हिंदी

Investment Expenditure

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Topics

Estimated time: 12 minutes
  • Introduction to Investment Expenditure
  • Private and Public Investment
  • Induced and Autonomous Investment
  • Key Points: Investment Expenditure
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction to Investment Expenditure

  • Investment expenditure is a key driver of aggregate demand, directly affecting income, output, and employment levels.
  • It refers specifically to real investment, which involves spending on new plants, capital equipment, machinery, structures like factories or homes, and additions to business inventories.
  • Investment is measured by the total expenditure on these capital goods that increase the existing capital stock.
CISCE: Class 12

Private and Public Investment

  • Private investment consists of expenditures by private entrepreneurs on capital goods such as plants, machinery, factories, offices, inventories, and buildings, primarily motivated by profit.
  • Public investment is undertaken by the government on projects like roads, dams, schools, hospitals, transportation, and housing, mainly driven by public welfare objectives.
  • In the analysis of income and output determination, the focus remains solely on private investment, excluding government sector investment.
CISCE: Class 12

Induced and Autonomous Investment

  • Induced: Varies with income—income up → demand up → investment up (upward II curve, income-elastic).
  • Autonomous: Fixed regardless of income (flat AI line, income-inelastic); e.g., govt projects.
  • Keynes models use autonomous for simplicity.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Investment Expenditure

  • Investment refers to expenditure on capital goods like machinery, buildings, and inventories that increase productive capacity.
  • It is a key component of aggregate demand, affecting income, output, and employment.
  • Investment can be private (profit-motivated) or public (welfare-oriented), but Keynesian analysis mainly considers private investment.
  • Investment is of two types: Induced investment (depends on income) and Autonomous investment (independent of income and taken as constant in the simple Keynesian model).

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