Gordon C. Boronow, FSA, Ph. D

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Circular Flow Model
Advertisements

The American Free Market System
Interest, Rent, and Profit. Interest It is the price for credit or loanable funds. It is also called the return earned by capital as an input in the production.
Demand for goods & services
CH. 8: THE ECONOMY AT FULL EMPLOYMENT: THE CLASSICAL MODEL
Chapter 2 Measuring the Economy.
N. G R E G O R Y M A N K I W Premium PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich 2008 update © 2008 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved.
Source: Mankiw (2000) Macroeconomics, Chapter 3 p Determinants of Demand for Goods and Services Examine: how the output from production is used.
Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model
Chapter 8 The Classical Long-Run Model Part 1 CHAPTER 1.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Saving, Capital Formation, and Financial Markets.
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide Saving and Capital Formation.
... are the markets in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment. ... move the economy’s scarce resources.
Ch 29: Interest, Rent, and Profit Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.
CHAPTER 3 DETERMINANT OF NATIONAL INCOME EQUILIBRIUM
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved C H A P T E R Saving, Investment, and the Financial System M acroeonomics P R I N.
Financial Institutions
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
Money and Banking Lecture 02.
The Classical Long-Run Model © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System
1 Ch. 7. At Full Employment: The Classical Model The relationship between the quantity of labor employed and real GDP What determines the full-employment.
1 Chapter 15 Gross Domestic Product Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROBLEMS. Current Account Deficit Current Account Deficit= net outflows on current account greater than net inflows. Made up on the.
Product and Resource Markets
Chapter 9: Economic Growth, the Financial System, and Business Cycles © 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick.
Circular Flow Diagrams
Unit 2 – The United States Economy
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Describe what, how, and for whom goods and services.
Circular Flow in Economics
Learning Objectives: Measuring the Economy LO1: Understand the circular flow of national income LO2: Explain the concept of equilibrium and why national.
Slide 0 CHAPTER 3 National Income Outline of model A closed economy, market-clearing model Supply side  factor markets (supply, demand, price)  determination.
1 Long-Run Economic Growth and Rising Living Standards Economic Growth.
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
BU Unit 5 Seminar Chapter 9: Long-Run Economic Growth Chapter 10: Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System.
GHSGT Review Economics. Unit 1 – Fundamental Concepts of Economics.
Chapter 5: The U.S. Economy Both the private (household & businesses) sector and the public (government) sector participate in the market economy. Households,
Modeling the Economy. Actors: 1. Consumers 2. Financial Institutions 3. Businesses 4. The Government 5. The Foreign Sector.
Review of the previous lecture 1. Total output is determined by  how much capital and labor the economy has  the level of technology 2. Competitive firms.
Chapter 13: Savings, Investment and financial markets  What are the main types of financial institutions in the U.S. economy, and what is their function?
The U.S. Economy The structure and operation of the United States economy.
Chapter 3 The American Economy in a Global Setting.
Understanding the circular flow of income. HOUSEHOLDS RESOURCE OWNERS Business firms Money payments Income payments Wages, Rent, Interest, Profits Consumer.
Unit 1-5: Basic Economic Concepts 1. The Circular Flow Model The Product Market- The “place” where goods and services produced by businesses are sold.
1 The Classical Long-Run Model. 2 Classical Model A macroeconomic model that explains the long- run behavior of the economy Classical model was developed.
MACROECONOMICS © 2011 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved S E V E N T H E D I T I O N PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw C H A P.
Chapter 5 Consumer surplus Household choice in input markets.
© 2011 Pearson Education Global Economy- the circular flow model 2 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Describe what,
The Impacts of Government Borrowing 1. Government Borrowing Affects Investment and the Trade Balance.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Describe what, how, and for whom goods and services.
Chapter 3: Demand, Supply and Market Equilibrium.
1 Chapter 4 Analysis of the Financial System and the Economy © 2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Circular Flow Diagrams Economists use the circular flow diagram to show the high degree of economic interdependence in our economy. Money flows in one.
Rent, Interest, and Profit Rent, Interest, and Profit.
THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS. FINANCIAL MARKETS... are the markets in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment....
The Role of the Consumer n Consumer purchases drive the economy –GDP=C+G+Ig+Xn –C=two thirds of GDP n Savings –Ig=Business spending comes from business.
Types of Business: Economic Structure. Proprietorship: business with one owner who takes all the risks but gets all of the profit.
The Classical Long-Run Model
Circular Flow Diagrams
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts 1.5 Circular Flow Diagram
23 FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT.
Gross Domestic Product
Circular Flow.
Analysis of the Financial System and the Economy
Semester II Exam Review
National Income: Where it Comes From and Where it Goes
The Two-sector Model of the Economy (Households and Firms)
The Role of Households & Businesses The Matrix
Presentation transcript:

