The Spending Multiplier • What effect does a change in spending (AE = C+Ig+G+Xn) have on income and output in the economy? small changes in spending _______ larger changes in income/output _______ AE = Aggregate Expenditures = C + I + G + Xn = AD The Multiplier Effect A little change in spending gives rise to a larger change in income/output (Y) --initial spending creates additional income that results in additional spending. This may also work in reverse. A small decrease in spending gives rise to much larger decreases in income and output. Spending by Alex income earned by Rosaura who spends some and saves some. Rosaura’s spending leads to income for Jovan who spends some and saves some. Jovan’s spending becomes income for Kara who spends some and … Read: “Squaring the Economic Circle” on p. 199 in your text book for a humorous explanation of the multiplier in reverse. The Multiplier Effect A little change in spending gives rise to a larger change in income/output (Y) --- initial spending creates additional income that results in additional spending. Price Level LRAS SRAS PL1 AD YF Real GDP How much spending is needed to close the GDP gap? • In a recession, Price Level spending is insufficient to reach full employment • The shortfall in PL1 spending is called a recessionary gap. • Because there is a recessionary gap, a GDP gap exists (short fall between actual (Y1) and potential GDP (YF). LRAS SRAS AD Y1 YF Real GDP GDP Gap How much spending is needed to close the gap? • If the GDP gap is $100 Price Level billion due to a recessionary gap in spending, should spending be increased $100 billion to close the gap? PL1 • Does a certain amount of spending result in an equal amount of GDP (income and output)? LRAS SRAS AD Y1 YF Real GDP Due to the multiplier effect, a $100 billion increase in spending would be far too much spending to close the GDP gap. A smaller, not equal change in AE leads to a desired larger change in GDP.) How much should spending be reduced? • An inflationary gap Price Level LRAS occurs if spending SRAS exceeds the amount necessary to purchase the full employment PL1 level of output (YF). AD • Does a reduction in spending (AE) result YF Y1 Real GDP in an equal decrease in GDP (income and output)? WHY? Actual output > potential output No – due to the multiplier effect. Tuesday • Need multiplier handout, pen, and paper at table. • Tutorials: 6:30 a.m. Study sessions for AP Gov: 2:45 p.m. • Record make-up scores for the following quizzes: exchange rates, net exports, balance of payments (see Unit 3) • AP Gov Study session Saturday: 10-12 noon • AP macro study sessions --- next week • If you want AP gov study guide materials, please ask. • Wednesday: Rm 112 (2-4th); Thursday Rm 207 (2-4th) How much of an increase or decrease in spending is needed to close these gaps and return to YF? Price Level Price Level LRAS SRAS PL1 LRAS SRAS PL1 AD Y1 YF Real GDP A recessionary gap (shortfall) in spending leads to a GDP gap (income/output less than potential). AD YF Y1 Real GDP An inflation gap in spending means spending exceeds the YF level of income/output. Too Much! The Multiplier Effect • A change in a component of aggregate expenditures (C, I, G, or Xn) gives rise to a LARGER change in equilibrium GDPR. • A GDPR gap of $100 billion could be closed less than $100 by a change in AE of _____ billion. AE x Multiplier = GDPR small larger ___________ ’s in spending ___________ ’s in income/GDPR Key Assumptions of the Spending Multiplier: • The economy supports repetitive, continuous flows of expenditures and income through which dollars spent by Smith are received as income by Chin, then spent by Chin and received as income by Gonzales, and so on. • Any change in income will cause both consumption and saving to vary in the same direction. Yd __C and __ S A larger disposable income means more is available to spend and save. Assume that all consumers spend 80% (MPC = .80) and save 20% (MPS = .20) of any change in income. $100 expenditure Yd of $100 $80 in C and $20 in S $80 expenditure Yd of $80 $64 in C and $16 in S $64 expenditure Yd of $64 $51.20 in C and $12.80 in S $51.20 expenditure . . . There is an end point or maximum by which income and expenditures are generated by the initial expenditure. The amount by which the change in Yd is spent (MPC) ensures the expansion and the leakage of saving (MPS) ensures that the expansion diminishes over time. Key Relationships: GDP = Yd $370 $390 410 430 450 470 490 510 530 C $375 390 405 420 435 450 465 480 495 S -$5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 APC 1.01 1.00 .99 .98 .97 .96 .95 .94 .93 APS -.01 .00 .01 .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 .07 MPC .75 .75 .75 .75 .75 .75 .75 .75 .75 MPS .