The MPC and MPS
Intro
When investment spending increases, there will be an increase in the income and the value of aggregate output by the same amount
An increase in aggregate output leads to an increase in disposable income and to more consumer spending, which leads to increased output
How large is the total effect on aggregate output if we sum up all the rounds of spending increases
It depends on what economists called the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) or the marginal propensity to save (MPS)
MPC + MPS = 1
The marginal Propensity to Consume
The MPC is a number between 0 and 1
If consumers save all their money, the number would be 0
If consumers spend all their money, the number would be 1
Usually, the number is between 0 and 1 with industrialized countries having a higher number and developing countries with lower numbers
If the MPC is 0.8, what's the impact on the total aggregate spending if there's an increase of 50 million in spending?
- Total Increase = Spending Multiplier * Initial Increase = 1/(1-0.8) * 50 = 250
The Multiplier Effect
Autonomous change in aggregate spending
- an initial rise or fall in aggregate spending that is the cause, not the result, of a series of income and spending changes
Multiplier
- ratio of the total change in real GDP caused by an autonomous change in aggregate spending to the size of that autonomous change
The size of the multiplier depends on the MPC
The higher the MPC, the more disposable income get recycled back into consumer spending
The lower the MPC, the more disposable income "leak out" into savings
Consumption Function
Consumption function is an equation showing how an individual household's consumer spending changes with disposable income
Autonomous consumer spending would be the amount spent regardless of income
Let's assume that a equals $20,000 and the MPC equals 0.6. What would the consumption be if the income is $100,000? $200,000?
c = a + MPC * yd = 20,000 + 0.6 * 100,000 = 80,000
c = a + MPC * yd = 20,000 + 0.6 * 200,000 = 140,000
Graph
Shift of the Aggregate Consumption Function
Changes in Expected Future Disposable Income
If you land a higher-paying job, you will tend to consume more money now even though your current income is the same
Conversely, if you are worried about a job layoff, you will probably decrease your current expense.
Changes in Aggregate Wealth
A booming stock market will tend to increase an individual's wealth, and therefore, his consumption
A fall in housing prices, conversely, will tend to decrease an individual's net worth, and therefore her consumption
Investment Spending
Planned investment spending is the investment spending that businesses intend to undertake during a given time period
If interest rates goes up, less investment spending occurs.
If interest rates go down, there is more investment spending
High expected future growth rate of GDP increases investment
Low expected future growth rate decreases investment
Positive unplanned inventory investment occurs when sales are less than business expects. Excess sales leads to negative unplanned inventory investment
Rising inventory indicates slowing economy
Tax (or Government Transfer) Multiplier
Changes in taxes (or increase in transfer payment) shifts the aggregate demand curve by less than an equal-sized change in government purchases
The presence of taxed decrease the multiplier
Automatic Stabilizers
Government spending and taxation rules that cause fiscal policy to be automatically expansionary when the economy contracts and automatically contractionary when the economy expands
As the economy expands, the multiplier reduces because the increase in income is siphoned off
As the economy contracts, the multiplier increase because the government is collecting less in taxes (a de facto expansionary policy in the face of a recession)