Lecture Principles of economics (2e): Chapter 15 - Robert H. Frank, Ben S. Bernanke

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Chapter 15: Saving, Capital Formation, and Financial Markets 1. Explain the relationship between savings and wealth 2. Identify and apply the components of national saving 3. Discuss the reasons why people save 4. Discuss the reasons why firms choose to invest in capital rather than financial assets 5. Analyze financial markets using the tools of supply and demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Savings and Wealth • Saving is current income minus spending on current needs – The saving rate is saving divided by income • Wealth is the value of assets minus liabilities – Assets are anything of value that one owns – Liabilities are the debts one owes – The balance sheet is a list of an economic unit’s assets and liabilities • Specific date • Economic unit (business, household, etc.) 15-2 Flow Variables and Stock Variables • A flow variables is defined per unit of time – Income, spending, saving, wage • A stock variable is defined at a point in time – Wealth, debt • The flow of saving causes the stock of wealth to change Capital Gains and Losses • Wealth changes when the value of your assets change – Capital gains increase the value of existing assets – Capital losses decreases the value of existing assets 15-3 National Savings • Macroeconomics studies total savings in the economy – Household savings is one component – Business and government savings are other parts • Start with the definition of production and income for the economy Y = C + I + G + NX Y = aggregate income C = consumption expenditure G = government purchases of goods and services I = investment spending NX = net exports 15-4 Calculate National Savings • Assume NX = 0 for simplicity • National savings (S) is current income less spending on current needs – Current income is GDP or Y • Spending on current needs – Exclude all investment spending (I) – Most consumption and government spending is for current needs • For simplicity, we assume all of C and all of G are for current needs S=Y–C–G 15-5 Private Saving • Private saving is household plus business saving • Household's total income is Y • Households pay taxes (T) from this income – Government transfer payments increase household income • Transfer payments are made by the government to households without receiving any goods in return – Interest is paid to government bond holders T = Taxes – Transfers – Government interest payments 15-6 Public Saving and National Saving • Public saving is the amount of the public sector's income that is not spend on current needs – Public sector income is net taxes – Public sector spending on current needs is G SPUBLIC = T – G • National saving (S) is private savings plus public savings SPRIVATE + SPUBLIC = (Y – T – C) + (T – G) S=Y–C–G 15-7 The Government Budget • Balanced budget occurs when government spending equals net tax receipts – Government budget surplus is the excess of government net tax collections over spending (T – G) – Government budget deficit is the excess of government spending over net tax collections From Surplus to Deficit • Three reasons for change in government budget – Government receipts decreased during the 2001 recession – Tax reductions during the first Bush term – Government spending increased 15-8 Saving and the Real Interest Rate • Savings often take the form of financial assets that pay a return: Interest-bearing checking, Bonds, savings, CDs, mutual funds, stocks • The real interest rate (r) is the nominal interest rate (i) minus the rate of inflation () Maximize Lifetime Well Being • Psychologists suggest individual self-control may be too weak to produce rational outcomes • Devices to support savings – Make savings automatic and withdrawals costly • Easy borrowing supports high levels of current spending 15-9 Investment and Capital Formation • Investment is the creation of new capital goods and housing • Firms buy new capital to increase profits – Cost – Benefit Principle – Cost is the cost of using the machine or other capital – Benefit is the value of the marginal product of the capital 15-10 The Investment Decision • Two important costs – Price of the capital goods – Real interest rates • Opportunity cost of the investment • Value of the marginal product of the capital is its benefit – Net of operating and maintenance expenses and of taxes on revenues generated – Technical innovation increases benefits – Lower taxes increase benefits – Higher price of the output increases benefits 15-11 Saving, Investment, and Financial Markets • Supply of savings (S) is the amount of savings that would occur at each possible real interest rate (r) – The quantity supplied increases as r increases • Demand for investment (I) is the amount of savings borrowed at each possible real interest rate – The quantity demanded is inversely related to r 15-12 Financial Market • If r is above equilibrium, there is a surplus of savings • If r is below equilibrium, there is a shortage of savings Saving S Real interest rate (%) • Equilibrium interest rate equates the amount of saving with the investment funds demanded r Investment I S, I Saving and investment 15-13 Technological Improvement • New technology raises marginal productivity of capital Real interest rate (%) S F r' r E I' I – Increases the demand for investment funds – Movement up the savings supply curve – Higher interest rate – Higher level of savings and investment Saving and Investment 15-14 Government Budget Deficit Increases Real interest rate (%) S' • Government budget deficit increases S F r' E r I Saving and investment • Reduces national saving • Movement up the investment curve • Higher interest rate • Lower level of savings and investment • Private investment is crowded out 15-15 Increase National Saving • Policymakers know the benefits of increased national saving rates – Reducing government budget deficit would increase national saving • Political problems – Increase incentives for households • Federal consumption tax • Reduce taxes on dividends and investment income • Higher national saving rate leads to greater investment in new capital goods and a higher standard of living 15-16
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