0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views

Macroeconomics & Business Environment: Mugdha Vaidya IBS, Mumbai

1) The document discusses various macroeconomic concepts including the multiplier, investment multiplier, and fiscal multipliers. 2) It explains how an increase in autonomous aggregate demand leads to a more than proportional increase in national income due to the multiplier effect. 3) The size of the multiplier depends on the marginal propensity to consume, and is greater than one, implying an initial change in spending causes a larger change in income.

Uploaded by

Maitry Patel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views

Macroeconomics & Business Environment: Mugdha Vaidya IBS, Mumbai

1) The document discusses various macroeconomic concepts including the multiplier, investment multiplier, and fiscal multipliers. 2) It explains how an increase in autonomous aggregate demand leads to a more than proportional increase in national income due to the multiplier effect. 3) The size of the multiplier depends on the marginal propensity to consume, and is greater than one, implying an initial change in spending causes a larger change in income.

Uploaded by

Maitry Patel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 22

Macroeconomics

& Business
Environment
Mugdha Vaidya
IBS, Mumbai
Multiplier
• When aggregate expenditure increases the effect on national income is in
multiples of that initial increase
• The multiplier is the amount by which equilibrium output changes when
autonomous aggregate demand increases by one unit
• The size of this effect depends upon marginal propensity to consume (mpc)
∆𝐴𝐷 = ∆𝐴𝐸 +b ∆𝐴𝐸+𝑏 2 ∆𝐴𝐸+ 𝑏 3 ∆𝐴𝐸……..
= ∆𝐴𝐸(1+b+ 𝑏 2 + 𝑏 3 ……)
1
∆𝐴𝐷= ∆𝐴𝐸
1−𝑏
1 1
• Hence multiplier= or
1−𝑏 1−𝑚𝑝𝑐
Investment Multiplier
• Amount of change in equilibrium level of income due to change in
autonomous aggregate investment by one unit
Δ𝑌
• Investment multiplier= Where the multiplier >1
Δ𝐼
• It implies that one unit change in aggregate autonomous investment
causes more than proportionate change in national income
• The size of the multiplier depends upon household's marginal
propensity to consume (MPC)
𝟏 𝟏
• Investment Multiplier= 𝟏−𝒃 or 𝟏−𝒎𝒑𝒄
Deriving Investment Multiplier
• two sector economy- no government sector and foreign trade
𝑌 =𝐶+𝐼
∆𝑌 = ∆𝐶 + ∆𝐼 ….(∆𝑌0 =𝑌′0 − 𝑌0 )
𝐶 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑌 (no taxes so 𝑌𝐷 is same as Y)
∆𝐶= 𝑏∆𝑌
∆𝑌 = 𝑏∆𝑌 + ∆𝐼
∆𝑌 − 𝑏∆𝑌 = ∆𝐼
∆𝑌(1-b)= ∆𝐼
Δ𝑦 1
=
Δ𝐼 1−𝑏

𝟏 𝟏
• Investment Multiplier= 𝟏−𝒃 or 𝟏−𝒎𝒑𝒄
The Multiplier and Paradox of Thrift
• Thrift is believed to be a ‘virtue’ by classical economists for both
individuals as well as an economy as it was believed to help increase
wealth in the economy
• It was criticized by Keynes who argued that if everyone in the
economy became thrifty
• ↑Savings → ↓Consumption → ↓AD → ↓Income/Output
&
↓Income/Output → ↓ Savings
The Multiplier and Paradox of Thrift
• Is a contradiction where ‘virtue’ for an individual is ‘harm’ for an
economy
• Reverse multiplier effect with decrease in savings
• It occurs only when increase in savings is not accompanied by
increase in investment
• If there is simultaneous increase in investment, then through
multiplier effect income and savings both increase
Presence of Government sector
• Introduction of government as a key economic player along with
households and firms
• Government expenditure / Spending includes goods purchased by central ,
state and local governments and payments made to government
employees and is determined autonomously
• Taxes include taxes on property, income and goods – Direct and Indirect
• Transfers include payments that do not involve any direct services by the
recipient , e.g. welfare payments, unemployment insurance etc
• Taxes are leakages like savings and government expenditures are injections
like investments
• Taxes and transfers affect disposable income 𝑌𝐷 = Y+TR-TA
Presence of Government sector
• Though government expenditure has an expansionary effect, taxes
have a contractionary effect on income
• However contractionary effect of taxes is less than expansionary
effect of government expenditure because- – Government
expenditure is entirely an addition to AD – Increase in Tax is not
entirely decrease in AD, part of it is absorbed by decrease in savings
and only part is absorbed by reduction in consumption i.e. AD
• When transfer payments are introduced it has a similar effect of
government expenditure on income level
Equilibrium income in the presence of
Government sector
• When taxes are paid in lumpsum

