2 significant sentences - Business Finance
Instructions: Post one significant sentence from any chapter 10-12 and one from any chapter 13-14. And please explain why it is a powerful sentence. Both paragraphs should have a total of 5-7 sentences for each significant sentence.Please find the chapters 10-14 attached as a pdf.
ch_10_14.pdf
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CHA PT E R 1 0
Income and Expenditures
Equilibrium
FUNDAMENTAL QUESTIONS
1. What does equilibrium mean
in macroeconomics?
2. How do aggregate
expenditures affect income,
or real GDP?
ª Antb/Shutterstock.com
3. What are the leakages from
and injections into spending?
4. Why does equilibrium real
GDP change by a multiple of a
change in autonomous
expenditures?
Preview
top: ª Carsten Reisinger/Shutterstock
What determines the level of income and expenditures, or real GDP? In the chapter titled
“Macroeconomic Equilibrium: Aggregate Demand and Supply,” we used aggregate
demand and aggregate supply to answer this question. Then, in the chapter titled
“Aggregate Expenditures,” we developed the components of aggregate expenditures in
more detail to provide the foundation for an additional approach to answering the question,
“What determines the level of real GDP?” If you know the answer to this question, you are
well on your way to understanding business cycles. Sometimes real GDP is growing and
jobs are relatively easy to find; at other times real GDP is falling and large numbers of people are out of work. Macroeconomists use several models to analyze the causes of busi-
5. What is the spending
multiplier?
6. What is the relationship
between the GDP gap and
the recessionary gap?
7. How does international
trade affect the size of the
spending multiplier?
8. Why does the aggregate
expenditures curve shift with
changes in the price level?
ness cycles. Underlying all of these models is the concept of macroeconomic equilibrium.
203
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Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
204
Chapter 10 Income and Expenditures Equilibrium
Equilibrium here means what it did when we talked about supply and demand: a point
of balance, a point from which there is no tendency to move. In macroeconomics, equilibrium is the level of income and expenditures that the economy tends to move toward
and remain at until autonomous spending changes.
Economists have not always agreed on how an economy reaches equilibrium or on
the forces that move an economy from one equilibrium to another. This last issue
formed the basis of economic debate during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Before
the 1930s, economists generally believed that the economy was always at or moving toward an equilibrium consistent with a high level of employed resources. The British
economist John Maynard Keynes did not agree. He believed that an economy can come
to rest at a level of real GDP that is too low to provide employment for all those who
desire it. He also believed that certain actions are necessary to ensure that the economy
rises to a level of real GDP consistent with a high level of employment. In particular,
Keynes argued that government must intervene in the economy in a big way (see the
Economic Insight “John Maynard Keynes”).
To understand the debate that began during the 1930s and continues on various
fronts today, it is necessary to understand the Keynesian view of how equilibrium real
GDP is determined. This is our focus here. We have seen in the chapter titled
“Macroeconomic Equilibrium: Aggregate Demand and Supply” that the aggregate
demand and supply model of macroeconomic equilibrium allows the price level to fluctuate as the equilibrium level of real GDP changes. The Keynesian income-expenditures
model assumes that the price level is fixed. It emphasizes aggregate expenditures without explicitly considering the supply side of the economy. This is why we considered the
components of spending in detail in the chapter titled “Aggregate Expenditures”—to
provide a foundation for the analysis in this chapter. The Keynesian model may be
viewed as a special fixed-price case of the aggregate demand and aggregate supply
model. In later chapters, we examine the relationship between equilibrium and the level
of employed resources and the effect of government policy on both of these elements.
10-1 Equilibrium Income and Expenditures
1. What does equilibrium
mean in macroeconomics?
Equilibrium is a point from which there is no tendency to move. People do not change their
behavior when everything is consistent with what they expect. However, when plans and
reality do not match, people adjust their behavior to make them match. Determining a
nation’s equilibrium level of income and expenditures is the process of defining the level of
income and expenditures at which plans and reality are the same.
10-1a Expenditures and Income
2. How do aggregate
expenditures affect income,
or real GDP?
We use the aggregate expenditures function described at the end of the chapter titled
“Aggregate Expenditures” to demonstrate how equilibrium is determined. Keep in mind that
the aggregate expenditures function represents planned expenditures at different levels of
income, or real GDP. We focus on planned expenditures because they represent the amount
that households, firms, government, and the foreign sector expect to spend.
Copyright 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
Chapter 10 Income and Expenditures Equilibrium
205
ECONOMIC INSIGHT
John Maynard Keynes
John Maynard Keynes (pronounced “canes”) is considered
by many to be the greatest economist of the twentieth
century. His major work, The General Theory of Employment,
Interest, and Money, had a profound impact on macroeconomics, both in thought and policy. Keynes was born in
Cambridge, England, on June 5, 1883. He studied economics
at Cambridge University, where he became a lecturer in
economics in 1908. During World War I, Keynes worked for
the British treasury. At the end of the war, he was the treasury’s representative at the Versailles Peace Conference. He
resigned from the British delegation at the conference to protest the harsh terms being imposed on the defeated countries. His resignation and the publication of Economic
Consequences of the Peace (1919) made him an international
celebrity.
