Top Banner
THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics
16

THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Dec 21, 2015

Download

Documents

Bethany Glenn
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

THE MULTIPLIER

AP Macroeconomics

Page 2: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Review

If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity to save must equal 1.

MPC + MPS = 1

Page 3: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Review

MPC = change in consumption/change in disposable income

MPS = change in savings/change in disposable income

…or 1-MPC (because MPC + MPS = 1, then 1-MPC must equal MPS)

Page 4: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

“delta” means

“change in”

Page 5: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

And now for…

THE MULTIPLIER…

Page 6: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Investment Demand

This is what happens if businesses decide to spend more on investment goods – output rises.

Page 7: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

The question is: by how much does output increase?

This is where the multiplier comes in!

Page 8: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

FOUR ASSUMPTIONS when analyzing the effects of changes in spending on the economy

1) Assume producers are willing to supply additional output at a fixed price

2) Take the interest rate as given 3) Assume there is no government spending

and taxes (no taxes)4) Assume exports and imports are zero (no

trade)

Page 9: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Home Improvement…

“The increase in aggregate output leads to an increase in disposable income that flows to households in the form of profit and wages” (Krugman, 158)

This is why, for example, if home builders decide to spend an extra $100 billion on home construction over the next year that the increase in housing investment spending does not raise the overall income by $100 billion exactly…

Page 10: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Total isolation…

Page 11: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

There’s ripple effect, or a chain reaction…

Page 12: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Multiple Rounds…

“The increase in a household’s disposable income leads to a rise in consumer spending which, in turn, induces firms to increase output yet again. This generates another rise in disposable income, which leads to another round of consumer spending increases, and so on. So there are multiple increases in rounds of aggregate output.”

Page 13: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Technically, to figure this out, we would take the MPC of round 1 and multiply it by $100 billion. We would then take the MPC of round 2 and multiply it by $100 billion, and so on. And then we would add them up:

(1+MPC1+MPC2+MPC3+…) x $100 billion

Page 14: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

So what, exactly, is the MULTIPLIER? 1/(1-MPC)

The ratio of the total change in real GDP caused by an autonomous change in aggregate spending to the

size of that autonomous change.

AUTONOMOUS = “self-governing” (the cause of the chain reaction)

i.e. the total change in real GDP caused by an autonomous change in aggregate spending

Page 15: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

And now…

Some resources:

http://www.reffonomics.com/textbook2/macroeconomics2/keynesianthought/keynesiancross.swf

Page 16: THE MULTIPLIER AP Macroeconomics. Review If households have the choice to consume or save, the marginal propensity to consume plus the marginal propensity.

Works Cited

Economics of Seinfeld. Saving. http://yadayadayadaecon.com/concept/saving/

Krugman, Paul, and Robin Wells. Krugman’s Economics for AP. New York: Worth Publishers.

Morton, John S. and Rae Jean B. Goodman. Advanced Placement Economics: Teacher Resource Manual. 3rd ed. New York: National Council on Economic Education, 2003. Print.

Reffonomics. www.reffonomics.com.