ECO 1302 Lecture Notes - Lecture 46: Aggregate Demand, Investment Goods

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The circular flow of spending, production and income. The consumption function and the marginal propensity to consume. Issue revisited: why the 2001 tax rebate failed in the united states but not in canada. In chapter 5, we suggested the government sometimes may want to shift the ad curve. One method to do this is to reduce taxes. In 2001 tax cuts were enacted in both canada and the united states. These cuts were successful in avoiding a recession in canada but not in the us. It seems canadian consumers understood very well that tax cuts were here to stay, and spent their extra (after-tax) income. In the us, americans understood the tax to be temporary, and as a consequence, saved a substantial share of their tax cuts, rather than spending them. Aggregate demand (ad) the total amount that all consumers, business firms, and government agencies are willing to spend on final goods and services.

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