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Chapter 24 National Income and the Current Account McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 24-1 Learning Objectives • Show how the incorporation of a foreign trade sector into a Keynesian income model alters the domestic saving/investment relationship and changes the multiplier. • Demonstrate that national income equilibrium may not be consistent with equilibrium in the current account. • Explain why income levels across countries are interdependent. 24-2 The Current Account and National Income • Aggregate spending is the focus of the Keynesian income model. • Prices and interest rates are assumed to be constant. • The economy is assumed to not be at full employment. 24-3 The Keynesian Income Model • Desired aggregate expenditures (E) can be written as E = C + I + G + X – M, where C is consumption I is investment spending by firms G is government spending X is export spending by foreigners M is domestic import spending 24-4 The Keynesian Income Model: Consumption • Consumption is assumed to be a function of disposable income (Yd), which is the difference between national income (Y) and taxes (T). • More generally, we could write this as C = a + b(Yd), where a is autonomous consumption spending b is the marginal propensity to consume (MPC). • For example, C = 200 + 0.8Yd 24-5 The Keynesian Income Model: Consumption • The MPC is ΔC/ΔYd, where Δ means “change in.” • The marginal propensity to save (MPS) is ΔS/ΔYd. • Since changes in income can only be allotted to consumption and saving, MPC + MPS = 1 • If the MPC = 0.8, the MPS = 0.2 • The saving function, then, is S = -a + sYd, where s is the MPS. • In our case S = -200 + 0.2Yd 24-6 The Keynesian Income Model: I, G, T, and X • Investment (I), government spending (G), taxes (T), and exports (X) are all assumed to be independent of income in the simplest Keynesian model. • We’ll assume I = 300, G = 700, T = 500, and X = 150 24-7 The Keynesian Income Model: Imports • Imports (M) are assumed to be a function of income: M = f(Y) • More generally, M M mY where m is the marginal propensity to import. • For example M = 50 + 0.1Y 24-8 The Keynesian Income Model: Imports • MPM = ΔM/ΔY • Also, average propensity to import is APM = M/Y • A final concept is the income elasticity of demand for imports (YEM), originally introduced in Chapter 11. • YEM = MPM/APM 24-9 Equilibrium National Income Recall our example C = 200 + 0.8Yd Yd = Y – T T = 500 I = 300 G = 700 X = 150 M = 50 + 0.1Y 24-10 Equilibrium National Income • This means that desired expenditures (E) can be calculated as follows: E = 200+0.8(Y-500)+300+700+150(50+0.1Y) E = 200+0.8Y-400+300+700+150-50-0.1Y E = 900+0.7Y • We can plot this relationship on a graph. • Also, let us plot a 45-degree line – This represents points where Y = E. 24-11 Desired spending (C+I+G+X-M) Equilibrium National Income 45° 900 Income or production (Y) 24-12 Equilibrium National Income • Equilibrium occurs where desired spending (E) equals production (Y). • In the graph, this occurs where the lines cross. • Mathematically, we can solve for equilibrium E=Y 900 + 0.7Y = Y 900 = 0.3Y Y = 3,000 24-13 Desired spending (C+I+G+X-M) Equilibrium National Income 45° 900 3,000 Income or production (Y) 24-14 Equilibrium National Income • At income levels below equilibrium, spending exceeds production. – As firms’ inventories decline, they will increase production levels. – Eventually Y = 3,000. • At income levels above equilibrium, production exceeds spending. – As firms’ inventories expand, they will decrease production levels. – Eventually Y = 3,000. 24-15 Leakages and Injections • We can think of saving, imports, and taxes as “leakages” from spending. • Investment, government spending, and exports can be seen as “injections” into spending. • In equilibrium, leakages must equal injections: S+M+T=I+G+X 24-16 Leakages and Injections In our example, S = -200 + 0.2(Y - T) M = 50 + 0.1Y T = 500 I = 300 G = 700 X = 150 24-17 Leakages and Injections S+M+T=I+G+X -200+0.2(Y-500)+50+0.1Y+500=300+700+150 -200+0.2Y-100+50+0.1Y+500=300+700+150 250+0.3Y=1,150 0.3Y=900 Y = 3,000 24-18 Equilibrium Income and the Current Account Balance • Since we have no unilateral transfers in this model, X – M represents the current account balance. • Starting from the leakages = injections equation we can rearrange S+M+T=I+G+X S + (T – G) – I = X – M • Therefore, the difference between total saving (private + government) and investment must equal a country’s current account balance. 