Chapter 2: The Basic Model 1 - Consumers, Producers, and Government Flashcards
What does the Keynesian theory of income determination focus on
- focuses on the real (goods) sector (activities like production, consumption, saving, investment, exports, imports)
- it also explains determination of changes in the total production (GDP) and real income (Y) in the short run.
What is the original Keynesian approach of income determination
- expenditure determines production (demand determines supply)
- each level of production implies a corresponding level of income
- income-expenditure circular flow illustrates the Keynesian approach
What are the three types of transactions in the good sector
- Goods market transactions (buying products from the store)
- Labour market transactions (paying employee wages)
- Capital transactions (buying shares)
What are factors of production that also represents income for households
Labour and capital
What does the basic framework focus on
- It focuses on only the flows of income and expenditure (and aggregate all transactions between households and firms)
What represents the chain reaction
The level of expended had determines the production level:
- an increase in expenditure (demand/spending) leads to > less than production demanded
- stocks are depleted then producers produce more (real GDP and employment increase)
- Real income (Y) increases
- Increases (of real GDP and Y) continue until
- total production = total expenditure = total income, at this point we have macroeconomic equilibrium
What is the definition of real consumption (C)
Expenditure by households on consumable items and services.
Expenditure on imported items is included
What does consumption (C) depend on
-Real disposable income
-Wealth
-The average price level
-Expectations, habits
In what way can total expenditure be divided into
- (C) consumption expenditure
- (I) investment
- (G) government expenditure
- (NX) net exports: exports (X) - imports (M)
total expenditure = C+I+G+(X-M)
What is the difference between real investment and financial investment
- Real investment also known as capital formation.
It is the purchase of capital goods. E.g. factories or machine (sales from production earned) - Financial investment is a form of saving.
Investing in a savings account or buying shares and bonds (interest)
What are factors that influence real investment
- (r) real interest rates (nominal interest rate - inflation)
-expectations
-business confidence
-regulations