In 1936, Keynes published The General Theory. It was a
time of world recession (it has been estimated that around
one-quarter of the U.S. labor force was unemployed at the
height of the Depression), and policymakers were searching
for ways to explain the persistent unemployment. In the book,
Keynes suggested that an economy could be at equilibrium at
less than potential GDP. More important, he argued that government policy could be altered to end recession. His analysis
emphasized aggregate expenditures. If private expenditures
were not sufficient to create equilibrium at potential GDP, government expenditures could be increased to stimulate income
and output. This was a startling concept. Most economists of
the time believed that government should not take an active
role in the economy. With his General Theory, Keynes started
a “revolution” in macroeconomics.
Andre Seale/Alamy
Actual expenditures always
equal income and output because
they reflect changes in inventories.
That is, inventories automatically
raise or lower investment expenditures so that actual spending equals
income, which equals output,
which equals real GDP. However,
aggregate expenditures (which are
planned spending) may not equal
real GDP. What happens when
planned spending and real GDP
are not equal?
When planned spending on
goods and services exceeds the current value of output, the production
of goods and services increases.
Because output equals income, the
level of real GDP also increases.
This is the situation for all income
levels below $500 in Figure 1. At Net exports equal exports minus imports. Agricultural products are important exports for many
these levels, total spending is greater countries, like these papayas being shipped from the port of Manaus Amazonas Brazil. If sold to
than real GDP, which means that a U.S. importer, the papayas will represent Brazilian exports and contribute to increased GDP in
Brazil by means of higher net exports.
more goods and services are being
purchased than are being produced. The only way this can happen is for goods produced in
the past to be sold. When planned spending is greater than real GDP, business inventories fall.
Copyright 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
206
Chapter 10 Income and Expenditures Equilibrium
FIGURE 1 The Equilibrium Level of Real GDP
(1)
Real GDP
(Y )
$0
(2)
Consumption
(C )
(3)
Investment
(I )
(4)
Government
Spending
(G)
$30
$50
$70
(5)
Net
Exports
(X )
(6)
Aggregate
Expenditures
(AE )
(7)
Unplanned
Change in
Inventories
$200
$200
$50
(8)
Change in
Real GDP
Increase
$100
$100
$50
$70
$40
$260
$160
Increase
$200
$170
$50
$70
$30
$320
$120
Increase
$300
$240
$50
$70
$20
$380
$80
Increase
$400
$310
$50
$70
$10
$440
$40
$500
$380
$50
$70
$0
$500
$0
$600
$450
$50
$70
$10
$560
$40
Decrease
$700
$520
$50
$70
$20
$620
$80
Decrease
Increase
No change
AE < Y
Income Falls
700
Expenditures (AE ) (dollars)
600
Equilibrium
500
AE > Y
Income Rises
400
AE
300
200
100
45
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
Real GDP (Y ) (dollars)
Macroeconomic equilibrium occurs where aggregate expenditures (AE) equal real GDP (Y). In the graph it is the point where the AE line
crosses the 45-degree line, where expenditures and real GDP both equal $500. When aggregate expenditures exceed real GDP (as they do
at a real GDP level of $400, for example), real GDP rises to the equilibrium level. When aggregate expenditures are less than real GDP (as
they are at a real GDP level of $600, for example), real GDP falls back to the equilibrium level.
When aggregate expenditures
exceed real GDP, real GDP
rises.
This change in inventories offsets the excess of planned expenditures over real GDP, so actual
expenditures (including the unplanned change in inventories) equal real GDP. You can see
this in column 7 of the table in Figure 1, where the change in inventories offsets the excess of
aggregate expenditures over real GDP (the difference between columns 6 and 1).
What happens when inventories fall? As inventories fall, manufacturers increase production to meet the demand for products. The increased production raises the level of real
GDP. When aggregate expenditures exceed real GDP, real GDP rises.
At real GDP levels above $500 in the table, aggregate expenditures are less than income.
As a result, inventories are accumulating above planned levels—more goods and services are
being produced than are being purchased. As inventories rise, businesses begin to reduce the
quantity of output they produce. The unplanned increase in inventories is counted as a form
Copyright 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
207
Chapter 10 Income and Expenditures Equilibrium
of investment spending so that actual expenditures equal real GDP. For example, when real
GDP is $600, aggregate expenditures are only $560. The $40 of goods that are produced but
not sold are measured as inventory investment. The $560 of aggregate expenditures plus the
$40 of unplanned inventories equal $600, the level of real GDP. As inventories increase,
firms cut production; this causes real GDP to fall. When aggregate expenditures are less than
real GDP, real GDP falls.
There is only one level of real GDP in the table in Figure 1 at which real GDP does not
change. When real GDP is $500, aggregate expenditures equal $500. The equilibrium level of
real GDP (or output) is that point at which aggregate expenditures equal real GDP (or output).
When aggregate expenditures equal real GDP, planned spending equals the output produced and the income generated from producing that output. As long as planned spending
is consistent with real GDP, real GDP does not change. But if planned spending is higher or
lower than real GDP, real GDP does change. Equilibrium is that point at which planned
spending and real GDP are equal.
