Integration of the Investment Function into the Aggregate Demand Curve
In the multiplier model, where aggregate demand () is plotted against national income (), aggregate investment () is a component of . For any single aggregate demand curve, determinants other than income, such as the interest rate (), are held constant. Consequently, the entire aggregate investment function, , is incorporated as a fixed value within the vertical intercept (representing autonomous demand) of the aggregate demand curve. Any change in these determinants of investment, such as a change in the interest rate or in autonomous factors like expected profits, shifts the entire aggregate demand curve.
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.3 Aggregate demand and the multiplier model - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Consider an economy where the relationship between total investment (I) and the interest rate (r) is described by the equation: I = a₀ - a₁r. If businesses in this economy become significantly more sensitive to changes in the cost of borrowing, how would this be represented in the equation?
Investment Response to Interest Rate Changes
Calculating the Impact of an Interest Rate Change
Shifts in Autonomous Investment
Integration of the Investment Function into the Aggregate Demand Curve
Analyzing Shifts in Autonomous Spending
Imagine an economy where businesses become more optimistic about future profits and, as a result, increase their planned capital expenditures by $100 billion, independent of the current level of national income. How would this change be represented on a graph with aggregate demand on the vertical axis and national income on the horizontal axis?
A widespread economic recession occurring in a country's major trading partners would, all else being equal, lead to a downward shift of the domestic aggregate demand curve's vertical intercept.
Analyzing the Components of the AD Curve's Intercept
An economy is described by a model where total spending is composed of several parts. Some parts depend on the current level of national income, while others do not. Which of the following events would cause a decrease in the total amount of spending that occurs even when national income is zero?
Consider an economy where spending that is independent of national income consists of the following: consumption of $80 billion, investment of $120 billion, government purchases of $150 billion, and exports of $50 billion. In this economy, the total planned expenditure when national income is zero is $____ billion.
A government is considering two distinct policy options to stimulate economic activity.
- Option A: Increase direct government purchases of goods and services by $100 billion.
- Option B: Implement a series of tax incentives that economists predict will raise autonomous consumption by $60 billion and autonomous investment by $50 billion.
Evaluate the two options based solely on their immediate effect on the vertical intercept of the aggregate demand curve. Which option would cause a larger upward shift?
Match each component of spending that is independent of national income with the economic event that would directly cause it to change.
Analyzing Conflicting Economic Shocks
Deconstructing Changes in Autonomous Spending
Integration of the Investment Function into the Aggregate Demand Curve
Learn After
In a standard macroeconomic model, a line representing total planned spending is plotted with total spending on the vertical axis and national income on the horizontal axis. A key component of this spending is business investment, which is assumed to decrease as the interest rate rises. If the central bank enacts a policy that causes the interest rate to increase, what is the resulting effect on this plotted line, assuming all other factors are held constant?
True or False: In a model where total planned spending is plotted against national income, and the investment component of that spending is determined solely by the interest rate, a decrease in national income will directly cause a reduction in the level of planned investment.
Investment Behavior in a Macroeconomic Model
Analyzing a Shift in Planned Investment
Consider a graph of the aggregate demand (AD) function, where total planned spending is on the vertical axis and national income (Y) is on the horizontal axis. In this model, the investment component of AD is sensitive to the interest rate. Which of the following statements accurately describes how investment is represented within this graphical framework?
In a macroeconomic model where a total planned spending line is plotted with total spending on the vertical axis and national income on the horizontal axis, match each economic concept to its correct graphical representation or characteristic. Assume that planned investment spending decreases as the interest rate rises.
The Role of Investment in the Aggregate Demand Function
In a macroeconomic model where the total planned spending line is plotted against national income, the level of planned investment is treated as a fixed value for any given interest rate. This fixed amount contributes to the line's __________.
A country's businesses become more optimistic about future profits, leading them to increase their planned capital expenditures regardless of the current interest rate. In a macroeconomic model where total planned spending is plotted against national income, arrange the following events in the correct logical sequence.
Consider two economies, A and B, that are identical in every way except for how their businesses respond to interest rate changes. In Economy A, planned investment is highly sensitive to changes in the interest rate. In Economy B, planned investment is less sensitive. If the central banks in both economies implement an identical increase in the interest rate, how will the effect on the aggregate demand (AD) curve (plotted with total spending on the vertical axis and national income on the horizontal axis) differ between the two economies?