2.4.3 & 2.4.4 Equilibrium Levels Of Real National Output & The Multiplier Flashcards
The multiplier ratio
the ratio of a change in equilibrium real income to the autonomous change (injection) that brough it about
The multiplier ratio example
a £1m injection into the circular flow results in a £2m increase in national income
- the value of the multiplier is 2
The multiplier process (injections)
- an injection into the CFI e.g export = immediate increase in AD but some of the extra income raised by selling goods will be spent in the economy
- whatever is not withdrawn from the CFI will cause second round increases in AD = further rounds of income and spending
Multiplier effects of withdrawals
- when injection decrease, the process works in reverse
- there will be a downward multiplier effect
Factor determining the size of the multiplier
- the size of the withdrawals from the CFI
- the proportion of money from the additional income saved by households
- the proportion of money spent on imported goods
- the proportion of money paid as taxes to the govt
Export multiplier effect
a fall in exports= reduced AD and will affect GDP, jobs and investments
Why are export industries important?
many industries rely heavily on key export industries remaining competitive e.g transportation, trade finance businesses (insurance), service businesses that operate in airports
Export multiplier effect example
- decrease exports = decrease consumption because decreased jobs and income
- decrease imports since these businesses have no profit or demand so no inclination to invest
Circular flow of income and AD
- an increase in any of the components of AD will lead to a rise in the CFI
The multiplier formula
- K = MPW
- K + 1/(1-MPC) - K is the multiplier
MPW
the marginal propensity to withdraw
Multiplier and MPC & MPW
- multiplier is greater if MPC is higher & MPW is lower
The marginal propensity to consume (MPC)
the proportion of a change in income (the margin) that will be spent on consumption rather than being saved. If income increases by £100 and the MPC is 0.7 then £70 of the increase in income will be spent on consumption
What affects the MPW?
- Marginal propensity to withdraw
- Marginal propensity to tax
- marginal propensity to import
Why can Marginal propensity to supply affect Marginal propensity to withdraw?
interest rates are high, then consumption may not rise significantly as additional income may be saved rather than spent