Consumption: The use of goods and services by households.
Function: Refers to how consumption behaves in relation to various economic factors.
Aggregate Expenditure: Total spending in an economy on final goods and services.
Importance of Consumption:
Accounts for approximately 70% of GDP in advanced economies.
Critical for understanding aggregate demand which influences output and employment levels.
Savings and Economic Growth:
Income not spent becomes savings, impacting capital stock, investment, and employment.
The nature of consumption function relates closely to the effectiveness of economic policy.
Disposable Income: Consumption depends on current disposable income (income after taxes).
Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC): Change in consumer spending due to income change influences fiscal multipliers and overall economic output.
Fiscal Policy Effectiveness: Consumption behavior is essential in understanding the effects of government spending and taxation on the economy.
Consumption: Ongoing use of goods and services by households.
Consumption Expenditure: Refers to purchases made for immediate use.
Durable Goods: Goods that generate ongoing services; expenditure occurs at purchase, but consumption persists over time.
Macroeconomic Insights:
Aggregate consumption determines saving and influences national capital supply.
Essential for understanding macroeconomic fluctuations and business cycles.
Three Key Theories of Consumption:
Relative Income Theory: Focuses on income comparison among individuals.
Life Cycle Theory: Examines spending and saving throughout an individual's life.
Permanent Income Theory: Relates consumption to long-term income expectations.
Concept: Consumption influenced by one's income compared to others, developed by James Duesenberry in 1949.
Key Ideas:
Comparison with Others: Well-being measured against peers; feeling poorer influences spending.
Demonstration Effect: Households often adopt consumption patterns of wealthier groups leading to decreased savings.
Income Changes:
Consumption increases with income, but individuals resist cutting spending during income drops.
Stability in consumption levels despite economic downturns.
Long-Term Consumption Patterns: Individuals maintain spending patterns based on past higher income levels.
Case Study: John ($50,000 income with peer income of $80,000) vs. Mark ($50,000 income with peer income of $40,000).
John feels poorer and spends more to keep up; Mark feels wealthier and saves.
Policy Considerations: Important for designing economic policies considering income distribution.
Savings Behavior: Explains differences in savings rates across income groups.
Social Influences: Highlights the impact of social and psychological factors on consumption.
Theory Overview: Individuals smooth consumption over a lifetime, borrowing low and saving high income.
Key Insight: Developed by Franco Modigliani; predicts savings during working years to support retirement spending.
Income and Lifetime Consumption: Borrowing as youth, saving in middle age, and spending in retirement.
Smoothing Consumption: Spending decisions based on expected lifetime income over current income.
Demographic Effects on Savings: Aging populations affect national savings rates.
Scenarios:
25-year-old takes student loans for education.
40-year-old saves aggressively for retirement.
70-year-old withdraws savings post-retirement.
Planning Consumption: Individuals anticipate future income, borrowing when young and saving later.
Consumption Pattern: Shows a hump-shaped pattern over a lifespan with low savings in youth and old age.
Theory Overview: Developed by Milton Friedman; consumption based on expected long-term income rather than current fluctuations.
Income Components: Permanent income (stable, expected income) vs. transitory income (temporary changes).
Disability to Change Spending: Preference for stable spending patterns; resistance to alter consumption based on temporary income changes.
Long-Term Expectations: Gradual changes in consumption expected with permanent income increases.
Scenarios:
John receiving a permanent raise vs. Mark winning a lottery; John increases spending, Mark saves most of his windfall.
Consumer Behavior: Explains why not all windfalls are spent.
Effective Long-Term Policies: Suggests policies targeting permanent income increases are more effective than temporary measures.
Definition: The proportion of additional income spent on consumption rather than saved.
Scenario: $1,000 income increase leads to $800 spending:
MPC = 800 / 1000 = 0.8 (80% spent, 20% saved).
High MPC: Stimulates economic growth through increased spending.
Low MPC: Slows growth as individuals save more than they spend.
Fiscal Policy Application: Essential for designing impactful fiscal policies.
Definition: Total spending on final goods/services in an economy over a specified period.
Components:
Household Consumption (C): Comprises autonomous and induced consumption.
Investment Spending (I): Total spending on capital goods.
Government Spending (G): Purchases at all government levels.
Net Exports (NX): Exports minus imports.
Economic Growth: AE increases lead to production hikes and GDP boosts.
Keynesian Insights: AE versus GDP influences production levels.
Influence of Components: Variables such as income, confidence, interest rates and global demand impact AE components.
Hypothetical Values:
Consumption = $5 trillion, Investment = $2 trillion, Government = $3 trillion, Net Exports = -$1 trillion.
Calculation: AE = 5 + 2 + 3 - 1 = $9 trillion; equilibrium achieved.
GDP Determination: Influences overall economic stability and growth.
Guides Policy: Shapes government responses, especially during downturns.