1 / 11

ECO 121 Macroeconomics

ECO 121 Macroeconomics. Spring 2010. Aisha Khan Section L & M. Lecture Ten. Recap - Aggregate Expenditures. M&B - Chapter 10 Changes in AE  due to investment changes Multiplier effect Introduce Net exports and Government Purchases S+T+M=I+G+X. Taxation.

Download Presentation

ECO 121 Macroeconomics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ECO 121 Macroeconomics Spring 2010 Aisha Khan Section L & M Lecture Ten

  2. Recap - Aggregate Expenditures • M&B - Chapter 10 • Changes in AE  due to investment changes • Multiplier effect • Introduce Net exports and Government Purchases • S+T+M=I+G+X

  3. Taxation • Government also collects taxes • Suppose it imposes a lump sum tax • Tax of a constant amount • Yielding a constant amount of tax revenue at each eq GDP • An increase in taxes lowers AE according to the MPC

  4. Balanced budget muiltiplier • Curious result • Equal increases in G and T simultaneously cause an equal rise in equilibrium GDP • Increase in G by $20 billion and an offsetting increase in T by $20 bullion cause Equilibrium GDP to rise by $20 billion

  5. Rationale • Increase in G is direct and adds $20 billion to AE • An increase in T has an indirect effect through the C and S schedules (T reduces disposable income and then C falls by the amount of the tax times MPC) • Balanced budget multiplier = 1 • Different MPC/ multipliers yield the same balanced budget multiplier

  6. Equilibrium vs Full employment GDP • Recessionary gap • When equilibrium GDP is less than full employment GDP • The amount by which the AE must shift upwards to achieve full-employment GDP • Inflationary gap • When AE exceed full employment GDP • The amount by which the AE must shift downwards to achieve full-employment GDP

  7. Recessionary gap AE0 C+I = GDP Aggregate expenditure C+ I AE1 Recessionary gap 45 GDP Full-employment GDP

  8. Inflationary gap AE2 C+I = GDP AE0 Aggregate expenditure C+ I Inflationary gap 45 GDP Full-employment GDP

  9. Limitations to the Model • Model can account for demand pull inflation but does not indicate the extent of inflation when there is an inflationary gap • Doesn’t explain how inflation is possible before reaching full employment levels

  10. Doesn't indicate how output beyond full-employment is possible • Model doesn’t address the possibility of cost-push inflation

  11. Read at home Read section : Application to the Model

More Related