Title: HKALE Macroeconomics
1HKALE Macroeconomics
- Chapter 2 Elementary Keynesian Model (I)-
- Two-sector
2References
- CH 3, Advanced Level Macroeconomics, 5th Ed, Dr.
LAM pun-lee, MacMillan Publishers (China) Limited - CH 3, HKALE Macroeconomics, 2nd Ed., LEUNG
man-por, Hung Fung Book Co. Ltd. - CH 3, A-L Macroeconomics, 3rd Ed., Chan Kwok,
Golden Crown
3Introduction
- National income accounting can only provide
ex-post data about national income. - The three approaches are identities as they are
true for any income level.
4Introduction
- In order to explain the level and determinants of
national income during a period of time, we count
on national income determination model, e.g.
Keynesian Models.
5Business Cycle
GNP
Recovery
Boom
Recession
Depression
0
Time
6Business Cycle
- It shows the recurrent fluctuations in GNP around
a secular trend
Trough Recovery Peak Recession
Employment level the lowest Rising the highest Falling
Growth rate of real GNP Negative Rising the highest Falling
Prices the lowest Rising the highest falling
7HKs Economic Performance
8Assumptions behind National Income Models
9Assumptions behind National Income Models
- Y National income at constant price
- Potential/Full-employment national income, Yf is
constant
- Existence of idle resources, i.e. unemployment
- The level of price is constant
- as Y PQ P 1, then Y (1)Q ? Y Q
- Price level tends to be rigid in downward
direction
10Equilibrium Income Determination of Keynesian's
Two-sector Model (1)- A Spendthrift Economy
11John Maynard Keynes
12- Two sectors households and firms
- no saving, no tax and no imports
- YYd while Yd disposable income
? no investment or injection
13Simple Circular Flow Model of a Spendthrift
Economy
Households
C
Income generated
Payment for goods and service
Y
E
Firms
14By Income-expenditure Approach
- AD ? (without S) E C ? Y (firms)
- ?
? - Y (households) ? AS ? D for factors
15By Income-expenditure Approach
- Equilibrium income, Ye is determined when
- AS AD
- Y E ?Y E C
16Equilibrium Income Determination of Keynesian's
Two-sector Model (2)-A Frugal Economy
17Assumptions
- 1. Households and firms
- 2. Saving, S, exists
- Income is either consumed or saved
- ? Y CS
- leakage, S, exists
- 3. Without tax, YYd
18Assumptions
- 4. Consumer and producer goods
- Injection (investment, I) exist
- 5. Investment is autonomous/exogenous
- 6. Saving and investment decisions
- made separately
- SI occurs only at equilibrium level of income
19Simple Circular Flow Model of a Frugal Economy
Households
C
S
Financial markets
I
Income generated
Payment for goods and service
Y
E
Firms
20Income Function Income line/45? line/Y-line
- an artificial linear function on which each point
showing Y E
21Expenditure Function (1) Consumption Function, C
- showing that planned consumption expenditure
varies positively with but proportionately less
than change in Yd - A linear consumption function C a cYd
- where
- a a constant representing autonomous
- consumption expenditure
- c Marginal Propensity to Consume, MPC
22A Consumption Function, C
E
C a cYd
a
Y
0
23Marginal Propensity to Consume, MPC, c
24Properties of MPC
- the slope of the consumption function
- 1gtMPCgt0
- the value of 'c' is constant for all income levels
25Average Propensity to Consume, APC
26Properties of APC
- the slope of the ray from the origin
- APC falls when Y rises
- Since C a cYd
Then
i.e.
Thus, APCgtMPC for all income levels
27Consumption Function Without a
28Consumption Function Without a
29Expenditure Function (2) Investment Function, I
- showing the relationship between
- planned investment expenditure and disposable
income level, Yd
30Autonomous Investment Function
- Autonomous investment function I I
- where I a constant representing
- autonomous investment expenditure
31Induced Investment Function
- Induced investment function I I iYd
- where i Marginal Propensity to Invest
MPI
32Properties of MPI
- the slope of the investment function
- 1gtMPIgt0
- the value of i' is constant for all income levels
33Average Propensity to Invest, API
34Properties of API
- the slope of the ray from the origin
- API falls when Y rises
- Since I I iYd
Then
i.e.
