introduction to the circular flow of income chapter 16 Flashcards
what does circular flow of income model show
shows how income, spending and output move around an economy. The model shows that output generates income which is then spent on the output. This flow explains why GDP can be measured by calculating the country’s output, income and expenditure.
open economy
an economy that is involved in trade with other economies.
closed economy
an economy that does not trade with other economies. no economy is totally closed
injectios
additions to the circular flow of income. investments, government spending and spending by foreigners on country’s exports
leakages
withdrawals from the circular flow of income. some income is saved, some is taxed and some is spent on imports
what has to be done for income to be inchanged
For income to be unchanged, injections of extra spending into the circular flow of income must equal leakages from the circular flow.
why does income rise
If injections are greater than leakages, there will be extra spending in the economy, causing income to rise.
why does income fall
if leakages exceed injections, more spending will leave the circular flow, and income will fall.
what does investments cause
A rise in investment will cause a rise in GDP. The higher investment results in an increase in production, income and spending.
effect of saving
an increase in saving will mean that some products will be unsold and so production will fall. a fall in saving increase GDP
The equilibrium level of income
The equilibrium level of income refers to when an economy or business has an equal amount of production and market demand
the circular flow in a closed economy
consumers receive goods and services from firms-money flows to firms as consumer spending
firms receive factor services from consumers-money flows to consumers as factor payments
the circular flow in an open economy
it is the same as the one in circular economy but:
leakages such as direct taxes paid and money is saved from factor payments
factor payments include exports and government spending
investments are injected into consumer spending
indirect taxes and imports are leaked from consumer spending
factor services
labour, capital, entrepreneurship and land
factor payments
wages, interest, profit and rent