Title: The ShortRun Macro Model
1- Chapter 10
- The Short-Run Macro Model
2The Short-Run Macro Model
- Spending is very important in short-run
- Spending depends on income
- Income depends on Spending
- In short-run, spending depends on income, and
income depends on spending - Many ideas behind the model were originally
developed by British economist John Maynard
Keynes in 1930s - Short-run macro model focuses on spending in
explaining economic fluctuations - Causing changes in total output and employment
3Thinking About Spending
- Spending on what?
- - Households, whose spending is called
consumption spending (C) - Business firms, whose spending is called planned
investment spending (IP) - Government agencies, whose spending on goods and
services is called government purchases (G) - Foreigners, whose spending we measure as net
exports (NX)
4Consumption Spending
- Natural place for us to begin our look at
spending is with its largest component - Consumption spending
- Total consumption spending is sum of spending by
over a hundred million U.S. households - What determines total amount of consumption
spending?
5Disposable Income
- First thing that comes to mind is your income
- The more you earn, the more you spend
- Its not exactly your income per period that
determines your spending - But rather what you get to keep from that income
after deducting any taxes you have to pay - If we start with income you earn, deduct all tax
payments, and then add in any transfer received,
would get your disposable income - Income you are free to spend or save as you wish
- Disposable Income Income Tax Payments
Transfers Received - Can be rewritten as
- Disposable Income Income (Taxes Transfers)
or - Disposable Income Income Net Taxes
- For almost any household, a rise in disposable
incomewith no other changecauses a rise in
consumption spending
6Wealth
- Given your disposable income, how much of it will
you spend and how much will you save? - Will depend, in part, on your wealth
- Total value of your assets minus your outstanding
liabilities - In general, a rise in wealthwith no other
changecauses a rise in consumption spending
7The Interest Rate
- Interest rate is reward people get for saving, or
what they have to pay when they borrow - All else equal, a rise in interest rate causes a
decrease in consumption spending - Relationship between interest rate and
consumption spending applies even for people who
arent savers in the common sense of term - Whether you are earning interest on funds youve
saved, or paying interest on funds youve
borrowed - The higher the interest rate, the lower is
consumption spending - In macroeconomics, household saving is the part
of disposable income that a household doesnt
spend - Whether its put in bank or used to pay off a loan
8Expectations
- Expectations about future would affect your
spending as well - All else equal, optimism about future income
causes an increase in consumption spending - Other variables influence your consumption
spending - Including inheritances you expect to receive over
your lifetime, and even how long you expect to
live - Disposable income, wealth, and interest rate are
the three key variables - In macroeconomics, we use phrases like
disposable income, wealth, or consumption
spending to mean the total disposable income,
total wealth, and total consumption spending of
all households in the economy combined - All else equal, consumption spending increases
when - Disposable income rises
- Wealth rises
- Interest rate falls
9Figure 1 U.S. Consumption and Disposable
Income, 1985-2002
10Consumption and Disposable Income
- Of all the factors that influence consumption
spending, most important and stable determinant
is disposable income - Relationship between consumption and disposable
income is almost perfectly linearpoints lie
remarkably close to a straight line - This almost-linear relationship between
consumption and disposable income has been
observed in a wide variety of historical periods
and a wide variety of nations - Vertical intercept in Figure 2 is called
- Autonomous consumption spending
- Part of consumption spending that is independent
of income
11Figure 2 The Consumption Function
Consumption Function
600
1,000
12Consumption and Disposable Income
- Second important feature of Figure 2 is the slope
- Shows change along vertical axis divided by
change along horizontal axis as we go from one
point to another on the line - Slope ? Consumption Disposable Income
- Economists have given this slope a special name
- Marginal propensity to consume, or MPC
