The Multiplier Flashcards
What is the multiplier effect?
The multiplier effect occurs when an initial injection into
the circular flow causes a bigger final increase in real national income.
This injection of demand might come for example from a rise in exports
X, investment I or government spending G.
Explain how the multiplier effect works
The multiplier effect arises because one agent’s spending is another
agent’s income. When a spending project creates new jobs for
example, this creates extra injections of income and demand into a
country’s circular flow.
What is the negative multiplier effect?
The negative multiplier effect occurs when an initial withdrawal or
leakage of spending from the circular flow leads to knock-on effects
and a bigger final drop in real GDP
How do you find the multiplier coefficient?
The multiplier coefficient itself is found by:
Final change in real GDP / Initial change in AD
What is the multiplier formula?
Multiplier k = 1/(1 - MPC) where the MPC = the marginal propensity to consume
What is MPC?
the proportion of a raise that is spent on the consumption of goods and services, as opposed to being saved.
What are other multiplier formulae for a closed economy with and without a govt and an open economy with a government?
In a closed economy with no government: k = 1/MPS
In a closed economy with a government k = 1/(MPS + MPT)
In an open economy with a government k = 1/(MPS + MPT + MPM) or 1/MPW
What are factors that have high multiplier value?
- Economy has plenty of spare capacity
- Propensity to import and tax is low
- High propensity to consume any
extra income
What are factors that have low multiplier value?
- Economy is close to full capacity
- Rising demand causes inflation
- Higher inflation causes rising
interest rates
Show the multiplier effect in a diagram.
Initial increase in AD from AD1 to AD2
increases real GDP from Y1 to Y2.
It then kicks off a multiplier effect which
increases AD further to AD3 and real GDP rises to Y3
What are the drawbacks of multipliers?
- Difficult to know exact size of multiplier - hard to measure
- Takes time for multiplier process to feed through to real GDP – time lag
- Economists disagree over its size
- Long run multiplier effect is likely higher for developing economies than for
developed ones; infrastructure projects often have higher multiplier effects