In year 1, Adam earns \(1,000 and saves \)100. In year 2, Adam gets a \(500 raise so that he earns a total of \)1,500. Out of that \(1,500, he saves \)200. What is Adam’s MPC out of his $500 raise?

  1. 0.50

  2. 0.75

  3. 0.80

  4. 1.00

Short Answer

Expert verified

Option (c): 0.80

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of marginal propensity to consume

The marginal propensity to consume denotes how much proportion people are willing to consume out of their income. It represents the slope of the consumption curve. The ratio of change in consumption to the change in income gives the value of MPC.

The mathematical expression for MPC is as follows:

MPC=ConsumptionIncome

02

Calculation for Adam’s MPC

When Adam was earning $1000 and saving $100, he was consuming $900 (=1000-100) worth of goods and services. Now, if Adam is earning $1500 and saving $200, he is consuming $1300 (=1500-200) worth of goods and services. The change in income is

$500 (=1500-1000) and change in consumption is $400 (1300-900).

Thus, the MPC is calculated as follows:

MPC=ConsumptionIncome=400500=0.8

Therefore, Adam’s MPC out of his increment is 0.80.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Refer to the table in Figure 10.5 and suppose that the real interest rate is 6 percent. Next, assume that some factor changes such that the expected rate of return declines by 2 percentage points at each prospective level of investment. Assuming no change in the real interest rate, by how much and in what direction will investment change? Which of the following might cause this change: (a) a decision to increase inventories; (b) an increase in excess production capacity?

What is the central economic idea humorously illustrated in the Last Word “TopplingDominoes”? How does the central idea relate to economic recessions, on the one hand, and vigorous economic expansions, on the other?

In what direction will each of the following occurrences shift the consumption and saving schedules, other things equal?

  1. A large decrease in real estate values, including private homes.
  2. A sharp, sustained increase in stock prices.
  3. A 5-year increase in the minimum age for collecting Social Security benefits.
  4. An economywide expectation that a recession is over and that a robust expansion will occur.
  5. A substantial increase in household borrowing to finance auto purchases.

How is it possible for investment spending to increase even in a period in which the real interest rate rises?

Linear equations for the consumption and saving schedules take the general form C = a + bY and S = − a + (1 − b)Y, where C, S, and Y are consumption, saving, and national income, respectively. The constant a represents the vertical intercept, and b represents the slope of the consumption schedule.

a. Use the following data to substitute numerical values for a and b in the consumption and saving equations.

National Income (Y)Consumption (C)
\(080
100140
200200
300260
400320

b. What is the economic meaning of b? Of (1 − b)?

c. Suppose that the amount of saving that occurs at each level of national income falls by \)20 but that the values of b and (1 − b) remain unchanged. Restate the saving and consumption equations inserting the new numerical values, and cite a factor that might have caused the change.

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