Thus, APIgtMPI for all income levels
35MPI under Autonomous Investment Function
- If I I, then ?Y will not affect I
Slope MPI 0
36Expenditure Function (3) Aggregate Expenditure
Function, E
- Showing the relationship between
- planned aggregate expenditure and disposable
income level, Yd - Aggregate expenditure function E CI
37Aggregate Expenditure Function, E
- Since C a cYd
- I I (autonomous function)
- E CI
- Then E (a cYd) (I)
- ? E (a I) cYd
- Where
- (a I) a constant representing
- the intercept on the vertical axis
- c slope of the E function
38Aggregate Expenditure Function, E
- Since C a cYd
- I iYd (induced function)
- E CI
- Then E (a cYd) (I iYd)
- ? E (a I) (c i)Yd
- Where
- (a I) a constant representing
- the intercept on the vertical axis
- c i slope of the E function
39Aggregate Expenditure Function
40Aggregate Expenditure Function
41Leakage Function (1) Saving Function, S
- showing that planned saving varies positively
with but proportionately less than change in Yd - A linear saving function S -a sYd
- where
- -a a constant autonomous saving
- s Marginal Propensity to save, MPS
42A Saving Function, S
43MPC (c) and MPS (s)
44Marginal Propensity to Saving, MPS, s
45Properties of MPS
- the slope of the saving function
- 1gtMPSgt0
- the value of s' is constant for all income
levels - Since Y C S
Then
Hence 1 c s and s 1 - c
46Average Propensity to Save, APS
47Properties of APS
- the slope of the ray from the origin
- APS rises when Y rises
- Since S -a sYd
Then
i.e.
Thus, APSltMPS for all income levels
48Saving Function Without -a
49Saving Function Without -a
50Determination of Ye by Income-expenditure
Approach
- Equilibrium income, Ye is determined when
- AS AD
- Total Income Total Expenditure
- i.e. Y E C I
- Given C a cYd and I I
- Ye Y and Yd Y
51Determination of Ye by Income-expenditure
Approach
- In equilibrium
- Y E C I
- (a cYd) (I )
- ? Y- cY a I
- Then Y(1-c) a I
Therefore
52If Investment Function is Induced
- In equilibrium
- Y E C I
- (a cYd) (I iYd)
- ? Y- (ci)Y a I
- Then Y(1-c-i) a I
Therefore
53Graphical Representation of Ye
54If Investment Function is Induced.
55Determination of Ye by Injection-leakage Approach
- Equilibrium income, Ye is determined when
- Total Leakage Total Injection
-
- Given S -a sYd
- I I
- Ye Y and Yd Y
56Determination of Ye by Injection-leakage Approach
- In equilibrium
- S I
- (-a sYd) (I )
- Then sY a I
Therefore
57If Investment Function is Induced
- In equilibrium
- S I
- (-a sYd) (I iYd)
- Then (s-i)Y a I
Therefore
58Graphical Representation of Ye
?
59If Investment Function is Induced
?
60Graphical Representation of Ye
61If Investment Function is Induced
62A Two-sector Model An Example
- Given
- C 80 0.6Y
- I 40
- Since
- E C I (80 0.6Y)(40)
- Then, E 120 0.6Y
63A Two-sector Model An Example
- By income-expenditure approach, in equilibrium
- Y E C I
- Then Y (120 0.6Y)
- (1-0.6)Y 120
- Thus, Y 120/0.4 300
64A Two-sector Model An Example
- By injection-leakage approach, in equilibrium
- Total injection Total leakage
- i.e. I S
- Given I 40 and S -a sYd
- Then, 40 (-80 0.4Y)
- 0.4Y 120
- Thus, Y 120/0.4 300
65A Two-sector Model Exercise
- Given
- C 30 0.8Y
- I 50
- Question (1) Find the equilibrium national
income level by the two approaches. (2) Show your
answers in two separate diagrams.
66A Two-sector Model Exercise
- By income-expenditure approach, in equilibrium
- Y E C I
- Then Y (30 50) 0.8Y
- (1-0.8)Y 80
- Thus, Y 80/0.2 400
67Graphical Representation of Ye
68A Two-sector Model An Example
- By injection-leakage approach, in equilibrium
- Total injection Total leakage
- i.e. I S
- Given I 50 and S -a sYd
- Then, 50 (-30 0.2Y)
- 0.2Y 80
- Thus, Y 80/0.2 400
69Graphical Representation of Ye
?
