The Aggregate Expenditures Model 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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The Aggregate Expenditures Model 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

28-2 Chapter Objectives Economists Combine Consumption and Investment to Depict an Aggregate Expenditures Schedule for a Private Closed Economy Three Characteristics of the Equilibrium Level of Real GDP in a Private Closed Economy –AE = Output –Saving = Investment –No Unplanned Changes in Inventories How Changes in Equilibrium Real GDP Occur and Relate to Multiplier Integrate Government and Foreign Sectors into AE Recessionary and Expansionary Expenditure Gaps

Assumptions and Simplifications Use the Keynesian aggregate expenditures model Prices are fixed (Real $) GDP = DI Begin with private, closed economy Consumption spending Investment spending LO1 11-3

Consumption and Investment r and i (percent) Investment (billions of dollars) (a) Investment demand curve ID 20 8 Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) (b) Investment schedule 20 Investment (billions of dollars) IgIg Investment Demand CurveInvestment Schedule 20 Investment demand curve Investment schedule 20 LO1 11-4

28-5 Equilibrium GDP Real GDP = C + I g Aggregate expenditures –Equal to C + I g –Aggregate expenditures schedule Quantity goods produced = quantity goods purchased Disequilibrium –Only 1 equilibrium level of GDP

Equilibrium GDP Determination of the Equilibrium Levels of Employment, Output, and Income: A Private Closed Economy (1) Possible Levels of Employment, Millions (2) Real Domestic Output (and Income) (GDP = DI),*Billio ns (3) Consumption (C), Billions (4) Saving (S), Billions (5) Investment (I g ), Billions (6) Aggregate Expenditure (C+I g ), Billions (7) Unplanned Changes in Inventories, (+ or -) (8) Tendency of Employment, Output, and Income (1) 40 $370$375$-5$20$395$-25Increase (2) Increase (3) Increase (4) Increase (5) Increase (6) Equilibrium (7) Decrease (8) Decrease (9) Decrease (10) Decrease * If depreciation and net foreign factor income are zero, government is ignored and it is assumed that all saving occurs in the household sector of the economy, then GDP as a measure of domestic output is equal to NI,PI, and DI. Household income = GDP LO1 11-6

Equilibrium GDP ° Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures, C + I g (billions of dollars) C I g = $20 billion Aggregate expenditures C = $450 billion C + I g (C + I g = GDP) Equilibrium point LO1 11-7

Other Features of Equilibrium GDP Saving equals planned investment Saving is a leakage of spending Investment is an injection of spending No unplanned changes in inventories Firms do not change production LO2 11-8

Changes in Equilibrium GDP & Multiplier ° Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) Increase in investment (C + I g ) 0 Decrease in investment (C + I g ) 2 (C + I g ) 1 LO3 11-9

Class Graph Exercise Break into groups of 3 or 4 and complete Graph exercise # 1

Adding International Trade Include net exports spending in aggregate expenditures Private, open economy Exports create production, employment, and income Subtract spending on imports X n can be positive or negative LO

The Net Export Schedule Two Net Export Schedules (in Billions) (1) Level of GDP (2) Net Exports, X n1 (X > M) (3) Net Exports, X n2 (X < M) $370$+5$ LO

Net Exports and Equilibrium GDP Real GDP Net exports, X n (billions of dollars) Real domestic product GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) ° Aggregate expenditures with positive net exports C + I g Aggregate expenditures with negative net exports C + I g +X n2 C + I g +X n1 X n1 X n2 Positive net exports Negative net exports LO

International Economic Linkages Prosperity abroad Can increase U.S. exports Exchange rates Depreciate the dollar to increase exports A caution on tariffs and devaluations Other countries may retaliate Lower GDP for all LO

Global Perspective Source: World Trade Organization, LO

Adding the Public Sector Government purchases and equilibrium GDP Government spending is subject to the multiplier Taxation and equilibrium GDP Lump sum tax Taxes are subject to the multiplier DI = GDP LO

Government Purchases and Eq. GDP The Impact of Government Purchases on Equilibrium GDP (1) Real Domestic Output and Income (GDP=DI), Billions (2) Consumption (C), Billions (3) Saving (S), Billions (4) Investment (I g ), Billions (5) Net Exports (X n ), Billions (6) Government Purchases (G), Billions (7) Aggregate Expenditures (C+I g +X n +G), Billions (2)+(4)+(5)+(6) Exports (X) Imports (M) (1) $370$375$-5$20$10 $20$415 (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) LO

Government Purchases and Eq. GDP 45° Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) C Government spending of $20 billion C + I g + X n C + I g + X n + G LO

Taxation and Equilibrium GDP Determination of the Equilibrium Levels of Employment, Output, and Income: Private and Public Sectors (1) Real Domestic Output and Income (GDP=DI), Billions (2) Taxes (T), Billions (3) Disposable Income (DI), Billions, (1)-(2) (4) Consump- tion (C), Billions (5) Saving (S), Billions (6) Invest- ment (I g ), Billions (7) Net Exports (X n ), Billions (8) Govern- ment Pur- chases (G), Billions (9) Aggregate Expendi- tures (C+I g +X n +G), Billions (4)+(6)+(7) +(8) Export s (X) Import s (M) (1) $370$20$350$360$-10$20$10 $20$400 (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) LO

Taxation and Equilibrium GDP 45° Real domestic product, GDP (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) $15 billion decrease in consumption from a $20 billion increase in taxes C a + I g + X n + G C + I g + X n + G LO

Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Recessionary expenditure gap Insufficient aggregate spending Spending below full-employment GDP Increase G and/or decrease T Inflationary expenditure gap Too much aggregate spending Spending exceeds full-employment GDP Decrease G and/or increase T LO

Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Real GDP (a) Recessionary expenditure gap Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) ° AE 0 AE 1 Full employment Recessionary expenditure gap = $5 billion LO

Equilibrium versus Full-Employment Real GDP (b) (billions of dollars) Aggregate expenditures (billions of dollars) ° AE 0 AE 2 Full employment Inflationary expenditure gap = $5 billion LO

28-24 Application U.S. economy late 1990’s –Too much investment –Stock market bubble –Consumer debt –Fraudulent business practice Aggregate expenditure falls U.S. recession of 2001 Terror attacks prolonged recession

Application: The Recession of December 2007 recession began Aggregate expenditures declined Consumption spending declined Investment spending declined Recessionary expenditure gap LO

Application: The Recession of Federal government undertook Keynesian policies Tax rebate checks $787 billion stimulus package LO

Say’s Law, Great Depression, Keynes Classical economics Say’s Law & Ricardo & Mill Economy will automatically adjust Laissez-faire Keynesian economics Cyclical unemployment can occur Economy will not correct itself Government can help manage macroeconomic instability 11-27

28-28 Key Terms planned investment investment schedule aggregate expenditures schedule equilibrium GDP leakage injection unplanned changes in inventories net exports lump-sum tax recessionary expenditure gap inflationary expenditure gap