हिंदी

Saving-investment Approach

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Topics

Estimated time: 11 minutes
  • Introduction
  • Key Equations
  • Disequilibrium Effects
  • Adjustment Process
  • Key Points: Saving-Investment Approach
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction

Economy reaches a stable income where planned saving (S) equals planned investment (I). Like a balanced budget—if households save too much, factories slow; if firms invest more, production ramps up.

CISCE: Class 12

Key Equations

  • Aggregate Demand (AD) = C + I
  • Aggregate Supply (AS) = C + S
  • Equilibrium: AD = AS → I = S
CISCE: Class 12

Disequilibrium Effects

When income ≠ equilibrium:

Income (₹ Cr) C S I AD (C+I) AS (Income) Gap Outcome
200 180 20 40 220 200 +20 Expand ↑ (stocks deplete)
300 260 40 40 300 300 0 Equilibrium ✓
400 340 60 40 380 400 -20 Contract ↓ (inventories build)
500 420 80 40 460 500 -40 Contract ↓

Real-Life Analogy: Mumbai shopkeeper overproduces samosas (high S, low C)—unsold piles up, cuts shifts (income falls). Undersetocks (high I)—customers leave, hires more helpers (income rises).

CISCE: Class 12

Adjustment Process

  • S > I (e.g., ₹400 Cr): Excess supply → Inventory piles → Firms cut output → Income falls to ₹300 Cr.
  • I > S (e.g., ₹200 Cr): Excess demand → Stocks deplete → Firms boost output → Income rises to ₹300 Cr.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Saving-Investment Approach

  • Equilibrium income is determined where planned saving equals planned investment (S = I).
  • Since AD = C + I and AS = C + S, equilibrium requires I = S.
  • If S > I, income falls due to excess supply; if I > S, income rises due to excess demand.
  • Thus, income adjusts until S = I, giving the same equilibrium as the AD–AS approach.

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