Consumption Savings and Investment
Consumption Savings and Investment
Consumption function Determinants of Consumption Engel's law Savings Determinants of Investment The Multiplier
Autonomous consumption
Autonomous consumption expenditure CA occurs when income levels are zero. Such consumption does not vary with changes in income. If income levels are actually zero, this consumption is financed by borrowing or using up savings.
Induced consumption
Induced consumption CI describes consumption expenditure by households on goods and services which varies with income. Consumption is considered induced by income.
Consumption
Y1
45 line: at any point on the 45line consumption exactly equals income and the households have zero saving. MPC is the slope of the consumption function, which measures the change in consumption per unit change in income.
Engel's Law
The nineteen century Prussian statistician Ernst Engel noticed that as income increases, expenditures on many items go up, but there are limits to the extra money people will spend on food when their income rise. Engel's Law: The proportion of total spending devoted to food declines as income increases.
CA YE Y
Determinants of Consumption
Current disposable income: it is the central factor determining a nation's consumption. Permanent income: it is the level of income that households would receive when temporary influences are removed. Wealth: it is the net value of tangible and financial items owned by a nation or person at a point of time. Other (interest rate, inflation, expectations).
Savings
Saving is that part of income that is not consumed. Saving equals income minus consumption: S = Y C Income is the sum of consumption and savings: Y = C + S then
C S !1 Y Y
and
(C (S !1 (Y (Y
Savings
The marginal propensity to save
(S MPS ! (Y
is defined as the fraction of an extra unit of income that goes to extra saving. MPC + MPS = 1 because the part of each unit of income that is not consumed is necessarily saved.
Saving Function
Like consumption saving is also the function of income: S = f(Y) If autonomous consumption exists then autonomous saving exists as well and saving function is: S = -CA + MPS.Y Saving is a source for investment.
C = f(Y)
CA 0 -CA
45 YE
S = f(Y)
Investment
Investment pays two roles in macroeconomics:
It can have a major impact on AD (real output and employment) It leads to capital accumulation (it increases the nation's potential output and promotes economic growth in the long run)
Determinants of Investment
Revenues: an investment should bring the firm additional revenue. Costs: interest rate influences the costs of the investment. Consumer demand: the bigger the increase in consumer demand, the more investment will be needed. Expectation: business expectation about future state of economy.
Higher Output
D1 D Investment spending
Higher Taxes
D D1 Investment spending
Pessimistic Expectation
D D1 Investment spending
I2 I1
I2 I1
45
Y1
YE
Y2
S = f (Y) E 0 Y1 YE Y2 Y I
Investment Multiplier
The Keynesian investment multiplier model shows that an increase in investment will increase output by a multiplied amount by an amount greater than itself. The multiplier is the number by which the change in investment must be multiplied in order to determine the resulting change in total output.
Investment Multiplier
C, I E2 C +I1 E1 I
45
C + I2 I2 = I1 + I Y=k. I
k ! (Y (I
Y1 Y
Y2
Investment Multiplier
S
S = f (Y) E2 I 0 Y1 Y Y2 Y E1 I2 I1
Investment Multiplier
The size of the multiplier k depends upon how large the MPC is.
(Y (Y 1 1 1 k! ! ! ! ! (I (Y (C 1 (C 1 MPC MPS (Y