Behavior of Aggregate Demand Increase/Decrease Shift Right/Left Recessionary/Inflationary Gaps Major Questions to Address • What are the components of aggregate demand? • What determines the level of spending for each component? • Will there be enough demand to maintain full employment? Four Components of Aggregate Demand • • • • Consumption (C) Investment (I) Government spending (G) Net exports (X - IM) Consumption Big but Stable Two Components – Autonomous Consumption – Income-Dependent (Induced) Consumption Income and Consumption • By definition, all disposable income is either consumed (spent ) or saved (not spent). Disposable income = Consumption + Saving YD = C + S CONSUMPTION (billions of dollars per year) U.S. Consumption and Income $7000 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 6000 C = YD 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 45° 0 $1000 Actual consumer spending 2000 3000 4000 5000 DISPOSABLE INCOME (billions of dollars per year) 6000 7000 The Marginal Propensity to Consume • The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is the fraction of each additional (marginal) dollar of disposable income spent on consumption. Change in Consumption C MPC = = Change in Disposable Income YD Marginal Propensity to Save • The marginal propensity to save (MPS) is the fraction of each additional (marginal) dollar of disposable income not spent on consumption. MPS = 1 – MPC The Consumption Function • The consumption function is a mathematical relationship that helps to predict consumer behavior. Autonomous income - dependent Total consumptio n consumptio n consumptio n • The consumption function provides a precise basis for predicting how changes in income (YD) effect consumer spending (C). C = a + bYD where: C = current consumption a = autonomous consumption (constant) b = marginal propensity to consume (slope) YD = disposable income Autonomous Consumption • The non income determinants of consumption include – – – – – expectations, wealth, credit, taxes, and price levels. Consumption Function $400 C = YD E Saving D C Dissaving Consumption Function C = $50 + 0.75YD B $125 G A $50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 CONSUMPTION (C) (dollars per year) Shift in the Consumption Function C = a2 + bYD C = a1 + bYD a2 a1 0 DISPOSABLE INCOME(dollars per year) AD Effects of Consumption Shifts Expenditure Price Level C2 Shift = f2 – f1 f2 C1 f1 P1 AD1 Y0 Income Q1 AD2 Q2 Real Output Investment Small but Volatile • Investment are expenditures on new plant, equipment, and structures (capital) in a given time period, plus changes in business inventories. • investment depends on: – Expectations. – Interest rates. – Technology and innovation. Interest Rate (percent per year) Investment Demand 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Better expectations C A B I2 Initial expectations 11 Worse expectations 100 200 300 400 I3 500 Planned Investment Spending (billions of dollars per year) Government Spending • The government sector (federal, state, and local) currently spends over $2 trillion a year on goods and services. • Government spending decisions are made independently of current income. Net Exports • Net exports can be both uncertain and unstable, creating further shifts of aggregate demand. GDP Gaps • equilibrium GDP may not occur at fullemployment GDP. – Equilibrium GDP is the value of total output (real GDP) produced at macro equilibrium (AS=AD). – Full-employment GDP is the value of total output (real GDP) produced at full employment. Recessionary GDP Gap 130 AD AS 120 110 100 E 90 Recessionary GDP gap 80 70 65 60 3 4 5 6 7 REAL GDP 8 9 10 11 12 13 Full-employment GDP Equilibrium GDP Inflationary GDP Gap Demand-pull inflation: (too much AD) PRICE LEVEL AS AD3 E3 P3 E1 P* QF QE3 Q3 The Keynesian Cross The Keynesian cross