70(No Transcript)
71Aggregate Production Function
- It relates the amount of inputs, labor (L) and
capital (K), used by the entire business sector
to the amount of final output (Y) the economy can
generate. - Y f(L, K)
- Given the capital stock (i.e. K is constant), Y
is a function of the employment of labor. - Thus, Y 2L (the figure is assigned)
72An Application
- Given Ye 300 and the labor force is 200. Find
(1) the amount of labor (L) required to bring it
happened (2) the level of unemployment and (3)
the full-employment level of income
73An Application
- (1) Since Y 2L
- (300) 2L
- Then, L 150
- (2 Unemployment level 200-150 50
- (3) Since Yf 2L 2(200) 400
- Then, Ye lt Yf by (400 300)100
74Ex-post Saving Equals Ex-post Investment
- Actual income must be spent either on consumption
or saving - ?Y C S
- Actual income must be spent buying either
consumer or investment goods - ? Y E C I
75Ex-post Saving Equals Ex-post Investment
- In realized sense,
- Since Y C S and Y C I
- Then, I S
- At any given income level, ex-post investment
must be equal to ex-post saving, if adjustments
in inventories are allowed
76Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- If planned investment is finally NOT realized
(i.e. unrealized investment is positive), then
past inventories must be used to meet the planned
investment, thus leading to unintended inventory
disinvestment. - Unrealized investment invites unintended
inventory disinvestment
77Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- Therefore,
- Realized I Planned I Change in unintended
inventory - OR
- Realized I Planned I Unrealized investment
78Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- As planned saving and investment decisions are
made separately, only when the level of national
income is in equilibrium will ex-ante saving be
equal to ex-ante investment.
79Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- In equilibrium,
- By the Income-expenditure Approach,
- Actual Income Planned Aggregate Expenditure
- ? Y E Planned C Planned I
- Y (a cY) (I)
- By the Injection-leakage Approach.
- Total Injection Total Leakage
- ? Planned I Planned S
- ( Actual I Actual S)
80Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- If planned aggregate expenditure is larger than
actual income or output level, i.e. E gt Y, then - ? AD gt AS
- ? planned I gt planned S
- ? unintended inventory disinvestment
- ? ?AS (next round) AD
- ? ?Y E
81Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- If planned aggregate expenditure is smaller than
actual income or output level, i.e. E lt Y, then - ? AD lt AS
- ? planned I lt planned S
- ? unintended inventory investment
- ? ?AS (next round) AD
- ? ?Y E and unintended stock 0
82Ex-ante Saving Equals Ex-ante Investment
- If ex-ante saving and ex-ante investment are not
equal, income or output will adjust until they
are equal. - In equilibrium, therefore
- Y E or I S
- Unintended inventory 0
- Unrealized investment 0
83An Illustration
(1) (2)(3) (2) (1)-(3) (3) (1)-(2) (4)I (5) (2)(4) (6) (1)-(5) (7) -(6) (8) (4)(6)
Y P. C. P. S. P. I. P. A. E. U.C.I. UR.I. A. I.
Level of Income Planned Consumption Expenditure Planned Saving Planned Investment Expenditure Planned Aggregate Expenditure Unintended Change in Inventory Unrealized Investment Actual Investment
0 80 -80 40 120 -120 120 -80
100 140 -40 40 180 -80 80 -40
200 200 0 40 240 -40 40 0
300 260 40 40 300 0 0 40
400 320 80 40 360 40 -40 80
500 380 120 40 420 80 -80 120
- MPC, c (140-80)/(100-0) 0.6
- C a cYd 80 0.6Yd
- I 40 and E C I 120 0.6Yd
84An Illustration
Actual income or output level (Y) 200 300 400
Planned aggregate expenditure (E) 240 300 360
Ex-ante EgtY EY EltY
Ex-ante IgtS IS IltS
Unintended change in stocks -40 0 40
Actual aggregate expenditure 240-40 200 300 36040 400
Ex-post Y?E Y?E Y?E
85Exercise 1
- Given C 60 0.8Y I 60
- Find the equilibrium level of national income,
Ye, by the income-expenditure and
injection-leakage approaches.
86Answer 1
- Given C 60 0.8Y I 60
- By the Income-expenditure Approach
- Ye E C I
- Ye (60 0.8Y) (60)
- Ye 600
87Answer 1
- Given C 60 0.8Y I 60
- By the Injection-leakage Approach
- I S
- 60 -60 0.2Y
- Ye 600
88Exercise 2
- Given C 60 0.8Y I 60
- Show the equilibrium level of national income,
Ye, in a diagram.
89(No Transcript)
90Exercise 3
(1) (2)(3) (2) (1)-(3) (3) (1)-(2) (4)I (5) (2)(4) (6) (1)-(5) (7) -(6) (8) (4)-(7)
Y P. C. P. S. P. I. P. A. E. U.C.I. UR.I. A. I.
Level of Income Planned Consumption Expenditure Planned Saving Planned Investment Expenditure Planned Aggregate Expenditure Unintended Change in Inventory Unrealized Investment Actual Investment
0 60 -60 60 120 -120 120 -60
200 220 -20 60 280 -80 80 -20
300 300 0 60 360 -60 60 0
400 380 20 60 440 -40 40 20
500 460 40 60 520 -20 20 40
600 540 60 60 600 0 0 60
700 620 80 60 680 20 -20 80
91(No Transcript)
92Exercise 4
- Given C 10 0.8Y and I 8
- If Y 1000, then
- What is the level of realized investment?
