the ISLM model

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the ISLM model

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The total quantity demanded of an economy’s output is the sum of four types of spending YAD = C +I + G + NX Equilibrium occurs in the economy when the total quantity of output supplied equals the total quantity of output demanded. Y = YAD Analysis assumes that the price level is fixed.

Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 1 Chapter 22 The ISLM Model Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 2 Determination of Aggregate Output The total quantity demanded of an economy’s output is the sum of four types of spending Y AD = C +I + G + NX Equilibrium occurs in the economy when the total quantity of output supplied equals the total quantity of output demanded. Y = Y AD Analysis assumes that the price level is fixed. Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 3 Consumption Expenditure and the Consumption Function I • Income is the most important factor determining consumption spending • Disposable income (Y d ) is total income minus taxes (Y-T) • The marginal propensity to consume (mpc) is the slope of the consumption function (ΔC/ΔY d ) • mpc is the change in consumer expenditure that result from an additional dollar of disposable income • a is autonomous consumer expenditure (i.e. expenditure that is independent of disposable income) Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 4 Consumption Expenditure and the Consumption Function II Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 5 Consumption Function Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 6 Investment Spending • Fixed investment—always planned • Inventory investment—can be unplanned • Planned investment spending – Interest rates – Expectations Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 7 The Keynesian Cross Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 8 Expenditure Multiplier • A change in planned investment spending leads to an even larger change in aggregate output. • An increase in planned investment spending leads to an additional increase in consumer expenditure which raises aggregate demand and output further.         − = ∆ ∆ ∆         − =∆ mpcI Y I mpc Y 1 1 1 1 Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 9 Response of Aggregate Output to a Change in Planned Investment Copyright 2011  Pearson Canada Inc. 22 - 10 Response of Aggregate Output to a Collapse in Investment Spending (1929-1933) [...]... in the Goods Market: The IS Curve • Interest rates and planned investment spending – Negative relationship • Interest rates and net exports – Negative relationship • 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 Deriving the IS Curve Equilibrium in the. .. Aggregate Output to Changes in I, G, T, NX 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... 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 Deriving the LM Curve The ISLM Diagram: Determination of Output and the Interest Rate ... Money: The LM Curve I • 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 Equilibrium in the Market for Money: The LM Curve II • Connects points that satisfy the equilibrium condition that MD = MS • For each level of aggregate output, the. .. aggregate output  1  ∆Y = (a + I)  1 − mpc     • 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” Government’s Role •Government spending and taxes can be used to change the position of the aggregate demand function •Government spending adds... change the position of the aggregate demand function •Government spending adds directly to aggregate demand •Taxes do not affect aggregate demand directly •If taxes change, consumer expenditure changes in the opposite direction C = a + [ mpc x (Y − T )] = a + (mpc x Y) - (mpc X T) Response of Aggregate Output to Government Spending and Taxes Role of International Trade A change in net exports (exports –

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