- Can think of MPC in three different ways, but
each of them has the same meaning - Slope of consumption function
- Change in consumption divided by change in
disposable income - Amount by which consumption spending rises when
disposable income rises by one dollar - Logic suggests that the MPC should be larger than
zero, but less than 1 - We will always assume that 0 lt MPC lt 1
13Representing Consumption with an Equation
- Sometimes, well want to use an equation to
represent straight-line consumption function - C a b x (Disposable Income)
- Where C is consumption spending
- Term a is vertical intercept of consumption
function - Represents theoretical level of consumption
spending at disposable income 0, or autonomous
consumption spending - Term b is slope of consumption function
- Marginal propensity to consume (MPC)
14Consumption and Income
- Consumption function is an important building
block - Consumption is largest component of spending, and
disposable income is most important determinant
of consumption - If government collected no taxes, total income
and disposable income would be equal - So that relationship between consumption and
income on the one hand, and consumption and
disposable income on the other hand, would be
identical - Consumption-income line
- Line showing aggregate consumption spending at
each level of income or GDP - When government collects a fixed amount of taxes
from household - Line representing relationship between
consumption and income is shifted downward by
amount of tax times marginal propensity to
consume (MPC) - Slope of this line is unaffected by taxes and is
equal to MPC
15Figure 3 The Consumption-Income Line
Consumption-Income Line
B
A
600
1,000
16Shifts in the Consumption-Income Line
- Can summarize our discussion of changes in
consumption spending as follows - When a change in income causes consumption
spending to change, we move along
consumption-income line - When a change in anything else besides income
causes consumption spending to change, the line
will shift - All changes that shift the lineother than a
change in taxeswork by increasing or decreasing
autonomous consumption (a)
17Figure 4 A Shift in the Consumption-Income Line
18Table 3 Changes in ConsumptionSpending and the
ConsumptionIncome Line
19Investment Spending
- In definition of GDP, word investment by itself
(represented by the letter I by itself)
consists of three components - Business spending on plant and equipment
- Purchases of new homes
- Accumulation of unsold inventories
- In short-run macro model, we define (planned)
investment spending (IP) as - Plant and equipment purchases by business firms,
and new home construction - Inventory investment is treated as unintentional
and undesired - Excluded from definition of investment spending
- For now, we regard investment spending (IP) as a
given value, determined by forces outside of our
model
20Government Purchases
- Include all goods and services that government
agenciesfederal, state, and localbuy during
year - In short-run macro model, government purchases
are treated as a given value - Determined by forces outside of model
21Net Exports
- If we want to measure total spending on U.S.
output, we must also consider international
sector - U.S. exports
- But international trade in goods and services
also requires us to make an adjustment to other
components of spending - In sum, to incorporate international sector into
our measure of total spending, we must add U.S.
exports, and subtract U.S. imports - Net Exports Total Exports Total Imports
22Summing Up Aggregate Expenditure
- Aggregate expenditure
- Sum of spending by households, businesses,
government, and foreign sector on final goods and
services produced in United States - Aggregate expenditure C IP G NX
- C stands for household consumption spending, IP
for investment spending, G for government
purchase, and NX for net exports - Plays a key role in explaining economic
fluctuations - Why?
- Because over several quarters or even a few
years, business firms tend to respond to changes
in aggregate expenditure by changing their level
of output
23Income and Aggregate Expenditure
- Relationship between income and spending is
circular - Spending depends on income, and income depends on
spending - We take up the first part of that circle
- How total spending depends on income
- Notice that aggregate expenditure increases as
income rises - But notice also that rise in aggregate
expenditure is smaller than rise in income - When income increases, aggregate expenditure (AE)
