Topic 1.5 - The Multiplier And Accelerator Flashcards
What is the national income multiplier?
Process by which any change in a component of AD results in a greater final change in real GDP (injection into circular flow)
What causes the effects of the multiplier to be diluted?
Spending allows multiplier effects to be perpetuated
Households with extra income will not spend all of it - effects diluted
Injections into circular flow can initiate multiplier effects but leakages determine the size of the effect
What factors determine the size of the multiplier?
How much of national income is:
- saved by households
- returned to government through direct tax
- spent on imports
What is average propensity to consume?
Proportion of income spent on consumption
= consumption/income
What is the average propensity to save?
Proportion of income saved
=savings/income
What is the average propensity to tax?
Proportion of income spent on tax
=tax/income
What is the average propensity to import?
Proportion of income spent on imports
=imports/income
What is the average propensity to withdraw?
Proportion of income spent on withdrawals - savings, taxes and imports
= withdrawals/income
APW = APS+APT+APM
What is the marginal propensity to consume?
Proportion of any change in income spent on consumption
MPC = change in consumption/change in income
MPS = change in savings/change in income
MPW = change in withdrawals/change in income (bigger multiplier - smaller MPW, more money, less flows out of circular flow)
How can we work out the size of the multiplier?
We assume that half of any additional expenditure and therefore income leaks out then half must spark off extra spending
What is the multiplier formula?
K (multiplier) = 1/MPW (MPS+MPT+MPM)
Show the multiplier effect on a neoclassical diagram
Show using a diagram the multiplier effect on a Keynesian diagram
What is the accelerator theory?
Increase in national income (GDP) results in a proportionally larger rise in capital investment
Often see a large surge in capital spending by businesses when an economy is growing strongly (increase in demand, component increasing)
Principle states, given change in demand for consumer goods will cause a greater percentage change in demand for capital goods
How does the accelerator come about?
- demand rises at a strong pace
- firms respond by expanding production and making fuller use of their existing productive capacity
- if they feel demand is sustained, may choose to increase spending on capital goods to increase capacity
- demand for capital goods driven by demand for products supplied by firms
Examples: - extra capacity for iCloud computing storage
- investment in 4g
- investment in renewable energy as supply shifts to renewable