Chapter 16: Expectations, Consumption, and InvestmentPrepared by:
Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano
16
Expectations,
Consumption,
Consumption
The theory of consumption was developed by Milton Friedman in the
1950s, who called it the permanent income theory of consumption,
and by Franco Modigliani, who called it the life cycle theory of
consumption.
16-1
The Very Foresighted Consumer
A very foresighted consumer who decide how much to consume based on
the value of his total wealth, which comprises:
The value of his nonhuman wealth, or the sum of financial wealth
and housing wealth.
The value of his human wealth, or the present value of expected
after-tax labor income.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Toward a More Realistic Description
The constant level of consumption that a consumer can afford equals
his total wealth divided by his expected remaining life.
Consumption depends not only on total wealth but also on current
income.
human wealth, or the expected present value of after-tax labor
income
real taxes in year t.
real labor income in year t.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Toward a More Realistic Description
Evidence on the relative importance of wealth and current income in
consumption decisions shows that both affect consumption.
This evidence is gathered through natural experiments—experiments
that economists cannot control, but occur naturally.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Putting Things Together: Current Income, Expectations, and
Consumption
Expectations affect consumption in two ways:
Directly through human wealth, or expectations of future labor
income, real interest rates, and taxes.
Indirectly through nonhuman wealth—stocks, bonds, and housing.
Expectations of the value of nonhuman wealth is computed by
financial markets.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Putting Things Together: Current Income, Expectations, and
Consumption
Consumption is likely to respond less than one for one to
fluctuations in current income.
Consumption may decrease one for one with a decrease in income only
if the decrease in income is considered to be permanent.
Temporary changes in current income, such as those caused by
recessions and expansions, are unlikely to increase consumption by
as much as income.
Consumption may move even if current income does not due to changes
in consumer confidence.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment
Investment decisions depend on current sales, the current real
interest rate, and on expectations of the future.
The decision to buy a machine depends on the present value of the
profits the firm can expect from having this machine versus the
cost of buying it.
16-2
Investment and Expectations of Profit
Depreciation:
The rate of depreciation, , measures how much usefulness the
machine loses from one year to the next.
Reasonable values for are between 4 and 15% for machines, and
between 2 and 4% for buildings and factories.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment and Expectations of Profit
The Present Value of Expected Profits, V(et):
The present value, in year t, of expected profit in year t+1
equals:
In year t+2,
Investment and Expectations of Profit
Computing the Present Value of Expected Profits
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
The Investment Decision
Denote It as aggregate investment, t as profit per machine (or per
unit of capital) for the economy as a whole, and V(et) as the
expected present value of profit per unit of capital. This yields
the investment function:
In words, investment depends positively on the expected present
value of future profits (per unit of capital).
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment and the Stock Market
James Tobin argued that there should be a tight relation between
the stock market and investment.
The stock price tells firms how much the stock market values each
unit of capital already in place; thus, the willingness to pay for
one more unit. If the stock market value exceeds the purchase
price, the firm should buy the machine.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment and the Stock Market
The stock market value of U.S. corporations (share price times
number of shares) divided by the value of the capital stock of U.S.
corporations is called Tobin’s q.
This ratio gives the value of a unit of capital relative to its
current purchase price. The higher the value of capital relative to
its current purchase price, the higher should be investment.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment and Expectations of Profit
Tobin’s q Versus the Ratio of Investment to Capital—Annual Rates of
Change, 1960-1999
There is a tight relation between investment and the value of the
stock market.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
A Convenient Special Case
Assume that:
Future profits and future interest rates remain the same as today,
and
People have static expectations (expect the future to be like the
present).
Under these assumptions, the equation
becomes:
A Convenient Special Case
Investment is a function of the ratio of the profit per unit of
capital to the sum of the real interest rate and the depreciation
rate.
The term is called the user cost or the rental cost of
capital.
Given
and
then,
Current Versus Expected Profit
Investment depends on expected future profit, but also moves
strongly with fluctuations in current profit.
Firms may be reluctant to borrow if current profit is low. But if
current profit is high, the firm may not need to borrow to finance
its investments. It does not need to convince potential
lenders.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Investment and Expectations of Profit
Changes in Investment and Changes in Profit in the United States,
1960-2000
Investment and profit move very much together.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Profitability Versus Cash Flow
Profitability refers to the expected present discounted value of
profits.
Cash flow refers to current profit, or the net flow of cash the
firm is receiving.
Both profitability and cash flow are important for investment
decisions, and are likely to move together.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Profits and Sales
Changes in Profit and Changes in the Ratio of Output to Capital in
the United States, 1960-2000
Profit and the ratio of output to capital move largely
together.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
The Volatility of
Consumption and Investment
Investment is more volatile than consumption. Consumers do not
increase consumption more than one for one with increases in
income. Investment, on the other hand, may exceed an increase in
current sales.
Consumption and investment usually move together. Both components
contribute roughly equally to fluctuations in output over
time.
16-3
The Volatility of
Consumption and Investment
Rates of Change of Consumption and Investment, 1960-2000
Relative movements in investment are much larger than relative
movements in consumption.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 3/e
Olivier Blanchard
Key Terms
financial wealth,
housing wealth,
human wealth,
nonhuman wealth,
total wealth,
natural experiment,
profitability,