will rise by MPC times change in income - ?AE MPC x ? GDP
- Weve used ?GDP to indicate change in total
income - Because GDP and total income are always the same
number
24Finding Equilibrium GDP
- When aggregate expenditure is less than GDP,
output will decline in future - Any level of output at which aggregate
expenditure is less than GDP cannot be
equilibrium GDP - When aggregate expenditure is greater than GDP,
output will rise in future - Any level of output at which aggregate
expenditure exceeds GDP cannot be equilibrium GDP - In short-run, equilibrium GDP is level of output
at which output and aggregate expenditure are
equal
25Inventories and Equilibrium GDP
- When firms produce more goods than they sell,
what happens to unsold output? - Added to their inventory stocks
- Change in inventories during any period will
always equal output minus aggregate expenditure - Find output level at which change in inventories
is equal to zero - AE lt GDP ? ?Inventories gt 0 ? GDP? in future
periods - AE gt GDP ? ?Inventories lt 0 ? GDP? in future
periods - AE GDP ? ?Inventories 0 ? No change in GDP
- Equilibrium output level is one at which change
in inventories equals zero
26Finding Equilibrium GDP With A Graph
- Figure 5 gives an even clearer picture of how
equilibrium GDP is determined - Lowest line, C, is consumption-income line
- Next line, labeled C IP, shows sum of
consumption and investment spending at each
income level - Next line adds government purchases to
consumption and investment spending, giving us C
IP G - Top line adds net exports, giving us C IP G
NX, or aggregate expenditure
27Figure 5 Deriving the Aggregate Expenditure Line
C IP G NX
C IP G
C IP
C
28Finding Equilibrium GDP With A Graph
- Figure 6 shows a graph in which horizontal and
vertical axes are both measured in same units,
such as dollars - Also shows a line drawn at a 45 angle that
begins at origin - 45 line is a translator line
- Allows us to measure any horizontal distance as a
vertical distance instead - Now we can apply this geometric trick to help us
find the equilibrium GDP
29Finding Equilibrium GDP With A Graph
- Figure 7 shows how we can apply geometric trick
to help us find equilibrium GDP - At any output level at which aggregate
expenditure line lies below 45 line, aggregate
expenditure is less than GDP - If firms produce any of these out put levels,
inventories will grow, and they will reduce
output in the future - At any output level at which aggregate
expenditure line lies above 45 line, aggregate
expenditure exceeds GDP - If firms produce any of these output levels,
inventories will decline, and they will increase
their output in the future - We have thus found our equilibrium on graph
- Equilibrium GDP is output level at which
aggregate expenditure line intersects 45 line - If firms produce this output level, their
inventories will not change, and they will be
content to continue producing same level of
output in the future
30Figure 7 Determining Equilibrium Real GDP
A
C IP G NX
H
E
K
Total Output
Aggregate Expenditure
J
Aggregate Expenditure
Total Output
45
31Equilibrium GDP and Employment
- When economy operates at equilibrium, will it
also be operating at full employment? - Not necessarily
- It would be quite a coincidence if our
equilibrium GDP happened to be output level at
which entire labor force were employed - In short-run macro model, cyclical unemployment
is caused by insufficient spending - As long as spending remains low, production will
remain low, and unemployment will remain high - In short-run macro model, economy can overheat
because spending is too high - As long as spending remains high, production will
exceed potential output, and unemployment will be
unusually low - Aggregate expenditure line may be low, meaning
that in short-run, equilibrium GDP is below full
employment - Or aggregate expenditure may be high, meaning
that in short-run, equilibrium GDP is above
full-employment level
32Figure 8 Equilibrium GDP Can Be Less Than Full
Employment GDP
Aggregate Production Function
AELOW
B
F
7,000
7,000
E
cyclical unemployment 25 million
6,000
A
45
7,000
100 Million
6,000
75 Million
Full Employment
Potential GDP
33Figure 9 Equilibrium GDP Can Be Greater Than
Full-Employment GDP
AEHIGH
Aggregate Production Function
E'
H
8,000
B
7,000
7,000
F
7,000
7,000
100 Million
8,000
135 Million
Potential GDP
Full Employment
34A Change in Investment Spending
- Suppose equilibrium GDP in an economy is 6,000
billion, and then business firms increase their
investment spending on plant and equipment - What will happen?
