Economics Assignment, Ahmad
Economics Assignment, Ahmad
Ansari
Enrollment no.-
2000102995
Semester -1st
Ba.LLB
Subject -ECONOMICS
BasicMacroeconomics
Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. LearningOutcomes
2. Introduction
3. The Four Macroeconomic Sectors
3.1 The Household Sector
3.2 The Firms Sector
3.3 The Government Sector
3.4 The Foreign Sector
4. The Three Markets
4.1 The GoodsMarket
4.2 The FactorMarket
4.3 The Financial Market
5. The Circular Flow of Income in a Two-SectorModel
5.1 Two-Sector Model with Saving and Investment
6. The Circular Flow of Income in a Three-SectorModel
7. The Circular Flow of Income in a Four-SectorModel
8. Leakages and Injections in the Circular Flow ofIncome
Introduction
Macroeconomics is the branch of economics that studies the economic behaviour of all the
agents
in the economy; i.e. it is the study of the economy as a whole. In other words,
macroeconomics is
the study of aggregate outcomes of the decisions taken by the different agents in an
economy.
To begin the study of basic macroeconomics let us introduce the concept of the circular flow
of
Income. The circular flow of income forms the basis for all the macroeconomic models of
the
economy and it is imperative to understand the circular flow model for understanding
essential
concepts like national income, aggregate demand and aggregate supply.
The circular flow of income describes the movement of goods or services and income among
the
different sectors of the economy. It illustrates the interdependence of the sectors and the
markets
to facilitate both real and monetary flow.
The real flow refers to the flow of factor services and flow of goods and services. The flow of
factor services from the households to the firms and the flow of goods and services from
firms to
the household is the real flow. The flow of factor services generates money flows in the form
of
factor payments which the firms pay the household and similarly the household need to pay
the
firms for the flow of goods and services. The movement to the money/cash payment from
one
sector to the other sector corresponding to the real flow is referred to as the monetary flow.
Thus,
the income of one sector becomes the expenditure of the other and the supply of goods
and
services by one sector becomes the demand of the other sector. The real flow and monetary
flow
move in a circular manner in an opposite direction. A continuous flow of production, income
and
expenditure is known as the circular flow of income.
The Circular Flow of Income in aTwo- Sector. Model with Saving and Investment.
In the above model, we assumed that the household sector spends its entire income and
that there
is no saving in the economy however, in practice, the household sector does not spend all
its
income; it saves a part of it. The saving by the household sector would imply monetary
withdrawal (equal to saving) from the circular flow of income. This would affect the sale of
the
firms since the entire income of the household would not reach the firm implying that the
production of goods and services would be more than the sale.
The equilibrium condition for a two-sector model with saving and investment is as follows:
Y = C + S or Y = C + I or C + S = C + I
Or, S = I
Where, Y = Income, C = Consumption, S = Saving and I = Investment
9. Summary
The circular flow of income describes the movement of goods or services and income
among the different sectors of the economy. It illustrates the interdependence of the
sectors and the markets to facilitate both real and monetary flow.
The real flow refers to the flow of factor services and flow of goods and services. The
movement to the money/cash payment from one sector to the other sector corresponding
to the real flow is referred to as the monetary flow.
There are four sectors and three markets in the circular flow of income model. The four
sectors are the household sector, the firm sector, the government sector and the foreign
sector. The three markets are the goods market, the factor market and the financial market
respectively.
The circular flow of income can be analysed with the help of three different models, i.e.,
circular flow income in a two sector model, in a three sector model and a four sector
model.
A two-sector model is the simplest model of the circular flow of income. It is assumed to
be a closed economy. There are only two sectors – the household sector and the firm
sector. The flow of income and expenditure is between these two sectors only.
In a three-sector model, apart from the above two sectors there is another sector called the
government sector. The economy is still a closed economy meaning that there is no
transaction with the rest of the world.
A four-sector model is the complete model of the circular flow of income. It considers the
effect of the foreign sector which includes transactions with the rest of the world. The
economy is now an open economy.
The volume of income in the circular flow increases with the injections in the economy
and decreases with the leakages in the economy.
Injections are inflows of income to the circular flow and leakages are outflows of income
from the circular flow.
The Injections are mainly investment, government expenditure and exports and leakages.