हिंदी

Basic Model of Income Determination

Advertisements

Topics

Estimated time: 10 minutes
  • Objectives of  Income Determination
  • JM Keynes
  • Keynesian Model
  • Steps
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Points: Basic Model of Income Determination
CISCE: Class 12

Objectives

Understand how income, output, and jobs are set in the short run. Learn Keynes' big idea: spending drives the economy.

CISCE: Class 12

JM Keynes

John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946), a British economist, changed economics in 1936 with his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. During 1930s job crises, he said governments should spend more (even borrow) on roads and schools to create jobs and boost output.

CISCE: Class 12

Keynesian Model

In the short run, a country's total income (Y), output, and jobs depend on aggregate demand (AD) – total spending by everyone.

  • No automatic full employment: If spending falls, factories slow, jobs vanish.
  • The government can step in with spending to lift AD.
CISCE: Class 12

Steps

  1. Households spend on goods (consumption, C).

  2. Firms invest in machines (investment, I).

  3. Government spends on services (G).

  4. Foreigners buy exports (minus imports, NX).
    AD = C + I + G + NX

AD Component What It Means Example
Consumption (C) Everyday buying Families buying food/clothes
Investment (I) Business spending Factory upgrades
Government (G) Public projects Building highways
Net Exports (NX) Exports - Imports Selling software abroad
CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

Like the 1930s Great Depression: Factories shut, unemployment hit 25%. Keynes said: Pump money into bridges (G up) → more jobs → more spending (C up) → economy revives. Same as India's 2020 stimulus during COVID lockdowns.

CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Basic Model of Income Determination

  • The Keynesian model explains determination of income, output, and employment in the short run.
  • Given by J. M. Keynes (1936), it states that income depends on aggregate demand (aggregate spending).
  • Higher aggregate demand leads to higher output and employment.
  • This simple model is the foundation of modern macroeconomic analysis.

Test Yourself

Advertisements
Share
Notifications

Englishहिंदीमराठी


      Forgot password?
Use app×