ECN 204 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Fiscal Multiplier, Mcgraw-Hill Education, Pessimism

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Consumption and saving: primarily determined by disposable income (di) Di = y - t: direct relationship. As di increases, c and s increases. Consumption schedule (c: planned household spending (in our model) Saving schedule (s: di minus c, dissaving can occur. Wealth: dollars minus liabilities, wealth effect (increase in spending over savings) shifts the consumption schedule upward and savings schedule demand. Borrowing: borrowing increases the limit of di. Fall 2016: however, increased borrowing today increases future liabilities (debt), which reduced future consumption possibilities. Increased price expectation increases spending today and shifts consumption schedule upward. Interest rates decrease, households borrow more, consume more and save less. Other important considerations: switching to real gdp. Use of real gdp rather than disposable income: changes along schedules. Movement along schedules is caused by changes in disposable income: simultaneous shifts. Changes in wealth, borrowing, expectations and real interest rates will shift the consumption and savings schedules in opposite directions: taxation.

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