consumption = 2/3 GDP in US uctuations the aect booms and recessions 4.2 John Maynard Keynes - Consumption function

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OVS452 Intermediate Economics II VSE NF, Spring 2008 Lecture Notes #3 Eva Hromádková 4 Consumption 4.1 Motivation MICRO question: How do HH's decide how much of income will they consume now and how much will they save for future? MACRO impact: long-run - eect on economic growth: savings = source of capital = key determinant of growth short term - aggregate demand: consumption = 2/3 GDP in US uctuations the aect booms and recessions Chronological approach: How did the understanding of demand for consumption evolve over the history of modern economic thinking? 4.2 John Maynard Keynes - Consumption function 4.2.1 Conjectures about consumption function: based on casual observation, no economic data or computers to analyse them 1. Marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is between 0 and 1: MPC = amount consumed out of 1 additional unit of income explanation: precautionary reasons 2. Average propensity to consume (APC) falls as income rises AP C = C/Y - ratio of consumption to total income explanation: savings are luxury good, i.e. he expected richer people to save larger fraction of their income 3. Key determinant of consumption is current income, interest rate does not play important role 1

Formally C = C + cy, C > 0; 0 < c < 1 4.2.2 Empirical verication POSITIVE evidence: Individual HHs data (cross section): HHs with higher income consumed more => MP C > 0 HHs with higher income saved more => MP C < 1 HHs with higher income saved larger fraction of income => Y => AP C Aggregate data on consumption and income (time series): years of low income = years of low cons & saving => MP C (0, 1) years of low income = years with high C/Y ratio => Y => AP C NEGATIVE evidence: all concerning decreasing APC secular stagnation - prediction about post-war period income rises => consumption relatively declines => savings rise => 1. there are not enough protable investments to absorb the savings + 2. inadequate demand for goods and services => long depression until scal policy is used to expand AD not conrmed by economic development after WWII Kuznets dataset - aggregate data on income & cons. since 1869 ratio of C/Y = AP C is remarkably stable despite large uctuations in income SUMMARY: Keynes's conjectures hold well in cross section studies of HHs' data + in short time-series, but fail when long time-series are concerned 4.3 Irving Fisher - Theory of intertemporal choice incorporate time dimension of consumption decision (intertemporal = involving dierent periods of time) tradeo between current and future consumption MODEL: preferences + constraints => choices about consumption and saving 2

4.3.1 2 period model: at t = 1 person is young => earns income Y 1 (given) and consumes C 1 (choice) at t = 2 person is old => earns income Y 2 < Y 1 (given) and consumes C 2 (choice) opportunity to borrow/save at interest rate r => Budget constraint: limit on how much person can spend, constrained by his income S + C 1 = Y 1 C 2 = Y 2 + (1 + r)s S can be both positive and negative => borrowing or saving intertemporal = all resources available for today and future (discounted) C 1 + C 2 1 + r }{{} PDV of consumption = Y 1 + Y 2 1 + r }{{} PDV of income => Consumer preferences: choice between 1 st and 2 nd period consumption indierence curves (IC): combination of C 1 and C 2 that make consumer equally happy tradeo: less today = more tomorrow, and vice versa quantication: marginal rate of substitution = what min. addition to C 2 you would accept in order to sacrice 1 unit of C 1? ICs are not linear: MRS depends on the level of C 1 and C 2 ranking of ICs: more consumption is better consumer prefers higher IC to lower => Optimisation: highest possible IC x staying on or under budget constraint in optimum, IC is tangent to BC => MRS = 1 + r 3

