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

Princ Ch26 Presentation

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

Princ Ch26 Presentation

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 27

CHAPTE

R 26
Saving, Investment, and
the Financial System
Economics
PRINCIPLES OF

N. Gregory
Mankiw
Premium PowerPoint Slides
by Ron Cronovich
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved
In this chapter,
look for the answers to these
questions:
 What are the main types of financial institutions in
the U.S. economy, and what is their function?
 What are the three kinds of saving?
 What’s the difference between saving and
investment?
 How does the financial system coordinate saving
and investment?
 How do govt policies affect saving, investment, and
the interest rate? 2
Financial Institutions
 The financial system: the group of institutions
that helps match the saving of one person with the
investment of another.
 Financial markets: institutions through which
savers can directly provide funds to borrowers.
Examples:
 The Bond Market.
A bond is a certificate of indebtedness.
 The Stock Market.
A stock is a claim to partial ownership in a firm.

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 3


Financial Institutions
 Financial intermediaries: institutions through
which savers can indirectly provide funds to
borrowers. Examples:
 Banks
 Mutual funds – institutions that sell shares to
the public and use the proceeds to buy portfolios
of stocks and bonds

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 4


Different Kinds of Saving
Private saving
= The portion of households’ income that is
not used for consumption or paying taxes
=Y–T–C

Public saving
= Tax revenue less government spending
=T–G

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 5


Budget Deficits and
Surpluses
Budget surplus
= an excess of tax revenue over govt spending
= T–G
= public saving

Budget deficit
= a shortfall of tax revenue from govt spending
= G–T
= – (public saving)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 6


National Saving
National saving
= private saving + public saving
= (Y – T – C) + (T – G)
= Y – C – G
= the portion of national income that is not used
for consumption or government purchases

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 7


Saving and Investment
Recall the national income accounting identity:
Y = C + I + G + NX
For the rest of this chapter, focus on the closed
economy case:
Y=C+I+G
national saving
Solve for I:
I = Y–C–G = (Y – T – C) + (T – G)

Saving
Saving == investment
investment in
in aa closed
closed economy
economy

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 8


ACTIVE LEARNING 1
A. Calculations
 Suppose GDP equals $10 trillion,
consumption equals $6.5 trillion,
the government spends $2 trillion
and has a budget deficit of $300 billion.
 Find public saving, taxes, private saving,
national saving, and investment.

9
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
Answers, part A
Given:
Y = 10.0, C = 6.5, G = 2.0, G – T = 0.3

Public saving = T – G = – 0.3

Taxes: T = G – 0.3 = 1.7

Private saving = Y – T – C = 10 – 1.7 – 6.5 = 1.8

National saving = Y – C – G = 10 – 6.5 = 2 = 1.5

Investment = national saving = 1.5


10
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
B. How a tax cut affects
saving
Use the numbers from the preceding exercise,
but suppose now that the government cuts taxes
by $200 billion.
 In each of the following two scenarios,
determine what happens to public saving,
private saving, national saving, and investment.
1. Consumers save the full proceeds of the
tax cut.
2. Consumers save 1/4 of the tax cut and spend
the other 3/4.
11
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
Answers, part B
In both scenarios, public saving falls by
$200 billion, and the budget deficit rises
from $300 billion to $500 billion.
1. If consumers save the full $200 billion,
national saving is unchanged,
so investment is unchanged.
2. If consumers save $50 billion and spend $150
billion, then national saving and investment
each fall by $150 billion.

12
SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 13
The Meaning of Saving and
Investment
 Private saving is the income remaining after
households pay their taxes and pay for
consumption.
 Examples of what households do with saving:
 Buy corporate bonds or equities
 Purchase a certificate of deposit at the bank
 Buy shares of a mutual fund
 Let accumulate in saving or checking accounts

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 14


The Meaning of Saving and
Investment
 Investment is the purchase of new capital.
 Examples of investment:
 THACO spends $250 million to build
a new factory in Flint, Michigan.
 You buy $5000 worth of computer equipment
for your business.
 Your parents spend $300,000 to have a new
house built.

Remember:
Remember: In
In economics,
economics, investment
investment is
is NOT
NOT
the
the purchase
purchase of
of stocks
stocks and
and bonds!
bonds!
SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 15
The Market for Loanable Funds
 A supply-demand model of the financial system
 Helps us understand
 how the financial system coordinates
saving & investment
 how govt policies and other factors affect
saving, investment, the interest rate

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 16


The Market for Loanable Funds
Assume: only one financial market
 All savers deposit their saving in this market.
 All borrowers take out loans from this market.
 There is one interest rate, which is both the
return to saving and the cost of borrowing.

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 17


The Market for Loanable Funds
The supply of loanable funds comes from saving:
 Households with extra income can loan it out
and earn interest. (private saving)
 Public saving, if positive, adds to national
saving and the supply of loanable funds.
If negative, it reduces national saving and the
supply of loanable funds.

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 18


The Slope of the Supply
Curve
An increase in
Interest
Rate Supply the interest rate
makes saving
more attractive,
6%
which increases
the quantity of
loanable funds
3% supplied.

60 80 Loanable Funds
($billions)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 19


The Market for Loanable Funds
The demand for loanable funds comes from
investment:
 Firms borrow the funds they need to pay for
new equipment, factories, etc.
 Households borrow the funds they need to
purchase new houses.

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 20


The Slope of the Demand
Curve
A fall in the interest
Interest
rate reduces the cost
Rate
of borrowing, which
7% increases the quantity
of loanable funds
demanded.
4%

Demand

50 80 Loanable Funds
($billions)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 21


Equilibrium
The interest rate
Interest adjusts to equate
Rate Supply supply and demand.

The eq’m quantity


5% of L.F. equals
eq’m investment
and eq’m saving.
Demand

60 Loanable Funds
($billions)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 22


Policy 1: Saving Incentives
Tax incentives for
Interest saving increase
Rate S1 S2 the supply of L.F.

…which reduces the


5%
eq’m interest rate
4%
and increases the
eq’m quantity of L.F.
D1

60 70 Loanable Funds
($billions)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 23


Policy 2: Investment
Incentives
An investment tax
Interest credit increases the
Rate S1 demand for L.F.
6%
…which raises the
5% eq’m interest rate
and increases the
D2 eq’m quantity of L.F.
D1

60 70 Loanable Funds
($billions)

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 24


ACTIVE LEARNING 2
Exercise
Use the loanable funds model to analyze
the effects of a government budget deficit:
 Draw the diagram showing the initial
equilibrium.
 Determine which curve shifts when the
government runs a budget deficit.
 Draw the new curve on your diagram.
 What happens to the equilibrium values of the
interest rate and investment?

25
ACTIVE LEARNING 2
Answers A
A budget
budget deficit
deficit reduces
reduces
national
national saving
saving and
and the
the
Interest S2 supply
S1 supply of
of L.F.
L.F.
Rate

…which
…which increases
increases
6% the
the eq’m
eq’m interest
interest rate
rate
5% and decreases the
eq’m quantity of L.F.
and investment.
D1

50 60 Loanable Funds
($billions)
26
CONCLUSION
 Like many other markets, financial markets are
governed by the forces of supply and demand.
 One of the Ten Principles from Chapter 1:
Markets are usually a good way
to organize economic activity.
Financial markets help allocate the economy’s
scarce resources to their most efficient uses.
 Financial markets also link the present to the future:
They enable savers to convert current income into
future purchasing power, and borrowers to acquire
capital to produce goods and services in the future.
SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM 27

You might also like