𝑌 =𝐶+𝐼+𝐺
𝐶 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑌𝐷
ത 𝑇𝑅
𝑌𝐷 = 𝑌 − 𝑇+

𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏(𝑌 − 𝑇+ത 𝑇𝑅) + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ


𝑌 − 𝑏𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ − 𝑏𝑇ത + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ
1
𝑌= (𝐶ҧ − 𝑏𝑇ത + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺)ҧ
1−𝑏
Equilibrium income in the presence of
Government sector
• When proportional taxes are paid
𝑌 =𝐶+𝐼+𝐺
𝐶 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑌𝐷
𝑌𝐷 = 𝑌 − 𝑡𝑌 + 𝑇𝑅

𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏(𝑌 − 𝑡𝑌 + 𝑇𝑅) + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ
𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏 1 − 𝑡 𝑌 + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ
𝑌 − 𝑏 1 − 𝑡 𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ
1
𝑌= (𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺)ҧ
1−𝑏 1−𝑡
Fiscal Multipliers- Government expenditure
multiplier
• Change in government expenditure leads to change in AD and hence
also a change in national income
𝟏 𝟏
• The size of change depends upon or 𝟏−𝒎𝒑𝒄 , when taxes are paid
𝟏−𝒃
in lumpsum
𝟏 𝟏
• The size of change depends upon or , when
𝟏−𝒃(𝟏−𝒕) 𝟏−𝒎𝒑𝒄(𝟏−𝒕)
proportional taxes are paid
• Transfers are considered autonomous
• Since 0<b<1, Government expenditure multiplier is greater than 1
Deriving Government expenditure multiplier
𝑌 =𝐶+𝐼+𝐺
∆𝑌 = ∆𝐶+ ∆𝐺 …(since investment is exogenous and constant, 𝐼)ҧ
∆𝑌 = b∆𝑌𝐷 + ∆𝐺
ത 𝑇𝑅 …(when lumpsum tax is paid and transfers are
𝑌𝐷 = 𝑌 − 𝑇+
autonomous)
Hence, ∆𝑌 = b∆Y + ∆𝐺
∆𝑌 − 𝑏∆Y= ∆𝐺
∆𝑌(1-b)= ∆𝐺
𝜟𝒚 𝟏
=
𝜟𝑮 𝟏−𝒃
Deriving Government expenditure multiplier
𝑌 =𝐶+𝐼+𝐺
∆𝑌 = ∆𝐶+ ∆𝐺 …(since investment is exogenous, 𝐼)ҧ
∆𝑌 = b∆𝑌𝐷 + ∆𝐺
𝑌𝐷 = 𝑌 − 𝑡𝑌+ 𝑇𝑅…(when proportional tax is paid and transfers are
autonomous)
Hence, ∆𝑌 =b(1-t) ∆Y + ∆𝐺
∆𝑌 − 𝑏 1 − 𝑡 ∆Y= ∆𝐺
𝜟𝒚 𝟏
=
𝜟𝑮 𝟏−𝒃(𝟏−𝒕)
Fiscal Multipliers: Tax Multiplier
1
1. 𝑌 = (𝐶ҧ ҧ Equilibrium income in the presence of the Government sector
− 𝑏𝑇ത + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺)..
1−𝑏
1
2. 𝑌 + ∆𝑌 = ( 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ − 𝑏(𝑇ത + ∆𝑇)… If tax changes by ∆𝑇
1−𝑏
Hence,
1
∆𝑌 = (−𝑏(∆𝑇)
1−𝑏
𝚫𝒀 −𝒃
𝑮𝑻 = =
𝚫𝑻 𝟏−𝒃
Fiscal Multipliers- Balance Budget Multiplier
• Tax multiplier is negative hence increase in Tax causes decrease in the
equilibrium level of income
• The budget is in balance when government expenditures plus transfer
payments are equal to the gross tax receipts , G=T
• Therefore, increase in government expenditure is financed by
increase in taxation ∆G=∆T
• Balance Budget multiplier is the increase in income as a result of
increase in government expenditure and taxes , its value is equal to 1
• Regardless of value of b, Government expenditure multiplier > Tax
multiplier
Fiscal Multipliers- Balance Budget Multiplier
Balanced budget multiplier= Government expenditure multiplier + Tax
multiplier
Introduction of Foreign sector – Open
economy
• Equilibrium Income when Lumpsum tax paid
Y= C+I+G+X-M
Y= C+ 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ + 𝑋ത -M
M=𝑀+ ഥ mY
𝐶 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑌𝐷
ҧ
Y= 𝐶+b(𝑌 ത 𝑇𝑅) + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+
− 𝑇+ ҧ 𝑋ത -( 𝑀+
ഥ mY)
𝑌 − 𝑏𝑌 + 𝑚𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ − 𝑏𝑇ത + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ + 𝑋ത − 𝑀 ഥ
1
𝑌= (𝐶ҧ − 𝑏𝑇ത + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+ ҧ 𝑋ത − 𝑀)