=> Eect of change in income on consumption: increase in Y 1 or Y 2 shifts BC outward if C 1 and C 2 are normal goods => both increase (even if only Y 1 changes) consumption smoothing = regardless when consumer experiences increase in income, he spreads it over consumption in both periods Implication: consumption is based on resources the consumer expects over his lifetime => Eect of change in interest rate on consumption: change in r rotates consumer BC around the endowment point (Y 1, Y 2 ) 2 basic eects: income eect: results from shift to higher/lower indierence curve => more or less of both C 1 and C 2 substitution eect: results from the change of the relative price of consumption in two periods e.g. if r then consumption in period 2 is less expensive than consumption in period 1 => one may decide to shift part of his consumption to period 2 nal eect = combination of income and substitution eect (depends on the shape of preferences) 4.4 Franco Modigliani - Life-cycle hypothesis 4.4.1 Hypothesis: income varies systematically over people's lives savings allow people to move income from high-income period to low-income period Example: person expects his income to fall after retirement => saves during productive age to maintain consumption e.g. person with current wealth W expects to live T more years: R working and earning Y, T R in retirement with no earnings 4

goal = smooth consumption over life time (same every year) C = W + RY T = 1 T W + R T Y T = 50, R = 30 => C = 0.02W + 0.6Y Formally: C = αw + βy ; α MPC out of wealth, β MPC out of income 4.4.2 Implications: explanation of APC paradox: AP C = C Y = α W Y + β short run: W does not vary proportionally with Y - falling APC long run: W and Y grow at the same rate - constant ratio W Y = AP C savings vary across person's lifetime (testable prediction): young who are working save, while old who are retired dissave PROBLEM: in data, elderly do not dissave as much as model predicts insurance: longer live than expected, possibility of illness altruism: bequests to their children 4.5 Milton Friedman - Permanent income hypothesis 4.5.1 Hypothesis: people experience random and temporary changes in income their savings are derived from their expected income Y = Y P + Y T Y P - permanent income (part of Y person expects to persist in the future) e.g. return to one's education Y T - transitory income (part of Y person does not expect to persist in future e.g. good weather => big harvest => high income consumption depends primarily on permanent income saving / borrowing are used to smooth consumption in response to transitory changes Formally: C = αy P 5

4.5.2 Implications: explanation of APC paradox by uctuation of Y around Y P : AP C = C Y HHs survey: observed = high income HHs => lower APC = α Y P Y if variation (increase) in income is based on Y P - HHs add proportionally to their consumption => constant APC (α) if variation (increase) in income is based on Y T their consumption => decreasing APC time series: short term: uctuations determined by Y T => falling APC - HHs do not change long term: changes determined by changes in Y P => constant APC 4.6 Robert Hall - Random walk hypothesis 4.6.1 Hypothesis: If permanent-income hypothesis is corrects and people form rational expectations => consumption follows a random walk (uctuations are unpredictable) Random walk = trajectory that consists of taking successive random steps Ex.: assume random variables Z 1, Z 2,... each taking on values {0,1} with equal probability 1/2. Dene sequence of their sums, e.g. S n = n j=1 Z j. Sequence S n is called random walk on Z. Explanation: permanent income hypothesis: consumers try to smooth their consumption w.r.t. transitory uctuations rationality of consumers: they use all available information to calculate and revise expected income => only unpredictable shocks are reected by shifts/jumps in consumption 4.6.2 Implications: only unexpected policy changes inuence consumption they take eect by changing the expectations PROBLEM: not supported by data - predictable changes in income => predictable changes in consumption 6

4.7 David Laibson - Pull of instant gratication behavioral economics: What if people are not rational optimizers? Q1: Would you prefer A)1 candy today B) 2 candies tomorrow? Q2: Would you prefer A)1 candy in 100 days B) 2 candies in 101 days? time inconsistency: Q1 - answer A, Q2 - answer B people generally prefer smaller, sooner payos to larger but later payos, when the smaller payos would be imminent - instant gratication (Q1) when the same payos are distant in time, people tend to prefer the larger outcome, even though the time lag from the smaller to the larger would be the same as before (Q2) also called hyperbolic discounting 4.8 Synthesis Consumption = F(Current income, Wealth, Expected future income, Interest rate) 7