24-19 Equilibrium Income and the Current Account Balance • In our example, the current account balance is X - M = 150 – [50+0.1(Y)] X – M = 150 – 50 – 0.1(3,000) X – M = -200 • This current account deficit means that total saving (100) is less than investment (300). 24-20 The Autonomous Spending Multiplier • If autonomous spending on C, I, G, or X changes, by how much will equilibrium income change? • Suppose autonomous investment rises from 300 to 330. • Because of the multiplier process, this ΔI of 30 will lead to a ΔY of more than 30. 24-21 The Autonomous Spending Multiplier • The increase of 30 in I increases disposable income by 30 (since T does not depend on income). • Because MPC = 0.8, spending rises by 30 x 0.8 = 24. • Because MPM = 0.1, M rises by 3. • This leaves a net effect of 21 in this second round. • This process continues, with spending increasing incrementally in each round. 24-22 The Autonomous Spending Multiplier • The overall effect is ΔY = (k0)ΔI, where k0 1 MPS MPM • k0 is called the open-economy multiplier. • In our example k0 = 3.3333. • That is, the increase in I of 30 ultimately increases Y by 100. 24-23 The Current Account and the Multiplier • In our example, national income equilibrium (Y=3,000) existed along with a current account deficit of 200. • If policy-makers wish to eliminate the current account deficit by lowering imports, by how much would national income have to fall? • From the definition of MPM, ΔY = ΔM/MPM = -200/0.1 = -2,000 • To make imports fall by 200, Y must fall by 2,000. 24-24 The Current Account and the Multiplier • If policy-makers wish to eliminate the current account deficit by increasing exports, could we simply increase X from 150 to 350? • The multiplier process makes this more complicated (if X rises, Y rises, and as a result M rises, etc.). 24-25 Foreign Repercussions and the Multiplier Process • When home country spending and income change, changes are transmitted to the foreign country through changes in home country imports. • In our simple model, an increase in I in the U.S. is transmitted in this way: ↑IU.S. → ↑YU.S. → ↑MU.S. 24-26 Foreign Repercussions and the Multiplier Process • However, in the real world U.S. exports are linked to incomes in the rest of the world (ROW). • This means that increased U.S. imports lead to higher incomes in the ROW, and therefore higher U.S. exports. • This feeds back onto U.S. incomes ↑IUS→↑YUS→↑MUS = ↑XROW→↑YROW→↑MROW→↑XUS 24-27 Price and Income Adjustments and Internal and External Balance • External balance refers to balance in the current account (that is, X = M). • Internal balance occurs when the economy is characterized by low levels of unemployment and reasonable price stability. • How does the economy adjust when there are external and internal imbalances? 24-28 Price and Income Adjustments and Internal and External Balance • Case I: Deficit in the current account; unacceptably rapid inflation • Case II: Surplus in the current account; unacceptably high unemployment • Case III: Deficit in the current account; unacceptably high unemployment • Case IV: Surplus in the current account; unacceptably rapid inflation • How should policy-makers respond in each case? 24-29 Internal and External Imbalance: Case I • Case I: Deficit in the current account; unacceptably rapid inflation • The government should pursue contractionary monetary and fiscal policy. • Effect: – Price level will fall, increasing X and decreasing M. – The decrease in income will also reduce M through the MPM. 24-30 Price and Income Adjustments and Internal and External Balance • Surplus in the current account; unacceptably high unemployment • The government should pursue expansionary monetary and fiscal policy. • Effect: – Price level will rise, decreasing X and increasing M. – The increase in income will increase employment. 24-31 Price and Income Adjustments and Internal and External Balance • Case III: Deficit in the current account; unacceptably high unemployment • The direction of the effect is unclear. • Expansionary policy to increase employment will worsen the current account deficit. • Contractionary policy to reduce the current account deficit will worsen unemployment. 24-32 Price and Income Adjustments and Internal and External Balance • Case IV: Surplus in the current account; unacceptably rapid inflation • The direction of the effect is unclear. • Expansionary policy to reduce the current account surplus will worsen inflation. • Contractionary policy to reduce the inflation rate will widen the current account surplus. 24-33