NET Economics UNIT 2 – Consumption Function and Investment Function


Introduction

The concepts of Consumption Function and Investment Function are among the most important topics in Macroeconomics, especially in the Keynesian Theory of Income and Employment. These concepts explain how individuals spend their income and how businesses decide to invest in the economy.

According to the British economist John Maynard Keynes, the level of national income, output, and employment in an economy depends largely on Aggregate Demand (AD). Consumption and Investment are the two most important components of Aggregate Demand.


PART I: CONSUMPTION FUNCTION

Meaning of Consumption

Definition

Consumption refers to the expenditure made by households on goods and services for the satisfaction of wants.

In simple words:

Consumption means spending money to buy goods and services for personal use.

Examples

  • Buying food
  • Paying rent
  • Purchasing clothes
  • Paying electricity bills
  • Spending on education and healthcare

What is Consumption Function?

Definition

The Consumption Function shows the relationship between consumption expenditure and income.

It explains:

How much people spend and how much they save at different levels of income.

Keynes observed that when income increases, consumption also increases, but not by the same proportion.


Consumption Function Equation

The consumption function is represented as:

C=a+bY

Where:

  • C = Consumption expenditure
  • a = Autonomous Consumption
  • b = Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)
  • Y = Income

Important Terms in Consumption Function

1. Income (Y)

Definition

Income refers to the earnings received by households from various sources.

Examples:

  • Salary
  • Wages
  • Interest
  • Rent
  • Profit

Income is the main determinant of consumption.


2. Consumption Expenditure (C)

Definition

Consumption expenditure refers to the amount spent by households on goods and services.

Example:

If a person earns ₹50,000 and spends ₹40,000, then:

Consumption = ₹40,000


3. Saving (S)

Definition

Saving is the part of income that is not consumed.

Formula:

S=YC

Where:

  • S = Saving
  • Y = Income
  • C = Consumption

Example

Income = ₹50,000

Consumption = ₹40,000

Saving = ₹10,000


4. Autonomous Consumption (a)

Definition

Autonomous consumption is the minimum consumption expenditure that occurs even when income is zero.

People still need food, shelter, and basic necessities.

They may borrow money or use past savings.

Example

Even if a person’s income is ₹0, they may spend ₹5,000 on basic needs.

This ₹5,000 is autonomous consumption.


5. Induced Consumption

Definition

Consumption that changes with income is called induced consumption.

As income rises, spending also rises.

Example

Income increases from ₹20,000 to ₹30,000.

Consumption increases from ₹18,000 to ₹24,000.

The additional ₹6,000 is induced consumption.


Keynes’ Psychological Law of Consumption

One of Keynes’ most important ideas is the Psychological Law of Consumption.

Statement

“Men are disposed, as a rule, and on average, to increase their consumption as their income increases, but not by as much as the increase in income.”

Meaning

When income rises:

  • Consumption rises.
  • Savings also rise.
  • Consumption rises less than income.

Example

Income (₹) Consumption (₹)
10,000 9,500
20,000 18,000
30,000 25,000

As income increases by ₹10,000, consumption increases but by less than ₹10,000.


Average Propensity to Consume (APC)

Definition

APC measures the proportion of income spent on consumption.

Formula:

APC=CY

Where:

  • C = Consumption
  • Y = Income

Example

Income = ₹40,000

Consumption = ₹32,000

APC=3200040000
APC=0.8

Thus, 80% of income is spent on consumption.


Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)

Definition

MPC measures the change in consumption resulting from a change in income.

Formula:

MPC=ΔCΔY

Where:

  • ΔC = Change in Consumption
  • ΔY = Change in Income

Example

Income rises from ₹50,000 to ₹60,000.

Consumption rises from ₹40,000 to ₹48,000.

MPC=800010000
MPC=0.8

Meaning:

For every additional ₹1 earned, ₹0.80 is spent.


Factors Affecting Consumption Function

Objective Factors

These are external factors.

1. Income Level

Higher income increases consumption.

2. Wealth

More wealth leads to higher spending.

3. Interest Rate

Higher interest rates encourage saving.

4. Taxation

Higher taxes reduce disposable income.

5. Price Level

Higher prices reduce purchasing power.


Subjective Factors

These are psychological motives.

Examples:

  • Desire to save
  • Future security
  • Family responsibilities
  • Business motives

PART II: INVESTMENT FUNCTION

Meaning of Investment

Definition

Investment refers to expenditure on the creation of capital assets.

In simple words:

Investment means spending money to increase future production capacity.


Examples

  • Building factories
  • Purchasing machinery
  • Constructing roads
  • Building warehouses
  • Installing new technology

Investment Function

Definition

The Investment Function shows the relationship between investment and factors influencing investment decisions.

According to Keynes:

Investment depends mainly on the expected profitability of investment and the rate of interest.


Types of Investment

1. Autonomous Investment

Definition

Investment that does not depend on income.

Examples:

  • Government infrastructure projects
  • Defence expenditure
  • Public sector investment

Even if national income changes, such investments continue.


2. Induced Investment

Definition

Investment that depends on income and demand.

When income rises:

  • Demand rises.
  • Production rises.
  • Investment rises.

Determinants of Investment

1. Rate of Interest

Definition

Interest is the cost of borrowing money.

Relationship:

  • Higher interest rate → Lower investment.
  • Lower interest rate → Higher investment.

Reason

Borrowing becomes cheaper when interest rates are low.


2. Expected Profitability

Definition

Expected profitability refers to the anticipated earnings from an investment project.

Firms invest only if they expect future profits.


Marginal Efficiency of Capital (MEC)

This is one of the most important UGC NET concepts.

Definition

Marginal Efficiency of Capital refers to the expected rate of return from an additional unit of capital.

Keynes defined MEC as:

The rate of discount that equates the present value of expected returns with the supply price of capital.


Simple Meaning

MEC tells us:

How profitable a new investment is expected to be.


Example

A machine costs ₹1,00,000.

Expected annual returns = ₹15,000.

If profitability is high, firms will invest.


Relationship Between MEC and Interest Rate

Investment occurs when:

MEC>Rate of Interest

Example

MEC = 12%

Interest Rate = 8%

Since:

12% > 8%

Investment will take place.


Example 2

MEC = 5%

Interest Rate = 8%

Since:

5% < 8%

Investment will not occur.


Average Propensity to Save (APS)

Definition

APS measures the proportion of income saved.

Formula:

APS=SY

Where:

  • S = Saving
  • Y = Income

Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)

Definition

MPS measures the proportion of additional income saved.

Formula:

MPS=ΔSΔY


Relationship Between MPC and MPS

Since income is either consumed or saved:

MPC+MPS=1

This is an important UGC NET formula.


Importance of Consumption and Investment Functions

1. Determination of National Income

Both consumption and investment determine aggregate demand.


2. Employment Generation

Higher investment creates jobs.


3. Economic Growth

Investment increases productive capacity.


4. Business Cycle Analysis

Fluctuations in investment are a major cause of economic booms and recessions.


UGC NET Important One-Liners

Consumption Function

Relationship between consumption and income.

Autonomous Consumption

Consumption even at zero income.

APC

Consumption divided by income.

MPC

Change in consumption divided by change in income.

Saving

Income minus consumption.

Investment

Addition to capital stock.

Autonomous Investment

Investment independent of income.

Induced Investment

Investment dependent on income.

MEC

Expected profitability of capital.

Keynes’ Psychological Law

Consumption increases with income, but less than proportionately.

Key Formulae

C=a+bY
S=YC
APC=CY
MPC=ΔCΔY
APS=SY
MPS=ΔSΔY
MPC+MPS=1

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