Title: Chapter 19 Spending Allocation Model
1Chapter 19Spending Allocation Model
- Spending Shares
- Effect of Interest Rates on Spending Shares
- Determining the Equilibrium Interest Rate
The spending allocation model applies more to the
long run than to short-run economic fluctuation.
2Spending Shares
- Y C I G X
- Dividing each side by Y
- ? 1 (C/Y) (I/Y) (G/Y) (X/Y)
- where
- C/Y Consumption share
- I/Y Investment share
- G/Y Government purchase share
- X/Y Net export share
3Numerical Example of Spending Shares
4Figure 19.1History of Spending Shares in GDP
5Interest Rate and Spending Shares (I)
- The interest rate affects the three shares of
spending consumption, investment, and next
exports. - When one of spending component increases
(decreases) such as consumption, the real output
must increase (decrease) by the same amount and
its spending share will increase (decrease). - Ex. Consumption decreases by 1,000 billion.
6Interest Rate and Spending Shares (I)
- Real interest rate rather than nominal interest
rate - The real interest rate in the long run is
determined by balancing private demands for
consumption, investment, and net exports with the
available supply of goods and services in the
economy. - Response by consumers, firms, and foreigners to
changes in interest rate takes a long time.
7Consumption and Saving
- A consumer must make a choice between consumption
and saving out of his/her income. - More a consumer saves today, more money available
to consume in future. - A choice between consumption and saving today is
a choice between consumption today and
consumption in future.
8Consumption and Interest Rate (I)
- A choice between consumption and saving today
depends on the interest rage.
- Example. You can spend 100 today or save it at
8 interest rate and spend it next year. - Next year you will get 108 and can consume 108
worth of goods and service. - If you think spending 100 today worth more than
spending 108 next year, you should consume 100
today. - If you think spending 100 today worth less than
spending 108 next year, you should save 100
today.
9Consumption and Interest Rate (II)
- A higher the interest rate,
- More goods and services a consumer can consume in
future - More saving a consumer makes today
- Less consumption a consumer makes today.
- The consumption is negatively related to the
interest rate. - The consumption share is negatively related to
the interest rate. - The consumption share function is downward
sloping.
10Figure 19.2The Consumption Share and the
Interest Rate
11Investment and Interest Rate (I)
- Firms borrow the funds to purchase capital and
pay back in future when it makes profits from its
production. - The higher the interest rate,
- the more they must pay back in future.
- The less they borrow today.
- The investment is negatively related to the
interest rate. - The investment share is negatively related to the
interest rate. - The investment share function is downward sloping.
12Investment and Interest Rate (II)
- The investment is more sensitive to interest
rates than consumption. - Future profits from the investment are not known.
- Higher interest rate makes an investment project
riskier. - The investment share function is less steep than
the consumption share function.
13Figure 19.3The Investment Share and the Interest
Rate
14Net Export and Interest Rate (I)
- The interest rate affects the exchange rate, and
in turn, affects the net exports. - Exchange rate the price of one currency in terms
of another. - Net exports are negatively related to the
interest rate.
15Net Export and Interest Rate (II)
- Interest rates in U.S. increase
- Foreigners want to save more funds in the U.S.
- Foreigners need to exchange their currencies to
the U.S. dollar. - The value of U.S. dollar increases relative to
foreign currencies. - The price of U.S. goods become more expensive
relative to foreign goods. - U.S. consumers buy cheaper foreign goods more.
- Net exports (Export Import) decrease in the
U.S.
16Figure 19.4The Net Exports Share and the
Interest Rate
17Effect of Interest Rate on Spending Shares
- Non-government shares
- Sum of consumption share, investment share, and
net exports share - Interest rate increases
- Consumption share decreases
- Investment share decreases
- Net exports share decreases
- Non-government shares also decrease
- ?Non-government shares function is downward
sloping.
18Figure 19.6Summing up Consumption, Investment,
and Net Exports Shares
19Government Purchases Share
- The government share does not depend on the
interest rate. - Once the government determines its share (by
setting the government purchase), the
non-government share is determined as one minus
the government share. - 1 (NG/Y) (G/Y)
- Where (NG/Y) (C/Y) (I/Y) (X/Y)
20Supply and Demand for Spending by the Private
Sector
21Determining Equilibrium Interest Rate
- Given the government share, the non-government
share function determines the interest rate which
makes the sum of all four shares equal to one. - The equilibrium interest rate determines shares
of consumption, investment, and net exports.
22Figure 19.7Determining the Equilibrium Interest
Rate and the Shares of Spending
23Changes in Interest Rate
- The interest rate will change when there is a
change (shift) in the the supply of resources
available for private sector or the demand for
spending by private sector. - Changes in government purchases share
- Shift of consumption share, investment share, or
net export share
24A Shift in Government Purchases
- The share of government purchases share
increases, then - The share (supply) available for non-government
uses increases. - Interest rate decreases.
- Shares of consumption, investment, and net
exports increase. - Crowding out the decline in private investment
due to an increase in government purchases.
25Figure 19.8The Effect of a Decrease in
Government Purchases
26A Shift in Consumption
- Consumers spend more (save less)
- The consumption share function shifts to the
right. - The non-government share function shifts to the
right. - The interest rate increases.
- The shares of investment and net exports decrease.
27Figure 19.9Effect of a Shift in Consumption
28National Saving Rate and Interest Rate
- High interest rate is a result of
- low national saving rate (by households and
government) leads to a higher interest rate (S
Y C G). - Higher government purchases
- Higher consumption
- high non-government share
- Higher investment
- Higher net exports