The Production, Property and Power Model A Visual Model of the Semi-Free-Market Economy Gordon C. Boronow, FSA, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Economics Nyack College Managing Director, Pol-Econcepts gordon.boronow@nyack.edu

The Venerable Circular Flow Diagram Shortcomings of the Circular Flow Diagram Ignores Government Role in the Economy Cannot Explain Capital Accumulation Stagnant/Equilibrium Present Oriented Consumption-only Model Source: Internet Image

Shortcomings of the Circular Flow Diagram Ignores Government Role in the Economy Cannot Explain Capital Accumulation Stagnant/Equilibrium Present Oriented Consumption-only Model

A More Complete Teaching Model Retain as much simplicity as possible Include the essential decision makers Bring out the human behavior aspect of economics Bring out the future orientation of the economy Reveal the tension and balance in all aspects of the economy

Presenting: Production, Property, And Power A Model of a semi-free market economy

The Economic Decision Makers Who are they? What factors into their decisions? What tensions are balanced? What motivates them?

Production, Property, and Power Household Decision Maker Concepts: Enjoyment of Consumption Security in Property (Savings) Forward-looking Cares about Future Households Balances need for income and security against enjoyment of leisure and consumption now and in the future Motivated by Desire for a Good Life and Avoidance of Insecurity

Production, Property, and Power Entrepreneur Concepts: Innovation, improvements, and growth Risk-taking, success and failure Forward-looking Essential uncertainty of the future Creative destruction Balances the cost of money and effort against the likelihood of sufficient future profits to make the venture worthwhile Motivated by Opportunity for Future Profits

Production, Property, and Power The Financial Intermediary Concepts: The Bank Aggregates Savings The Banker Allocates Capital (Performs Due Diligence) “Animal Spirits” Balances the cost of funds against the potential for a profitable loan transaction Motivated to Earn Profits for the Bank

Production, Property, and Power Politicians (Government) Concepts: Authorized to provide security and control risk through legislation and regulation Enforced with police power Constrained by behavioral effects on tax revenues (Laffer curve) Short-sighted (next election) “Public Servants” (with Self Interests) Balances the urge to control against the discontent and tax avoidance of taxpayers Motivated by an Urge to Control and to Use Power to “do good” (i.e., to implement their “Vision”)

The Production Cycle Households: Firms: Own the resources of the economy (land, labor, capital, ability) Receive income (wages, rents, interest, profits and welfare) which they save or spend on consumption Allocate time to work or leisure Firms: Produce consumer goods and/or capital goods Maximize profits by adjusting prices and quantities of production

The Production Cycle Households: Own the resources of the economy (land, labor, capital, ability) Receive income (wages, rents, interest, profits and welfare) which they save or spend on consumption Allocate time to work or leisure Firms: Produce consumer goods and/or capital goods Maximize profits by adjusting prices and quantities of production

Property Loop: The Head of Household Chooses how much to spend or save Savings are converted to property which stores purchasing power for a future household More property increases the feeling of security for the future The opposite of saving is borrowing, which transfers purchasing power from the future Debt reduces net holdings of property, and increases feelings of insecurity

