1 / 23

Chapter 20

Chapter 20. The ISLM Model. Determination of Aggregate Output. Consumption Expenditure and the Consumption Function. Table 1 Consumption Function: Schedule of Consumer Expenditure C When mpc = 0.5 and a = 200 ($ billions). FIGURE 1 Consumption Function. Investment Spending.

nash-burks
Download Presentation

Chapter 20

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 20 The ISLM Model

  2. Determination of Aggregate Output

  3. Consumption Expenditure and the Consumption Function

  4. Table 1 Consumption Function: Schedule of Consumer Expenditure C When mpc = 0.5 and a = 200 ($ billions)

  5. FIGURE 1 Consumption Function

  6. Investment Spending • Fixed investment: always planned • Inventory investment: can be unplanned • Planned investment spending • Interest rates • Expectations

  7. FIGURE 2 Keynesian Cross Diagram

  8. Expenditure Multiplier

  9. FIGURE 3 Response of Aggregate Output to a Change in Planned Investment

  10. FIGURE 4 Response of Aggregate Output to the Collapse of Investment Spending, 1929–1933 Source: Economic Report of the President.

  11. Changes in Autonomous Spending Any change in autonomous spending will lead to a multiplied change in aggregate output The shift in the aggregate demand function can come from a change in planned investment, a change in autonomous consumer spending, or both Changes in autonomous spending are dominated by “animal spirits”

  12. Government’s Role

  13. FIGURE 5 Response of Aggregate Output to Government Spending and Taxes

  14. Role of International Trade

  15. FIGURE 6 Response of Aggregate Output to a Change in Net Exports

  16. Summary Table 2 Response of Aggregate Output Y to Autonomous Changes in a, I, G, T, and NX

  17. The ISLM Model • Includes money and interest rates in the Keynesian framework • Examines an equilibrium where aggregate output equals aggregate demand • Assumes fixed price level where nominal and real quantities are the same • IS curve is the relationship between equilibrium aggregate output and the interest rate • LM curve is the combinations of interest rates and aggregate output for which MD = MS

  18. Equilibrium in the Goods Market: The IS Curve • Interest rates and planned investment spending • Negative relationship • Interest rates and net exports • Negative relationship • IS curve: the points at which the total quantity of goods produced equals the total quantity of goods demanded • Output tends to move toward points on the curve that satisfies the goods market equilibrium

  19. FIGURE 7 Deriving the IS Curve

  20. Equilibrium in the Market for Money: The LM Curve • Demand for money called liquidity preference • Md/P depends on income (Y) and interest rates (i) • Positively related to income • Raises the level of transactions • Increases wealth • Negatively related to interest rates

  21. Equilibrium in the Market for Money: The LM Curve (cont’d) • Connects points that satisfy the equilibrium condition that MD = MS • For each level of aggregate output, the LM curve tells us what the interest rate must be for equilibrium to occur • The economy tends to move toward points on the LM curve

  22. FIGURE 8 Deriving the LM Curve

  23. FIGURE 9 ISLM Diagram: Simultaneous Determination of Output and the Interest Rate

More Related