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 • YD ____ C ____ S ____ APC ____ APS • MPC and MPS are relatively stable as income increases. Key Definitions and Formulas: C/Yd • APC = Average Propensity to Consume = _____ • (fraction of any income spent) S/Yd • APS = Average Propensity to Save = _______ • (fraction of any income that is saved) 1 • C/Yd + S/Yd = _____ • If income is $100 billion and the APS is .20, then the average amount of consumption = ?? $80 Billion Key Definitions and Formulas: ΔC / ΔYd • MPC = Marginal Propensity to Consume = _________ • (fraction of any change in income that is spent) ΔS / ΔYd • MPS = Marginal Propensity to Save = _________ • (fraction of any change in income that is saved) 1 • C/ Yd + S/ Yd = _____ • If income increases by $100 billion and the MPC is .75, .25 and the change in saving = then the MPS = ____ ______? $25 B Spending Multiplier Formulas: M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE .80 5 If the MPS = .20 the MPC = ____ M = ____ .25 4 If the MPC = .75 the MPS = ____ M = ____ .10 10 If the MPC = .90 the MPS = ____ M = ____ If the change in GDPE = $20 billion and the change in 4 AE = $5 billion, then the multiplier = ____ and the .75 and the MPS = _____. .25 MPC = _____ Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE • If the GDP gap is $100 billion, how much must AE (C, I, G, or Xn) increase to return the economy to YF if the MPC = .80? 5 M = 1/1-MPC = 1/1-.80 = 1/.20 = _____ AE x M = GDPE 20 ______ X 5 ______ = 100 Billion Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE • If the GDP gap is $40 billion and the MPS = .25, what amount must AE increase to close the GDP gap? 4 M = 1/MPS = 1/.25 = _____ AE x M = GDPE 10 ______ X 4 ______ = 40 Billion Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE • If the economy is experiencing an inflationary gap and actual GDP exceeds potential GDP by $50 billion, how much must government decrease G to close the inflationary gap and return to full employment, assuming an MPS of .20? 5 M = 1/MPS = 1/.20 = _____ AE x M = GDPE 10 ______ X 5 ______ = 50 Billion Does a change in G have the same effect on GDP as a change in T? No – G has a greater effect! A change in G affects GDP directly by a multiple of the change in G. A change in T affects GDP by a multiple of less than the change in T. A change in T results in a change in Yd. Yd can be either spent (C) or saved (S); therefore, a change in T only affects GDP by a multiple of the change in C. The initial change in C is less than the change in T. Determine the effect on GDP of an increase in G of $20 billion and the effect of a decrease in T of $20 billion. Assume the MPC = .80 Remember: AE x M = GDP 1/1-.80 = _____ 5 Multiplier = _________ • Effect of the the increase in G: G 20 5 100 increase _____ X ______ = ______ • Effect of the decrease in T: 20 _____ 16 C _____ 4 S T of $20 billion Yd _____ C 16 X ______ 5 80 increase which is less than _____ = ______ the increase of 100 from G. What would be the effect on the economy (GDPE) of a decrease of $100 billion in G. Assume the MPS =.25 100 X 4 = $400 billion decrease in GDP • What would be the effect of an increase in taxes of $100 billion? Increase T of $100 billion decreases income (Yd) by 100 billion. That means consumers will decrease spending by $75 billion (.75 x100) and decrease saving by $25 bill. The $75 billion decrease in C X the multiplier of 4 = a $300 billion decrease in GDP. Effect of EQUAL increases or decreases in G and T? Effect on Budget? no change / balanced Effect on Economy? Expansionary or contractionary depends on increase or decrease. Determine the effect on GDP of equal increases (balanced budget) in both G and T of $50 billion. Assume an MPC of .80. • Effect on Budget? balanced • Effect on GDP (economy)? $40 billion (.80x50) 5 • Multiplier = _____ C = _____ Effect on GDP? Effect of G: 5 x 50 = 250 billion increase in GDP Effect of T: decrease income by $50 billion; therefore, C decreases by $40 billion and S decreases by $10 billion. Therefore, $40 billion X 5 = 200 billion decrease in GDP Net effect: 250 – 200 = $50 billion increase in GDP Key Idea: The balanced budget multiplier is 1 x G • An increase in G and T of $50 billion would 50 billion increase GDPE by how much? ________ • A decrease in G and T of $30 billion would $30 billion decrease GDPE by how much? _______ • Conclusion: A balanced budget increase in G and T (spending and taxes are equal) has an expansionary ____________ effect on the economy. • A balanced budget decrease in spending and taxes contractionary effect on the budget. has a ______________ Disequilibrium in the Keynesian AE Model. • Equilibrium occurs when AE = GDPE • Expenditure = output decreasing • If AE > GDP then inventories are ______ output. and businesses will ____ increasing • If AE < GDP then inventories are ______ and businesses will ____ output. AP Questions