in investment in the short run when the price level changes and the economy moves along its SAS curve.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

The increase in investment shifts the AE curve upward and shifts the AD curve rightward.

With no change in the price level, real GDP would increase to $1,200 billion at point B.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

But the price level rises.

The AE curve shifts downward….

Reduces equilibrium expenditure …

Equilibrium real GDP decreases along the AD curve.

The multiplier effect is smaller than when the price level is fixed.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

Real GDP increases from $1,000 billion from $1,130 billion, instead of to $1,200 billion as it does with a fixed price level.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

Figure 23.13 illustrates the long-run effects of an increase in autonomous expenditure at full employment.

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The Multiplier andthe Price Level

If the increase in autonomous expenditure takes real GDP above potential GDP and there is an inflationary gap.

The money wage rate rises, the SAS curve shifts leftward, and real GDP decreases until it is back at potential real GDP.

In the long run, the multiplier is zero.

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