relates aggregate expenditure to total income (output). At equilibrium, aggregate expenditure equals income (output). Aggregate Expenditures • Aggregate expenditures are the rate of total expenditure desired at alternative levels of income, ceteris paribus, at a given price level • Aggregate expenditures is the sum of C, I, G, and NX, at a given price level The Consumption Shortfall ZF Expenditure $3000 2350 CF Total output 2000 Output not purchased by consumers 1500 1000 500 45° 0 Consumption function (C)= $100 + 0.75YD 1000 2000 Income (Output) YF 3000 Aggregate Expenditures includes Nonconsumer Spending • Investors, governments, and net export buyers add to consumer spending to equal aggregate expenditure. Expenditure Equilibrium • Equilibrium is the point where aggregate expenditure and 45 degree lines meet. • Recall that real GDP can be calculated as the value of final goods and services, or as the payments to all inputs in its production. • In essence real output = income Expenditure Equilibrium $3500 AE = Y Expenditure 3000 2500 Equilibrium 2000 E 1500 1000 500 45° 0 YE $500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 Income (Output) (billions of dollars per year) • When AE > Y, inventories depleting, signals expansion • When Y > AE, inventories increasing, signals contraction Aggregate Expenditure at different price levels Plots out Aggregate Demand •Wealth, •Int’l Trade and •Money Demand Effects Aggregate Expenditures C + I + G + NX YD= Y – tY = (1-t)Y C = a + mpcYD = a + mpc (1-t)Y I = I – di G=G NX = NX AE=a + I – di + G + NX + mpc (1-t)Y AE = AE + mpc (1-t)Y Changes to Autonomous Expenditure Autonomous spending • Autonomous Consumption • Investment • Gov’t Spending • Net Exports Shifts Aggregate Expenditure Up or Down Shifts Aggregate Demand Right or Left AE + mpc (1-t) Y Aggregate Expenditures C = a + mpc (1-t) Y AE G I - di NX Y* Y real output/Income AE1 + mpc (1-t) Y AE0 + mpc (1-t) Y Aggregate Expenditures AE1 AE 0 Y0 Y1 Y real output/Income An increase in autonomous aggregate expenditures has a much larger increase in real output/income. Multiplier Effect AE1 AE 0 Y0 Y1 Multiplier Effect • An increase in autonomous expenditures increases income by a like amount • With the increase in income, there is an increase in induced consumption. • The increase in consumption, again increases income. • The increase in consumption diminishes at each step due to savings and taxes. Deriving the Multiplier ΔY =ΔAE + mpc(1-t)ΔAE + mpc(1-t)[mpc(1t)ΔAE] + mpc(1-t)[mpc(1-t)mpc(1-t)ΔAE] +…… ΔY =ΔAE{1 + mpc(1-t)+ [mpc(1-t)]2 + [mpc(1-t)]3 +……+ [mpc(1-t)] } M = ΔY / ΔAE = 1 + mpc(1-t)+ [mpc(1-t)]2 + [mpc(1-t)]3 +……+ [mpc(1-t)] Multiplier derived a) M = 1 + mpc(1-t)+ [mpc(1-t)]2 + [mpc(1-t)]3 +……+ [mpc(1-t)] b) M [mpc(1-t)] = mpc(1-t)+ [mpc(1-t)]2 + [mpc(1-t)]3 +……+ [mpc(1-t)] c) Subtract equation b from a, and we get M - M [mpc(1-t)] = 1 or M (1 - mpc(1-t)) = 1 d) M = 1 / (1 - mpc(1-t)) Brass Tacks • Suppose mpc=0.9, and t=0.15, then how much would a $100 increase in autonomous expenditure raise real income? • M = 1 / (1 – 0.9(1 – 0.15)) = 1 / (1 – 0.9*0.85) = 1 / (1 – 0.765) = 1 / 0.235 = 4.26 • ΔY = 4.26 * $100 = $426 Size of Multiplier • Depends on the circular flow of income in the economy • In a macroeconomic equilibrium aggregate expenditures equal national income Circular Flow Draw on the Board Injections versus Leakages Equilibrium Investment + Government Spending + Exports = Savings + Taxes + Imports Multiplier Decreases as Leakages Increase • With each increase in income that motivates the multiplier, – consumers save some portion, – the government taxes another portion, – and consumers may purchase imports • With each leakage, the less the consumer spends on domestic products, lowering the amount of additional income in the next round of the multiplier.