Justification for Modeling Aggregate Demand Components
In a simple economic model where total output is determined by total spending, the two components of spending are household consumption and planned business investment. Explain why, to make this model useful for analysis, it is not enough to simply state that total spending is the sum of these two components. What further step is essential regarding these components?
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
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
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Two-Component Model of Consumption
An economist is constructing a model to explain short-run changes in a nation's total output. The model simplifies the economy by excluding government activity and international trade, defining total planned spending as the sum of household consumption and planned business investment. To make the model functional for predicting how output responds to changes in spending, what is the most crucial distinction the economist must incorporate into the model's structure?
Justification for Modeling Aggregate Demand Components
Constructing a Predictive Economic Model
In constructing a demand-side model for a simplified economy (with no government or foreign trade), the equation 'Total Planned Spending = Household Consumption + Planned Business Investment' is, by itself, a complete and sufficient model for determining the total output of the economy.
An economist is building a simple model where total planned spending determines the economy's output. The model only includes household spending and planned business spending. Match each element of the model with its correct description.
From Identity to Predictive Model
From Accounting Identity to Behavioral Model
An economist is analyzing a simplified economy with no government or international trade, where total planned spending is the sum of household consumption and planned business investment. The economist knows that last year, total output was $12 trillion. If the goal is to predict how total output will change if planned business investment decreases, what is the most critical piece of information the economist must first develop or assume?
Transforming an Identity into a Predictive Model
An economic analyst is tasked with forecasting next year's total output for a simplified economy where planned spending consists only of household consumption and planned business investment. The analyst has the exact figures for total consumption and total investment from the previous year. Why is this information, by itself, insufficient for creating a reliable forecast?
GDP Expenditure Identity
National Income Identity in a Closed Economy without Government
Derivation of the Aggregate Demand Function in the Simplified Model