
- •Consumption function
- •But in our analysis we shall include Government and Foreign components (g;t;m;X)
- •Withdrawals and Injections
- •1) Withdrawals function
- •2) Injections and their determinants
- •Determination of National Income
- •Factors of δ ,Conditions of Equilibrium
- •2) Multiplier Effect
- •2 Main practical conclusions from mult. Theory:
- •Keynesian analysis of the inflation & trade cycles
- •1. Inflation
- •2. Keynes explained business fluctuations by instability of investment
- •3. Mechanism of the Trade cycles
- •1. Terminology
- •2. Budget philosophies & growing national debt
- •1. Does national debt figures reflect the real burden for a country?
- •2. Can growing national debt leave to gnt bankruptcy?
- •Fiscal policy
- •1. Automatic/”built-in” stabilizers
- •Stabilizing effect of gnt transfer payments
- •2. Discretionary fiscal policy
- •3. Effectiveness of fiscal policy
Keynesian theory. Simple Keynesian analysis.
Consumption function
The role of AD in Keynesian theory
Consumption function
Non-income determinants of consumption
1. The role of AD in Keyn. theory
Δ in AD determine the level of Y & price level
Assumptions in Keyn. analysis:
Absence of inflation (amount of money corresponds to Δ in AD as r =const)
Absence of business fluctuations (equilibrium between Inj and W)
Inj are exogenous variables (don’t depend on Δ in Y) and domestic consumption Cd and W are endogenous (depend on Δ in Y)
Originally Keynes assumed absence of government intervention in to economy: G=0, T=0, M;X=0 All savings are individual (personal) savings.
But in our analysis we shall include Government and Foreign components (g;t;m;X)
AD= C + I + G + Xn
AD= Cd(C-Cm) + Id + Gd(govern. ex. on domes. pr. g&s) + Xd (total X-reexport)
AD= Cd + J = Cd + W
Main determinants of AD are Cd, W, J; if AD>Y YW until W=J
Originally K. analyzed C(total consumption): C=Cd+Tind (indirect taxes)+M(expenditures on import)
2. Consumption function (relationship between C &Y)
choice of each family: to consume or to save
DI (disposable income…after paying taxes)=C+S
Each nation may use Y either on Cd or W: Y=Cd+W (S+T+M)
Y is the main determinant of C
Relationship between C&Y m.b. illustrated with the consumption fun-n, C=f(Y) represented by 45’ degree line diagram.
As Y rises, so does C
At low level of Y before A point consumption f-n lies above 45’line, that is country spends more, than it earns by borrowing from other countries, using previous savings. This situation is called dissavings.
At point A, C=Y. Country spends all its incomes; income corresponding to p.A is called break-even income. E.g. income is fully consumed
Above p.A C<Y. Part of incomes goes to savings
The slope of C fun-n depends on Marginal Propensity to Consume. mpc=the proportion of a rise in Y that goes on con-n; mpc =ΔC/ΔY (cons. F-n is a straight line=> mpc=const, no slope); average propensity to consume =proportion of total Y that goes on C: apc=C/Y.
If Y we have a movement along con-n function.
3. Non-income determinants of consumption
Assets or wealth: (real assets (cars,houses), financial assets(shares,deposits); the wealth the C (on average)
Price level; the Plevel ,the real value of wealth, C
Level of taxes , the ¯C (con-n depends on DI)
Availability & the price of consumers’ credit; the easier it’s to get consumer credit, the cheaper consumer credit, the C
Consumer indebtedness , the ¯C
Expectations of future prices and incomes. If people expect in prices or in incomes they consume more now.
Distribution of income: if total income is redistributed from poor to rich, it will ¯C. Poor people don’t save.
Attitude to consumption: if people have a habit to consume more, C; “buy now, pay later” mentality => C
The age of durables: if ppl have old age durable (end of recession), money are spent
Y ¯ - At the peak of the boom ppl’ll probably spend less on durables as they have already bought the items they wanted
Y – After period of recession C , during which ppl had cut back on the con-n of durables