1 / 11

Multiplication, Net Exports, and Government

Multiplication, Net Exports, and Government. I. Multiplier. Multiplier effect: a change in a component of agg expenditures leads to a larger change in equilibrium GDP Multiplier = change rGDP/initial change in spending 1) initial change usually investment (more volatile), but can be C,G, I, X

cecil
Download Presentation

Multiplication, Net Exports, and Government

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. Multiplication, Net Exports, and Government

  2. I. Multiplier • Multiplier effect: a change in a component of agg expenditures leads to a larger change in equilibrium GDP • Multiplier = change rGDP/initial change in spending • 1) initial change usually investment (more volatile), but can be C,G, I, X • 2) initial change: up or downshift in agg expend schedule due to up or downshift in component • 3) multiplier can be negative

  3. Source of Multiplication • 1) repetitive, continuous flow of money • 2) change income fractional, same direction change in S and C •  diminishing spending chain • ∆I ∆wage, rent, interest, profit (spending and receiving income sides same coin) • Multiplication ends when ∆I matched by exactly offsetting S: corrects disequilibrium

  4. MPC and MPS • Amount of multiplication necessary to recreate equilibrium determined by MPC and MPS • Multiplier = 1/MPS • MPS + MPC = 1 • Multipliers = 1/(1-MPC)

  5. Significance and Generalization • Multiplier creates larger fluctuations in economy from biz decisions: greater booms, greater busts • Simple multiplier: leakage only into savings (MPS of .05 = 20x) • Complex: leakage into taxes, imports (“fraction of the change in income which leaks, or is diverted, from the income-expenditure stream”); estimated at 2x

  6. II. Trade and Equilibrium Output • C + I = private closed economy agg expend • C + I + (X-M)= private open economy • Net exports increase agg expenditure beyond what closed is capable of, so GDP up; net imports reduce agg ex below closed level, so GDP down • HOWEVER…

  7. AS determined by input prices • Int’l trade generally increases efficiency •  lower costs of production (of all resources, including investment capital (“money” is the single largest traded “good”)) •  greater output • Therefore, GDP higher in open economy • Also, int’l trade increases international incomes, therefore higher levels of exports (partly offsets lower GDP from imports) • Empirical evidence: “beggar-thy-neighbor” tariff wars of 1920s-30s

  8. Exchange rates • Depreciation: dollar losing value (inflation) • Effect on net exports? • Appreciation: dollar gaining value (dis- or deflation) • Effect on net exports? • Effect on GDP? • Where are we on the curve?

  9. III. Government • C + I + G + (X-M) • 1) Continue simplified investment and net export schedules • 2) G no effect on private spending • 3) Assume tax revenue entirely personal taxes; DI<PI; but GDP=NI=PI • 4) Fixed level of taxes regardless of GDP • 5) Price level constant

  10. Spend and Tax • G spending increases agg expenditures and equilibrium GDP by a multiplier • G is an injection offsetting S and M • No, that’s not what I mean • G taxing reduces ae and eGDP by a multiplier, but indirectly by reducing DI C; tax multiplier = tax x MPC • G taxes are a leakage • Tax cuts increase ae and eGDP, but less than an increase in spending

  11. Balanced Budget Multiplier • $20 B in spending + $20 B in higher taxes • Increase spending: AE increases by full $20 B • Increase taxes: AE decreases by 20 x MPC= 20(.95)= 19 • Net ∆ AE = 1 • 1 x (1/1-.95) = $20 B ∆ GDP • Balanced budget multiplier is always 1

More Related