Aggregate Demand – Consumption (C) and Savings (S) Flashcards

1
Q

What is the formula of AD?

A

AD = C + I + G + X – M

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2
Q

What is consumption?

A

consumer spending on real output; spending on non-durables, durables & services; the largest component of AD, usually about 60%

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3
Q

What is investment?

A

spending on capital goods; spending on plant, equipment etc. That help produce more consumer goods in future; investment demand comes from both private and public sector

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4
Q

What is government spending?

A

spending by the government on its current day-to-day provision of public services such as healthcare, education, defence and transport. Does not include transfer payments (pensions and welfare benefits)

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5
Q

What is Net trade (export demand X - import demand M)?

A

exports X are an inflow of demand from citizens abroad (inflow); imports M refers to domestic demand for foreign-produced goods (outflow).

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6
Q

What are factors influencing consumption?

A
  • Income
  • Wealth effect
  • Consumer confidence
  • Job security
  • Interest rates
  • Demography
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7
Q

How does income affect consumption?

A

especially real disposable income; typically more income means more consumer spending.

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8
Q

How does wealth effect affect consumption?

A

an increase in the value of assets (property, shares etc.) encourages more consumer spending through a positive wealth effect

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9
Q

How does consumer confidence affect consumption?

A

high confidence leads to more consumer spending

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10
Q

How does job security affect consumption?

A

low unemployment can make people less worried they may lose their job and so they spend more.

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11
Q

How does interest rates affect consumption?

A

affect the cost of borrowing; spending on big ticket items such as houses, cars and white goods are likely to rise when interest rates fall.

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12
Q

How do demographics affect consumption?

A

a growing population (e.g. immigration) spending more
(And vice versa for factors causing a fall in consumption).

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13
Q

What are benefits of rising consumption?

A

Rising AD
Faster short run economic growth
Less spare capacity
Falling unemployment
Gives businesses confidence to invest

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14
Q

What are costs of rising consumption?

A

Inflation pressure
Current account deficit (more imports sucked in)
Unbalanced growth
More household debt
Could be bad for environment

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15
Q

What is saving?

A

Saving (S) is NOT a component of AD, but disposable income that is not spent is saved.

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16
Q

What is the savings ratio?

A
17
Q

What is the importance of saving for an economy?

A

Savings flow into financial markets and businesses can access these funds to invest
Savings provide households with a cushion of financial stability and funds for the government when it needs to borrow.

18
Q

What is the paradox of thrift?

A

The Keynesian paradox of thrift is an economic theory which states that an increase in saving can lead to a decrease in economic activity and, ironically, a decrease in overall saving.