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Unit 7: Concept of Multiplier




          Using the definitions of marginal propensity to save, and of marginal propensity to import, m,  Notes
          we can say  S = &  Y
                                  M = m  Y
          Equation (4) can now be
                               (&+m) =  J +  X                                    ...(5)
          Hence, we get
                                    1
                                                      Y =    ( J+ X)              ...(6)
                                   s+m
          The changes in investment and exports can now be viewed as autonomous variables and the
          effects of change in, say, exports on the national income can be studied.
          Equation (6) shows that the effect of change in exports on the national income equals the change
          in exports multiplied by the expression 1/s+m, which is the foreign trade multiplier or k .
                                                                                  f
          k  works like the simple inverse multiplier. An increase in exports gives rise to an increase in
           f
          income for exporters and those employed in export industries. They, in turn, spend more of
          their increased incomes. How much more they spend on domestic goods depends on two leakages:
          how much they saved and how much they spend on imports. The savings do not create any new
          incomes. An increase in import spendings does not create new incomes in the country itself,
          only in those foreign countries with which the first country trades.
          It is now easy to see that the larger the marginal propensities to save and import, the smaller
          will be the value of the multiplier.

                 Example: If the marginal propensity to save is 0.2 and if the marginal propensity to
          import is 0.3, the value of k  = 1/(0.2+0.3) = 2; i.e., an autonomous increase in exports of 100 will
                                f
          lead to an increase in national income of 200.




             Case Study  Much do about Multipliers


                t is the biggest peacetime fiscal expansion in history. Across the globe countries have
                countered the recession by cutting taxes and by boosting government spending. The
             IG20 group of economies, whose leaders meet this week in Pittsburgh, have introduced
             stimulus packages worth an average of 2% of GDP this year and 1.6% of GDP in 2010.
             Coordinated  action on this scale might suggest  a consensus about the effects of fiscal
             stimulus. But economists are in fact deeply divided about how well, or indeed whether,
             such stimulus works.
             The debate hinges on the scale of the “fiscal multiplier”. This measure, first formalised in
             1931 by Richard Kahn, a student of John Maynard Keynes, captures how effectively tax
             cuts or increases in government spending stimulate output. A multiplier of one means
             that  a $1  billion increase  in government  spending will  increase a  country’s  GDP  by
             $1  billion.
             The size  of the multiplier is bound to vary according to economic conditions. For an
             economy operating at full capacity, the fiscal multiplier should be zero. Since there are no
             spare  resources,  any increase  in  government  demand  would  just  replace  spending


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