The Multiplier AE = Aggregate expenditures = C, I, G, Xn If $500 billion in AE $1000 billion in GDPE, then how much would G have to to reach a YF of $2000 billion? • • • • • $2000B $1000B $500B $200B $100B Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE The value of the spending multiplier decreases when? A. B. C. D. Tax rates are decreased Exports decrease Imports decrease Government expenditures decrease E. The MPS increases Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE Which of the following best explains why equilibrium income will rise by more than $100 in response to a $100 increase in G? A. Incomes will which leads to taxes B. Incomes will which leads to C which leads to additional increases in income . . . C. AE PL D. Aggregate expenditures MS I E. budget deficit Aggregate Expenditures small larger ___________ ’s in spending ___________ ’s in income/GDPR Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE In a closed economy with no taxes in which the APC is 0.75, which of the following is true? A. B. C. D. E. If income is $100, then saving is $75 If income is $100, then C is $50 If income is $200, then saving is $50 If income is 200, then C is $75 If income is $500, then S is $100 C/YD APC = Average Propensity to Consume = _____ (fraction of any income spent) Suppose that Yd is $1000, C is $700, and the MPC is 0.60. If Yd increases by $100, C and S will equal which of the following? A. B. C. D. E. C S 420 600 660 660 760 280 400 320 440 340 MPC = Marginal Propensity to Consume = ΔC/ Δ Yd (fraction of any change in income that is spent) MPS = Marginal Propensity to Save = ΔS/ Δ Yd (fraction of any change in income that is saved) C/ Yd + S/ Yd = __1___ If at YF, government wants to increase its spending by $100 billion without inflation in the short run, it must do which of the following? A. B. C. D. E. T by greater than $100 B T by $100B T by less than $100 B T by $100 B by less than $100 B ΔG x Multiplier = Δ GDP ΔT → Δ Yd → Δ C and Δ S Δ C x multiplier = Δ GDP If AE from 200 to 300 solely due to a change in G which leads to a change in GDPe of 1000 to 1500, which of the following is true? A. B. C. D. E. G is 300 and the multiplier is 5 G is 100 and the multiplier is 5 G is 100 and C increases by 500 G and GDP increase by 500 each C and GDP increase by 500 each Key Formula: AE x M = GDPE M = 1/MPS or 1/1-MPC or GDPE/ AE If G and T are simultaneously increased by $100 billion and the MPS = .20, what is the impact on GDP? A. B. C. D. E. Increase $500 billion Decrease $500 billion Increase $100 billion Decrease $100 billion increase $80 billion Key Idea: The balanced budget multiplier is 1 x G Unit 3 Website • Multiplier Online Quiz • Record actual score earned. • If you retake the quiz for homework, you may change your score; however, you may not retake the quiz in class immediately after taking it the first time. • Do not submit your answers until you are finished with the quiz. • Thank you. Tuesday • See board for study sessions/info on practice tests • Need pen/handouts on spending multiplier; FED/Money; Balance Sheets; Long-run Growth Have a nice day! The FED and Monetary Policy Banks play an important role in determining changes in the money supply. a) Assume that a bank receives a cash deposit of $9000 from a customer. What is the immediate impact of this transaction on the money supply? Explain. b) Since the cash was already a part of the money supply (M1), depositing it in a checking account does not increase the money supply --- it only changes its composition from $9000 in cash to $9000 in checkable deposits. The FED and Monetary Policy Key Ideas Banks can create money! • When you deposit money in a checking account at the bank, does the bank have to keep all your money in the bank vault? • The FED requires that banks keep only a certain percentage of your money in the bank vault or on deposit at the FED. Reserve Ratio (Requirement) • The percent that must be kept in the bank vault or on deposit at the FED is the required reserve ratio or reserve requirement. • The actual amount is called the required or legal reserves. • For example, if the RR is 20%, the bank must keep $200 of your $1000 deposit in the bank vault. • What can the bank do with the other $800 (excess reserves)? So – how do banks create $? Bank A B C D E F … Deposit $1000 $800 $640 $588.80 $471.04 … … RR ER Loan $200 $800 $800 $160 $640 $640 $51.20 $588.80 $588.80 $117.76 $471.04 $471.04 … … … … … … … … … Total Amount of $ created by banking system: $4000 Money Creation Formula • A single bank can create $ by the amount of its excess reserves. • The banking system as a whole can create $ by a multiple of the excess reserves. • Money Multiplier = 1/RR • $ created by Banking System = DM x ER • Ex. If RR = 20% MM = 1/.20 = 5 • If $1000 is deposited in