1−𝑏+𝑚
Introduction of Foreign sector – Open
economy
• Equilibrium Income when Proportional tax paid
Y= C+I+G+X-M
Y= C+ 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺ҧ + 𝑋ത -M
M=𝑀+ ഥ mY
𝐶 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑌𝐷
𝑌𝐷 = 𝑌 − 𝑡𝑌 + 𝑇𝑅

𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏(𝑌 − 𝑡𝑌 + 𝑇𝑅) + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+
ҧ 𝑋-(
ത 𝑀+ഥ mY)

𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏 1 − 𝑡 𝑌 + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+ҧ 𝑋-(


ത 𝑀+
ഥ mY)
𝑌 − 𝑏 1 − 𝑡 𝑌 + 𝑚𝑌 = 𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+ ҧ 𝑋-
ത 𝑀ഥ
1
𝑌= (𝐶ҧ + 𝑏𝑇𝑅 + 𝐼 ҧ + 𝐺+ҧ 𝑋−
ത 𝑀)

1−𝑏 1−𝑡
Foreign Trade Multiplier
• Increase in income levels in other countries leads to increase in exports of
domestic economy
• This leads to increase in domestic production leading to increase in income
which further adds to increase in consumption(depending on mpc)
• Part of this increase is directed towards imports depending upon marginal
propensity to import ( mpi)
• This leads to second stage of expansion , though leakage in the form of imports
would restrict the expansion in income
• Further increases in income become smaller and smaller
• The size of multiplier will be smaller when marginal propensity to import(m) is
positive
Δ𝑦 1 1
= or
Δ𝑋 1−𝑏+𝑚 1−𝑏(1−𝑡)+𝑚
Deriving foreign trade multiplier
• When Lumpsum tax paid
Y= C+I+G+X-M
Y+M= C+I+G+X
∆𝑌 + ∆M = ∆C + ∆ X …(assuming investment and government expenditure
remains constant)
∆𝑌+m ∆𝑌=b ∆𝑌+ ∆ X
∆𝑌 +m ∆𝑌 −b ∆𝑌 = ∆ X
(1-b+m) ∆𝑌 = ∆ X
Δ𝑦 1
=
Δ𝑋 1−𝑏+𝑚
Deriving foreign trade multiplier
• When proportional tax paid
Y= C+I+G+X-M
Y+M= C+I+G+X
∆𝑌 + ∆M = ∆C + ∆ X… (assuming investment and government expenditure
remains constant)
∆𝑌+m ∆𝑌=b(1-t)∆𝑌+ ∆ X
∆𝑌 +m ∆𝑌 −b(1-t) ∆𝑌 = ∆ X
[1-b(1-t)+m] ∆𝑌 = ∆ X
Δ𝑦 1
=
Δ𝑋 1−𝑏(1−𝑡)+𝑚
Uses and Limitations of multiplier
• Most important in planning economic growth
• It shows amount of additional investment required to for the level of
planned growth in national income
• However it may not work
• Lack of availability of adequate quantity of consumer goods at the right time
• Time lag in increase in supply
• Full employment ceiling

You might also like