Consumption Function
Consumption Function
Consumption, saving, and investment play a central role in a nations economic performance. Nations that save and invest large fractions of their incomes tend to have rapid growth of output, income, and wages; this pattern characterized the United States in the nineteenth century, Japan in the twentieth century, and the miracle economies of East Asia in the last three decades.
Consumption and investment are central to macroeconomics. Consumption is the largest single component of GDP, constituting around 65 percent of total spending over the last decade. What are the major elements of consumption? Among the most important categories are housing, motor vehicles, food, and medical care.
Consumption function
One of the most important relationships in all macro-economics is the consumption function. The consumption function shows the relationship between the level of consumption expenditures and the level of disposable personal income. This concept, introduced by Keynes, is based on the hypothesis that there is a stable empirical relationship between consumption and income.
Keynes was not interested in factors determining the aggregate supply. He focused his attention to analyze aggregate demand. Therefore, Consumption function assumes significant role in explaining the composition of aggregate demand and changes there in.
MPC=C Y
Determinants of consumption
1. Redistribution of income in favour of poor 2. Easy availability of credit 3. Expectations about price and income changes 4. Money illusion can lead to higher conumption
MPC
0.81 0.76 0.80 0.77 0.90 0.85 0.66 0.89
1. line tells us whether consumption is equal to, greater than, or less than the level of disposable income. 2. It also tells about how much the household is saving or dissaving
o 45
The break-even point on the consumption schedule that intersects the 45o line represents the level of disposable income at which households just break even or where the entire disposable income is spent on consumption with nothing left for savings.
With the increase in income, saving gap also increases As a result of increase in the propensity to consume of the community, the propensity to consume curves shifts upward. If APC remains constant, the consumption function curve will be linear or a straight line.
Propensity to consume
AP= C Y MPC= C Y APC+APS=Y=1 APC=1-APS APS=1-APC MPC= S Y MPC= 1-MPS MPS= 1-MPC MPC+MPS=1
Such changes (falling MPC and falling APC) are possible during recessionary phase
Determinants of Consumption
Current disposable income. Permanent income and the Life-Cycle Model of Consumption. The life-cycle hypothesis assumes that people save in order to smooth their consumption over their life-time.
Consumption
Demonstration Effect: Natural Instinct to Imitate others General Price Level Inverse Relationship Taxation Policy - Inverse Relation Rate of Interest: Uncertain Relationship Windfall gains & losses Change in Expectations
Keynes CF attributes
Current income determines consumption. MPC is 0.70 but less than 1 When Income increase APC falls. Consumption Function is Stable in Short Run.
Psychological law of consumption As income rises consumption lags behind this can lead to secular stagnation
Future expectations Capital gains or wind-fall gains Price level Fiscal policy Interest Rate Determinants of savings
Investment function
Real Investment: According to Keynes, it implies creation of new capital goods such as machinery and stores, which directly create additional jobs and new output Types: Induced and Autonomous investment
Induced Investment
Has a direct relationship with income When income increases, C Inc. and to meet this investment also increases. Induced investment is Income elastic I=f(Y)
Autonomous investment
AI is independent of the level of income Income inelastic Influenced by exogenous factors like innovations, inventions,growth of population and labour force, researches, social and legal institutions, weather changes and war But it is not influenced by demand
Determinants of investment
Keynes says that the volume of investment in the economy depends upon: MEC and Rate of interest MEC is dependent upon the prospective yield from the capital asset and supply price of the capital asset,which is the cost of producing the asset Therefore, e = Q/p Further, Keynes defines MEC as equal to the rate of discount which would make the present value of annuities given by the returns expected from the capital asset during its life just equal to the supply price.
price of the asset R= prospective yields or the series of expected annual returnsfrom the capital assest in the year 1,2 and n yrs e=rate of discount which makes the capital asset exactly equal to the present value of the expected yield from it.Thus e=MEC
Rate of Interest
Since MEC is expressed as a ratio it can be compared to rate of interest,as the pvt investment directly depends upon a rational comparison between the expected rate of profit and the rate of interest. Such a comparison is in effect b/w the supply price of an asset and its demand price Demand price of the asset is the sum of expected future yield discount at the current rate of interest Thus, DP= Sum of prospective yield discounted at the current rate of interest SP= sum of prospective yields discounted by the MEC
MEC: prospective yield(dependent upon expectations: short run or long run) and supply price of asset Rate of interest : Supply of money and demand for money Demand for money :liquidity preference : transcationary motive ,precautionary motive Investmen and speculative motive t TM and PM are income elastic,never change in short period. M1=L1(Y) Money held for speculative motive if a function of rate of interest,M2=L2(r), Higher the rate of interest, lower the demand for money Autonomous
Govt Exp
Determination of employment
Employment(lak hs) 0 10 AS(Rs crore) 0 60 AD(rs crore) 60 100 Trends in employment rise rise
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90
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rise
rise rise equilibrium Fall Fall