The graph in Figure 1 illustrates equilibrium. The 45-degree line shows all possible
points where aggregate expenditures (measured on the vertical axis) equal real GDP (measured on the horizontal axis). The equilibrium level of real GDP, then, is simply the point
where the aggregate expenditures line (AE) crosses the 45-degree line. In the figure, equilibrium occurs where real GDP and expenditures are $500.
When the AE curve lies above the 45-degree line—for example, at a real GDP level of
$400—aggregate expenditures are greater than real GDP. What happens? Real GDP rises to
the equilibrium level, where it tends to stay. When the AE curve lies below the 45-degree
line—at a real GDP level of $600, for example—aggregate expenditures are less than real
GDP; this pushes real GDP down. Once real GDP falls to the equilibrium level ($500 in our
example), it tends to stay there.
When aggregate expenditures
are less than real GDP, real
GDP falls.
The equilibrium level of real
GDP is where aggregate
expenditures equal real GDP.
10-1b Leakages and Injections
Equilibrium can be determined by using aggregate expenditures and real GDP, which represents income. Another way to determine equilibrium involves leakages from and injections
into the income stream, the circular flow of income and expenditures.
Leakages reduce autonomous aggregate expenditures. There are three leakages in j the
stream from domestic income to spending: saving, taxes, and imports.
•
•
•
The more households save, the less they spend. An increase in autonomous saving
means a decrease in autonomous consumption, which could cause the equilibrium level
of real GDP to fall (see the Economic Insight “The Paradox of Thrift”).
Taxes are an involuntary reduction in consumption. The government transfers income
away from households. Higher taxes lower autonomous consumption, in the process
lowering autonomous aggregate expenditures and the equilibrium level of real GDP.
Imports are expenditures for foreign goods and services. They reduce expenditures on
domestic goods and services. An autonomous increase in imports reduces net exports,
causing autonomous aggregate expenditures and the equilibrium level of real GDP to fall.
For equilibrium to occur, these leakages must be offset by corresponding injections of
spending into the domestic economy through investment, government spending, and
exports.
•
•
•
3. What are the leakages from
and injections into spending?
Saving, taxes, and imports are
leakages that reduce
autonomous aggregate
expenditures.
Investment, government
spending, and exports are
injections that increase
autonomous aggregate
expenditures.
Household saving generates funds that businesses can borrow and spend for investment
purposes.
The taxes collected by government are used to finance government purchases of goods
and services.
Exports bring foreign expenditures into the domestic economy.
Copyright 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
208
Chapter 10 Income and Expenditures Equilibrium
ECONOMIC INSIGHT
The Paradox of Thrift
People generally believe that saving is good and more saving
is better. However, if every family increased its saving, the
result could be less income for the economy as a whole. In
fact, increased saving could actually lower savings for all
households.
An increase in saving may provide an example of the paradox of thrift. A paradox is a true proposition that seems to
contradict common beliefs. We believe that we will be better
off if we increase our saving, but in the aggregate, increased
saving could cause the economy to be worse off. The paradox of thrift is a fallacy of composition: the assumption that
what is true of a part is true of the whole. It often is unsafe to
generalize from what is true at the micro level to what is true
at the macro level.
The graph illustrates the effect of higher saving. Initial
equilibrium occurs where the S1 þ T þ IM curve intersects
the I þ G þ EX curve, at an income of $500. Suppose saving
Saving
Increases
100
Leakages (S + T + I M ),
Injections (I + G + EX) (dollars)
increases by $20 at every level of income. The S1 þ T þ IM
curve shifts up to the S2 þ T þ IM curve. A new equilibrium
is established at an income level of $400. The higher rate of
saving causes equilibrium income to fall by $100.
Notice that the graph is drawn with a constant I þ G þ
EX line, since these are autonomous spending items that do
not depend upon income. If investment increases along with
saving, equilibrium income will not necessarily fall. In fact,
because saving is necessary before there can be any investment, we would expect a greater demand for investment
funds to induce higher saving. If increased saving is used to
fund investment expenditures, the economy should grow
over time to higher and higher levels of income. Only if the
increased saving is not injected back into the economy is
there a paradox of thrift. The fact that governments do not
discourage saving suggests that the paradox of thrift generally is not a real-world problem,
80
S2
S1
e2
e1
60
20
–20
T
G
IM
IM
EX
Income
Falls
40
0
I
T
100
200
300
400
500
600
Real GDP (Y ) (dollars)
–40
–60
The equilibrium level of real
GDP occurs where leakages
equal injections.
There is no reason to expect that each injection will match its corresponding leakage—
that investment will equal saving, that government spending will equal taxes, or that exports
will equal imports. But for equilibrium to occur, total injections must equal total leakages.
Figure 2 shows how leakages and injections determine the equilibrium level of real
GDP. Column 5 of the table lists the total leakages from aggregate expenditures: saving (S)
plus taxes (T) plus imports (IM). Saving and imports both increase when real GDP
increases. We assume that there are no taxes, so the total amount of leakages (S þ T þ IM)
increases as real GDP increases.
Copyright 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some th ...
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