1 / 43

National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes. The Neo-Classical Model • Goal: to explain the more realistic circular flow • Supply Side (firms): how total output(=income; GDP) is determined • Supply Side: how total income is distributed

uma-sanford
Download Presentation

National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

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. National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

  2. The Neo-Classical Model • • Goal: to explain the more realistic circular • flow • • Supply Side (firms): how total output(=income; • GDP) is determined • • Supply Side: how total income is distributed • • Demand Side: how income is allocated among • different uses (C, I, G) • • Equilibrium: how supply and demand equal

  3. How real economies function? Markets for Factors of Production • Income Factor Payments • Private Saving • Taxes Public Saving • Gov’t Purchases Invsetment • Consumption • Firm Revenue Financial Markets Households Firms Government Markets for Goods and Services

  4. Households will receive income and use it to pay taxes to the government, to consume goods and services, and save through financial markets.

  5. Firms receive revenue from the sale of goods and services and use it to pay for the factors of production.

  6. Both households and firms borrow in financial markets to buy investment goods, such as houses and factories.

  7. The government receives revenue from taxes and uses it to pay for government purchases. • Any excess of tax revenue over government spending is called public saving, which can be either be positive (a budget surplus) or negative (budget deficit)

  8. What Determines the Total Production of Goods and Services? • An economy’s output of goods and services- its GDP depends on • 1. its quantity of inputs • 2. its ability to turn inputs into output

  9. The Factors of Production • -are inputs used to produce goods and services. • The two most important factors of production are capital and labor.

  10. Capital is the set of tools that workers use: the worker’s crane, the accountants calculator, and this author’s personal computer. • Labor is the time people spend working. • We use K to denote the amount of capital and the symbol L to denote the amount of labor.

  11. In our discussion, we take the economy’s factors of production as given. In other words, we assume that the economy has a fixed amount of labor and capital and a fixed amount of labor. We write: • _ • K = K • _ • L =L

  12. The Production Function • The available production technology determines how much output is produced given amounts of capital and labor.

  13. Y = F(K,L) • This equation states that output is a function of the amount of capital and the amount of labor.

  14. The production function reflects the available technology for turning capital and labor into output.

  15. Many production functions have property called constant returns to scale. • Constant returns to scale- α + β = 1 Doubling all inputs exactly doubles output

  16. The Supply of Goods and Services • We can now see that the factors of production and the production function together determine that quantity of goods and services supplied, which in turn equals the economy’s output.

  17. How is National Income distributed to the Factors of Production? Factor Prices The distribution of national income is determined by factor prices. Factor Prices are the amounts paid to the factor of production- the wage workers earn and the rent the owners of capital collect.

  18. The Decisions Facing the Competitive Firm • The simplest assumption to make about a typical firm is that it is competitive. • A competitive firm is small relative to the markets on which it trades, so it has little influence on market prices.

  19. Factor Factor Supply • Price • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . Equilibrium Price

  20. The figure illustrates that the price of each factor of production receives for its services is in turn determined by the supply and demand for that factor.

  21. To make its product, the firm needs two factors of production, capital and labor. As we did for the aggregate economy, we represent the firm’s production technology by the production function • Y= F(K,L) • Where: Y= the number of units produced • k= the number of machines used • L= the number of hours worked

  22. The firm produces more output if it has more machines or if its employed work more hours.

  23. The firm sells its output at price P, hires workers at a wage W, and rents capital at rate R. Notice that when we speak of firms renting capital, we are assuming that households own the economy’s stock of capital. • In this analysis, households rent out their capital, just as they sell their labor.

  24. Remember that, the goal of firm is to maximize profit. • P= R – C • It is what the owners of the firm keep paying for the costs of production.

  25. Costs include both labor costs and capital costs. • Labor Cost = W x L (wage times the amt. of labor) • Capital Cost= R x K ( rent times the amt. of capital)

  26. We can write • Profit =Revenue- Labor Costs- Capital Costs

  27. To see how profit depends on the factors of production, we use the production function Y= F(K,L) to substitute for Y to obtain Profit = PF( K,L) – WL – RK The firm takes the product price and factor prices as given and chooses the amounts of labor and capital that maximize profit.

  28. The Firm’s Demand for Factors • We know that our firm will hire labor and capital in the quantities that maximize profit. But what are those profit-maximizing quantities?

  29. The Marginal Product of Labor • The more labor the firm employs, the more output it produces. The marginal product of labor (MPL) is the extra amount of labor the firm gets form one extra unit of labor, holding the capital fixed.

  30. We can express this using the production function: • MPL = F (K, L + 1) – F ( K,L) • This equation states that the marginal product of labor is the difference between the amount of output produced with L + 1 Units of labor and the amout produced with only L units of labor.

  31. Most production functions have the property of diminishing marginal product: holding the amount capital fixed, the MPL decreases as the amount of labor increases.

  32. From the MPL to Labor Demand • When the competitive, profit-maximizing firm is deciding whether to hire an additional labor, it considers how that decision would affect profits. • It therefore compares the extra revenue from the increased production that results from the added labor to the extra cost of higher spending on wages.

  33. Thus, the change in profit from hiring an additional labor is • Δ Profit = Δrevenue – Δcost • =(P x MPL) - W

  34. How much Labor does the firm hire? • (P x MPL)= W • We can also rewrite this as • MPL= W/P

  35. where: • W/P is the real wage- the payment to labor measured in units of output rather than in dollar. To maximize profit, the firms hires up to the point at which the MPL= W

  36. The firm decides how much capital to rent in the same way it decides how much labor to hire. • MPk = F ( K + 1, L) – F( K, L)

  37. Question: How Total Income is Distributed • If production function has constant returns to • scale, markets are competitive and firms are • maximizing profits Economic profits=0 • Y = MPL ×L + MPK ×K

  38. GOODS & SERVICES MARKETDEMAND SIDE • Components of aggregate demand: • C = consumer demand for g & s • I = demand for investment goods • G = government demand for g & s • (closed economy: no NX )

  39. 2.1 Consumption • • HH receive income pay taxes consume and • save from the disposable income • • Disposable income is total income minus total • taxes: Y – T • • Consumption function: C = C (Y – T ) • Shows that ­(Y – T ) ⇒ ­C • • The marginal propensity to consume is the • increase in C caused by a one-unit increase in • disposable income.

  40. Investment • The investment function is I = I (r ), • where r denotes the real interest rate, the • nominal interest rate corrected for inflation. • • The real interest rate is • the cost of borrowing • the opportunity cost of using one’s • own funds • to finance investment spending. • So, ­r ⇒ ¯I

  41. Government Purchases- • Government purchases are the third component of the demand for goods and services.

  42. Transfer of Payments- - Are the opposite of taxes: they increase household’s disposable income, Y-T.

  43. If government purchases equal taxes minus transfers, then G=T, and the government has a balanced budget. • If G exceeds T, the government runs a budget deficit, • If G is less than T, the government runs a budget surplus.

More Related