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Macro Economics




                    Notes              roughly a constant proportion  of income  on essential consumption items such as rent,
                                       fuel, clothing and lighting.
                                   These generalisations broadly hold from the basis of the law of consumption or propensity to
                                   consume subsequently formulated by J M Keynes. Keynes was the first to stress the importance
                                   of the relationship between income and consumption and to make it one of the central parts of
                                   Macro Economics.

                                   5.1 Concept of Consumption Function

                                   The consumption function – the relationship between consumption and income – is largely a
                                   Keynesian contribution. Keynes postulated that consumption depends mainly on income. In
                                   regard to the relationship, he argued that consumption increases as income increases but by an
                                   amount less than the increase in income. It is, however, assumed that by income Keynes meant
                                   the "disposable income of the consumer". Keynes designated tendency of consumption varying
                                   directly with disposable income as the Fundamental Psychological Law. According to this law,
                                   "men are disposed, as a rule and on the average, to increase their consumption as their income
                                   increases but not by as much as the increase in their income. This law is known as propensity to
                                   consume or consumption function".
                                   This law consists of three propositions:
                                   1.  When aggregate  income increases,  consumption expenditure  also increases but by a
                                       somewhat smaller amount. The reason is that as income increases, more and more of our
                                       wants get satisfied and therefore lesser and lesser amounts are spent out of subsequent
                                       increases in income.
                                   2.  When income increases, the increment of income will be divided in a certain proportion
                                       between consumption and saving. This follows from the first proposition that what is not
                                       spent is saved.

                                   3.  As income increases both consumption spending and saving will go up.
                                   Assumptions of the Law


                                       It is assumed that habits of people regarding spending do not change or propensity to
                                       consume remains the same. Normally, the propensity to consume is more or less stable
                                       and does remain unchanged. This assumption implies that only income changes whereas
                                       other factors like income distribution, price movement, growth of population, etc. remain
                                       more or less constant.

                                       The conditions are normal in the economic system.
                                       The existence of a capitalistic laissez faire economy. The law may not hold good in an
                                       economy where state interferes with consumption or productive enterprise.

                                   Explanation of the Law

                                   The most important determinant of consumption is income. In technical language consumption
                                   is a function of (determined by) income. This relationship between consumption and income is
                                   termed as "consumption function" or " the propensity to consume".
                                   C = f (Y)
                                   Where,        C is consumption

                                                 f is function
                                                 Y is income



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