- Sales revenue at firms that manufacture
investment goods will increase by 1,000 billion - What will households do with their 1,000 billion
in additional income? - What they will do depends crucially on marginal
propensity to consume (MPC) - Assume MPC 0.6
35A Change in Investment Spending
- When households spend an additional 600 billion,
firms that produce consumption goods and services
will receive an additional 600 billion in sales
revenue - Which will become income for households that
supply resources to these firms - With an MPC of 0.6, consumption spending will
rise by 0.6 x 600 billion 360 billion,
creating still more sales revenue for firms, and
so on and so on - Increase in investment spending will set off a
chain reaction - Leading to successive rounds of increased
spending and income - At end of process, when economy has reached its
new equilibrium - Total spending and total output are considerably
higher
36Figure 10 The Effect of a Change in Investment
Spending
2,500
2,306
2,176
1,960
1,600
1,000
Initial Rise in IP
After Round 2
After Round 3
After Round 4
After Round 5
After All Rounds
37The Expenditure Multiplier
- Whatever the rise in investment spending,
equilibrium GDP would increase by a factor of
2.5, so we can write - ?GDP 2.5 x ?IP
- Expenditure multiplier is number by which the
change in investment spending must be multiplied
to get change in equilibrium GDP - Value of expenditure multiplier depends on value
of MPC - Simple formula we can use to determine multiplier
for any value of MPC - 1 (1 MPC)
- Using general formula for expenditure multiplier,
can restate what happens when investment spending
increases
38The Expenditure Multiplier
- A sustained increase in investment spending will
cause a sustained increase in GDP - Multiplier process works in both directions
- Just as increases in investment spending cause
equilibrium GDP to rise by a multiple of the
change in spending - Decreases in investment spending cause
equilibrium GDP to fall by a multiple of the
change in spending
39Other Spending Shocks
- Shocks to economy can come from other sources
besides investment spending - Suppose government agencies increased their
purchases above previous levels - Besides planned investment and government
purchases, there are two other components of
spending that can set off the same process - An increase in net exports (NX)
- A change in autonomous consumption
- Changes in planned investment, government
purchases, net exports, or autonomous consumption
lead to a multiplier effect on GDP - Expenditure multiplier is what we multiply
initial change in spending by in order to get
change in equilibrium GDP
40Other Spending Shocks
- Following four equations summarize how we use
expenditure multiplier to determine effects of
different spending shocks in short-run macro model
41A Graphical View of the Multiplier
- Figure 11 illustrates multiplier using aggregate
expenditure diagram
- An increase in autonomous consumption spending,
investment spending, government purchases, or net
exports will shift aggregate expenditure line
upward by increase in spending - Causing equilibrium GDP to rise
- Increase in GDP will equal initial increase in
spending times expenditure multiplier
42Figure 11 A Graphical View of the Multiplier
AE2
F
AE1
E
1,000
Increase in Equilibrium GDP
2,500 Billion
45
43Automatic Stabilizers and the Multiplier
- Automatic stabilizers reduce size of multiplier
and therefore reduce impact of spending shocks - With milder fluctuations, economy is more stable
- Some real-world automatic stabilizers weve
ignored in the simple, short-run macro model of
this chapter - Taxes
- Transfer payments
- Interest rates
- Imports
- Forward-looking behavior
- Each of these automatic stabilizers reduces size
of multiplier - Making it smaller than simple formulas given in
this chapter
44Automatic Stabilizers and the Multiplier
- In real world, due to automatic stabilizers,
spending shocks have much weaker impacts on
economy than our simple multiplier formulas would
suggest - One more automatic stabilizerperhaps the most
important of all - Passage of time
- In long-run, multipliers have a value of zero
- No matter what the change in spending or taxes,
output will return to full employment, so change
in equilibrium GDP will be zero
45The Role of Saving
- In long-run, saving has positive effects on
economy - But in short-run, automatic mechanisms of
classical model do not keep economy operating at
its potential - In long-run, an increase in desire to save leads
to faster economic growth and rising living
standards - In short-run, however, it can cause a recession
that pushes output below its potential - Two sides to the saving coin
- Impact of increased saving is positive in
long-run and potentially dangerous in short-run
46The Effect of Fiscal Policy
- In classical model fiscal policychanges in
government spending or taxes designed to change
equilibrium GDPis completely ineffective - In short-run, an increase in government purchases
causes a multiplied increase in equilibrium GDP - Therefore, in short-run, fiscal policy can
actually change equilibrium GDP - Observation suggests that fiscal policy could, in
principle, play a role in altering path of
economy - Indeed, in 1960s and early 1970s, this was the
thinking of many economists - But very few economists believe this today
-