Chooses how much to spend or save Property Loop: The Head of Household Chooses how much to spend or save Savings are converted to property which stores purchasing power for a future household More property increases the feeling of security for the future The opposite of saving is borrowing, which transfers purchasing power from the future Debt reduces net holdings of property, and increases feelings of insecurity

Property Loop: The Entrepreneur The Entrepreneur envisions a new idea for a product, a process or a new market The idea requires resources that the entrepreneur must acquire from retained earnings or from financial markets (e.g. bank) The resources are used to purchase capital goods in the production cycle Factor income from the production of capital goods flows back to the households

Property Loop: The Entrepreneur The Entrepreneur envisions a new idea for a product, a process or a new market The idea requires resources that the entrepreneur must acquire from retained earnings or from financial markets (e.g. bank) The resources are used to purchase capital goods in the production cycle Factor income from the production of capital goods flows back to the households

Combined Property Cycle Savings Leave the Production Cycle Investments Enter the Production Cycle There is a Gap in the Property Cycle! “Mind the Gap”

Combined Property Cycle Savings Leave the Production Cycle Investments Enter the Production Cycle There is a Gap in the Property Cycle! “Mind the Gap”

A Financial Intermediary: The Banker Allocates savings to the most profitable (to the bank) projects of the entrepreneurs Performs “Due Diligence” (a process of risk analysis on each project to protect the bank-and by extension the household-from too much risk) Affected by “animal spirits”

Affected by “animal spirits” A Financial Intermediary: The Banker Allocates savings to the most profitable (to the bank) projects of the entrepreneurs Performs “Due Diligence” (a process of risk analysis on each project to protect the bank-and by extension the household-from too much risk) Affected by “animal spirits”

The Power Loop Government power is necessary to protect life and property in the economy Politicians are the embodiment of government They tax the economy (households, since any tax ultimately affects some household) They spend the tax, which returns it to the production and property cycles

The Power Loop Government power is necessary to protect life and property in the economy Politicians are the embodiment of government They tax the economy (households, since any tax ultimately affects some household) They spend the tax, which returns it to the production and property cycles

The Power Loop: Budget Deficits Politicians routinely spend more than they collect in taxes They borrow current resources: Funded by household savings (assuming no money or credit creation by government is going on) Reduces resources available to entrepreneurs Transfers purchasing power from future government to the present government

Politicians routinely spend more than they collect in taxes The Power Loop: Budget Deficits Politicians routinely spend more than they collect in taxes They borrow current resources: Funded by household savings (assuming no money or credit creation by government is going on) Reduces resources available to entrepreneurs Transfers purchasing power from future government to the present government

Forces exert Pressure in the Economy Forces in the Economy Market, Psychological and Political Motives Forces exert Pressure in the Economy Without Pressure, there is Slack in the Economy Under Market, Psychological and Political Forces, Slack Gives Way to Pressure, which Tends to Balance That Unstable Stability is “Equilibrium”

Forces in the Economy Market, Psychological and Political Motives Forces exert Pressure in the Economy Without Pressure, there is Slack in the Economy Under Market, Psychological and Political Forces, Slack Gives Way to Pressure, which Tends to Balance That Unstable Stability is “Equilibrium”

Equilibrium: Negatively Defined Firms are unable to further increase profits Households are unwilling to work longer hours at the going wages Households are unwilling to spend or save more at current prices and interest rates Entrepreneurs do not want to make investments at the current cost of capital Government is unwilling to increase taxes Government is unwilling to increase debt

Equilibrium: Positively Defined Firms have maximized profits Households have maximized the pleasure of consumption and enjoyment of security Entrepreneurs can finance all the projects they want to implement at the current cost of capital Government Controllers have provided the maximum degree of security possible given the resources at their disposal

The Production, Property and Power Model A Visual Model of the Semi-Free-Market Economy The End.