93Exercise 4
- Given C 10 0.8Y and I 8
- If Y 1000, then
- What is the level of realized investment?
- As Y 1000, C 10 0.8(1000) 810
- As Y ? C S
- ? Actual S I 1000-810 190
94Exercise 4
- Given C 10 0.8Y and I 8
- If Y 1000, then
- What is the level of unplanned inventory
investment?
95Exercise 4
- Given C 10 0.8Y and I 8
- If Y 1000, then
- What is the level of unplanned inventory
investment? - Unplanned inventory investment actual I
planned I 190 8 182
96In Equilibrium
- Actual Y Planned aggregate E
- Ex-ante I ex-ante S (actual I actual S)
- Unplanned investment 0
- Unrealized investment 0
97Movement Along a Function
- A movement along a function represent a change in
consumption or investment in response to a change
in national income. - While the Y-intercepting point and the function
do NOT move. - ?Y?C a c?Yd? ?C
- ?Y?I I i?Yd? ?I
98Movement Along a Consumption Function
C a cYd
99Exercise 5
- Given C 80 0.6Yd. How is consumption
expenditure changed when Y rises from 100 to
150? Show it in a diagram.
100Answer 5
C 800.6Yd
101Exercise 6
- Given I 40 0.2Yd. How is investment
expenditure changed when Y rises from 100 to
150? Show it in a diagram.
102Answer 6
103Shift of a Function
- A shift of a consumption or investment function
is a change in the desire to consume(i.e. a) or
invest(i.e. I) at each income level. - As the change is independent of income, it is an
autonomous change. - ?a ? ?C ?a cYd
- ?I ? ?I ?I or ?I ?I iYd
104Shift of a Function
- A change in autonomous consumption or investment
expenditure (i.e. a or I) will lead to a
parallel shift of the entire function. - The slope of the function remains unchanged.
- An upward parallel shift in C function implies a
downward parallel shift of S function
105Shift of a Consumption Function
106Exercise 7
- Given C800.6Yd Y100. How is consumption
function affected if autonomous consumption
expenditure rises to 100? Show it in a diagram.
107Answer 7
160
100
108Shift of an Investment Function
109Rotation of a Function
- A change in marginal propensities, i.e. MPC and
MPI, will lead to a rotation of the function on
the Y-axis. - The slope of the function rises with larger
marginal propensities vice versa. - An upward rotation of C function implies a
downward rotation of S function
110Rotation of a Consumption Function
111Exercise 8
- Given C800.6Yd Y100. How is consumption
function affected if MPC rises to 0.8? Show it in
a diagram.
112Answer 8
160
140
100
113The Multiplier
- A n autonomous change in consumption expenditure
(a) or investment expenditure (I) will lead
to a parallel shift of the aggregate expenditure
function (E). - The slope of E function rises with larger
autonomous expenditure vice versa.
114The Multiplier
- ?a or ?I ? ?E
- ?E gt Y
- ? planned I gt planned S
- ? unintended inventory disinvestment
- ? AD gt AS ? excess demand occurs
- ? AD ?AS (next round)
- ? E ?Y (higher Ye)
115The Multiplier
- The (income) multiplier, K, measures the
magnitude of income change that results from the
autonomous change in the aggregate expenditure
function. - If I is an autonomous function, then autonomous
expenditure (a I). - Multiplier,
116The Multiplier
117The Multiplier
118The Multiplier
K?Y/?E
119The Multiplier
120The Multiplier
- If I is an induced function, then...
121Remarks on the Multiplier
- If I is an induced function, then the value of
multiplier is smaller. - The larger the value of MPC or MPI, the larger
the value of the multiplier vice versa. - The smaller the value of MPS, the larger the
value of the multiplier vice versa.
122Remarks on the Multiplier
- If MPS 1 or MPC 0 and MPI 0
- then, k1/1-c 1
- If MPS 0 or MPC 1 and MPI 0
- then, k1/1-c 0, i.e. infinity
- then there is an infinite increase in income
123Exercise 9
- Given C 80 0.6Yd
- Find the value of the multiplier if
- I 40
- I 40 0.1Yd
124Exercise 10
- By redistribute 1 from the rich to the poor
will help increase the level of national income.
Explain with the following assumptions
125Exercise 11
- What is the size of the multiplier if the economy
has already achieved full employment (i.e. Ye
Yf)?