Expectations Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Give the expenditure components of GDP.

A

C - Consumption - goods and services purchased by consimers
I - Investment - purchase of capital goods
G - Gov. Spending - purchase of goods and services by the state or local government
IM - purchase of foreign goods by domestic consumers
X - purchase of domestic goods by foreign consumers

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2
Q

Describe the relation between consumption and disposable income.

A

When disposable income decreases, consumption is likely to decrease.

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3
Q

How can consumers maintain consumption when disposable income decreases temporarily?

A

Through borrowing

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4
Q

Describe the relation between consumption and real GDP.

A
  • Tend to move together
  • Consumption is less volatile/smoother
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5
Q

What main factors are consumption dependent on?

A
  • Current income
  • Exp. future income
  • Household wealth
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6
Q

Summarise Friedman’s permanent income theory.

A

Permanent income emphasises that consumers always look beyond current income

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7
Q

Summarise Modigliani’s life cycle theory.

A

Emphasises that consumer’s natural planning horizon is their entire lifetime.

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8
Q

What is total wealth?

A

Human wealth + financial wealth + housing wealth.

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9
Q

What is human wealth?

A

The present value of expected future labour income

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10
Q

What is financial wealth?

A

Contents of bank accounts, savings accounts and value of bonds and stocks

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11
Q

What is housing wealth?

A

Value of house - value of remaining mortgage debt

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12
Q

How would a very foresighted consumer decide how much to consume?

A
  • Calculate total wealth
  • Decide to spend a proportion of total wealth each year throughout life, borrowing if if Ct > Yt and saving if Ct < Yt
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13
Q

How do you compute human wealth?

A

Multiply initial income, proportion of income kept after tax and compound real income rises whilst working age

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14
Q

Why would foresighted predictions be unrealistic?

A
  • Individuals may not maintain constant consumption over their lifetimes
  • Computations involved in planning for constant consumption may be too complicated
  • Human wealth is based on forecasts, which may turn out to be less than expected
  • Banks may be unwilling to extend much credit to young adults on exp. future earnings
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15
Q

Describe liquidity constraints.

A

As consumers cannot get credit, this explains the sensitivity of consumption to current income

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