Page 92 - DECO201_MACRO_ECONOMICS_ENGLISH
P. 92

Ashwani Panesar, Lovely Professional University
                                                                                      Unit 5: Consumption Function



                            Unit 5: Consumption Function                                        Notes


            CONTENTS
            Objectives
            Introduction

            5.1  Concept of Consumption Function
            5.2  Propensity to Consume
                 5.2.1  Absolute Income Hypothesis

                 5.2.2  Relative Income Hypothesis
            5.3  Factors Determining Propensity to Consume
            5.4  Summary
            5.5  Keywords
            5.6  Review Questions

            5.7  Further Readings

          Objectives

          After studying this unit, you will be able to:
               Realise the concept of consumption function;

               State the assumptions of Keynes' Psychological Law;
               Explain the concept of Propensity to Consume;
               Identify the factors that affect propensity to consume.

          Introduction

          Consumption function refers to the functional or causal relationships between consumption on
          the one hand and the various factors determining it on the other. Your income is considered to
          be  the chief determinant of your consumption, so the consumption function  conventionally
          refers to the functional relationship between income and consumption.



             Did u know? The relationship between income and consumption has always been a subject
            of intense study ever since Ernst Ergel, a German statistician, formulated the "laws  of
            consumption expenditure in 1857". On the basis of  statistical data pertaining  to the
            consumption expenditures of the sample of German households, Angel formulated a set
            of three generalisations which are popularly known as "Engel's laws of consumption".
          Engel's laws may be stated as follows: As the level of income increases, households tend to
          spend:
               a decreasing percentage of income on food,
               an  increasing proportion  of income  on things  such  as  education,  medical  facilities,
               recreation, etc.




                                           LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY                                   87
   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97