bank, required reserves are $200; excess reserves are $800. A single bank can create money (loan) by this amount) • The banking system as a whole can create: • 5 X $800 = $4000. New vs Existing $ • • • • • • Out of circulation into circulation Not currently counted until put into circulation (added) Bank Reserves (out) --- loans made (in/added as new) Bank Reserves (out) – bonds purchased from public (in/added as new) FED reserves (out) – bonds purchased from public (in/added as new) Buried treasure (out) – deposited in bank checking account (new/added) • • • • In Circulation Counted as part of M1 M1 = currency + checkable deposits (demand deposits) Changing coins to checkable deposits changes only the COMPOSITION of the money supply but does not add to it. To determine total change in MS: •Include (add) deposit if NEW $ + banking system created $ •Shortcut: New deposit X DM = Total change in money supply •If initial deposit not new --- total change is ONLY banking system created money (if coins to checks --- changes composition of MS) Tools of the FED used to control the money supply: • Reserve Requirement – Percent the bank must keep of your deposit in the bank vault or on deposit at the FED • Discount Rate – Interest rate the FED charges banks to borrow money • Open Market Operation – The buying and selling of government securities (bonds) by the New York FED. Reserve Requirement • More money kept in bank vault – less money can be loaned out $ Available for Loans Vault Reserve Requirement • Less money kept in bank vault – More money can be loaned out $ Available for Loans Vault Discount Rate • Higher interest rate makes it more difficult for banks to borrow $ from the FED. Loans to banks $ for banks to loan FED -- High Rates Discount Rate • Lower interest rate makes it more easier for banks to borrow $ from the FED. Loans to banks $ for banks to loan FED -- Low Rates Buy Bonds: Open Market Operation Assume purchase is from the public and the public deposits its payment into bank accounts. FED Banks Money Supply? Sell Bonds: Open Market Operation Assume the sell is to the public and the payment for the bonds reduces the checking accounts of the public. FED Banks Money Supply? Expansionary (Easy) Monetary Policy • _____ discount rate • _____ reserve requirement • _____ open market operations • ____ Money Supply • ____ Aggregate Demand Contractionary (Tight) Monetary Policy • _____ discount rate • _____ reserve requirement • _____ open market operations • ____ Money Supply • ____ Aggregate Demand The FED Funds Rate • The interest rate banks charge each other for temporary loans. • This is what the FED usually targets with its OMO. It cannot directly change an interest rate set by a bank, but by changing the reserves of the bank, it pressures the bank to change its interest rates. • The FED can directly change only the DISCOUNT rate (relatively ineffective) Demand for Money • Transactions demand – to purchase output – varies directly with nominal GDP (vertical) – GDPN → DM to purchase output – GDPN → DM to purchase output • Asset or speculative demand varies inversely with interest rates (downward-sloping) – interest rates → OC of holding money balances → asset demand for money – interest rates → OC of holding money balances → asset demand for money The Transmission Mechanism PL LRAS (i) SM1 SRAS i1 PL1 DM AD Y1 YF GDPR QM1 QM The Transmission Mechanism PL LRAS SRAS 5th (i) SM1 PL1 i1 DM AD YF Y1 GDPR QM1 QM Bank Balance Sheets (T- Accounts) • A T-account shows – changes in a bank’s assets (amounts owed the bank or the bank has a claim on) – And a bank’s liabilities (claims against the bank --such as checking account deposits) • Basic relationship: Assets – liabilities = net worth. • Simplified: Assets should equal liabilities (that’s why they call it a “balance” sheet) Suppose Justin deposits in Bank A $1000 in quarters he received from a relative for graduation. Bank A’s balance sheet (T-Account) looks like this: Assets Liabilities +1000 actual reserves +$1000 checkable deposit Does the money supply change when Justin deposits his quarters? The quarters were already counted in M1. The deposit does not increase the money supply; it just changes its composition from quarters to checkable deposit. Assuming the required reserve ratio (reserve requirement) is 10%, the bank’s balance sheet should look like this: BANK A Assets + $100 required reserves + $900 excess reserves Liabilities +$1000 checkable deposit Assuming that for the sake of convenience, Bank A keeps all of its reserves (required and excess) on deposit at the FED and keeps zero in vault cash. The FED’s balance sheet should look like this as a result of Justin’s deposit of coins: THE FED: Assets Securities Liabilities +1000 Reserves of Bank A Assume that Bank A decides to loan out its excess reserves of $900 to Sarah. The loan is deposited in Sarah’s account in Bank A. New Assets Liabilities $ + $100 required reserves + $900 excess reserves + $900 loans +$1000 checkable deposit + 900 checkable deposits Assume the Sarah writes a $900 check to Allie who deposits the check in his bank (Bank B). Assume that Bank B also keeps All of its reserves on deposit at the FED. After the check clears, the Balance sheet of Bank A, should look like this Assets +100 required reserves (Justin’s deposit) $0 excess reserves $900 loans (Sarah) Liabilities +1000 checkable deposit (Justin) $0 checkable deposit (Sarah) Bank B (Allie’s bank) Assets + $90 required reserves + $810 excess reserves Liabilities +$900 checkable deposit (Allie’s) FED Bank Assets +Securities Liabilities +$100 reserves of Bank A (1000-900) $900 reserves of Bank B Conclusions: Reserves lost by one bank are gained by other banks. • What could Bank B do with its $810 in excess reserves? • If the deposit expansion continues through the banking system, what is the potential new money the banking system could create from the quarters? • What is the total change in the money supply from the deposit? FED Open Market Purchase of Government Securities FED Banks FED Buys Bonds from Commercial Banks Balance Sheet of Federal Reserve Bank Assets Liabilities + Securities + reserves of commercial banks Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks Assets Liabilities - Securites +reserves FED Buys Bonds from the Public Balance Sheet of Federal Reserve Bank Assets Liabilities + Securities +reserves of commercial banks Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks Assets Liabilities + reserves +checkable deposits FED Open Market Sale of Government Securities FED Banks FED Sells Bonds to Commercial Banks Balance Sheet of Federal Reserve Bank Assets Liabilities - Securities - reserves of commercial banks Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks Assets Liabilities + Securites - reserves FED Sells Bonds to the Public Balance Sheet of Federal Reserve Bank Assets Liabilities - Securities - reserves of commercial banks Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks Assets Liabilities - reserves - checkable deposits Impact on the Economy Fed Purchase of government securities: FED Banks ___ Sm ___ i ___ I, C ___ AD __ 0 __PL __U FED Banks ___ Sm ___ i ___ I, C ___ AD __ 0 __PL __U Name two factors that weaken the money (deposit) multiplier: • Banks do not loan out all of their excess reserves • Loans are taken in cash rather than checkable deposits (cash drain) Janet Smith deposits $1000 of her cash holdings in her checking account at the bank. The reserve requirement is 20% and the bank has no excess reserves. • A) what is the immediate effect of her deposit on the money supply? Explain why. • B) What is the maximum amount of money the bank can initially loan out? Explain. • C) What is the maximum amount of money the entire banking system can create? Explain. • D) Give one reason why the money supply may not increase by the amount you identified in (C) Janet Smith deposits $1000 of her cash holdings in her checking account at the bank. The reserve requirement is 20% and the bank has no excess reserves. • A) what is the immediate effect of her deposit on the money supply? Explain why. There is no increase in the money supply because the cash was already counted as part of M1. Only the composition of the money supply changes from $1000 cash to $1000 checkable deposit. Janet Smith deposits $1000 of her cash holdings in her checking account at the bank. The reserve requirement is 20% and the bank has no excess reserves. • B) What is the maximum amount of money the bank can initially loan out? Explain. • A single bank can loan the amount of its excess reserves. • If 20% of $1000 ($200) is set aside in the bank vault or on deposit at the FED, this leaves excess reserves ($1000 - $200) of $800 for the bank to loan out. Janet Smith deposits $1000 of her cash holdings in her checking account at the bank. The reserve requirement is 20% and the bank has no excess reserves. • C) What is the maximum amount of money the entire banking system can create? Explain. • The banking system as a whole can create money by a multiple of the initial excess reserves of a deposit (DM x ER = BS created money) • DM = 1/RR = 1/.20 = 5 5 x 800 = $4000 Janet Smith deposits $1000 of her cash holdings in her checking account at the bank. The reserve requirement is 20% and the bank has no excess reserves. • D) Give one reason why the money supply may not increase by the amount you identified in (C) • If banks do not loan out all excess reserves, the potential to create money by the system is reduced. • If customers take loans in cash rather than checkable deposits, the potential to create more loans from deposits is reduced.