Google
Friday 
April 19, 2024 

AmosWEB means Economics with a Touch of Whimsy!

AmosWEBWEB*pediaGLOSS*aramaECON*worldCLASS*portalQUIZ*tasticPED GuideXtra CrediteTutorA*PLS
LIQUIDITY: The ease of converting an asset into money (either checking accounts or currency) in a timely fashion with little or no loss in value. Money is the standard for liquidity because it is, well, money and no conversion is needed. Other assets, both financial and physical have varying degrees of liquidity. Savings accounts, certificates of deposit, and money market accounts are highly liquid. Stocks, bonds, and are another step down in liquidity. While they can be "cashed in," price fluctuations, brokerage fees, and assorted transactions expenses tend to reduce their money value. Physical assets, like houses, cars, furniture, clothing, food, and the like have substantially less liquidity.

Visit the GLOSS*arama


INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES DETERMINANTS:

Ceteris paribus factors, other than aggregate income or production, that are held constant when the investment line is constructed and which cause the investment line to shift when they change. Some of the more important investment expenditures determinants are interest rates, expectations, wealth, capital prices, and technology.
Investment expenditures determinants are ceteris paribus factors that determine the position of the investment line that plots the relation between investment expenditures and income. Changes in these determinants then cause shifts of the investment line.

While the investment line is commonly assumed to be horizontal, reflecting autonomous investment, it realistically has a positive slope, indicating induced investment. Induced investment means that investment expenditures are based on the aggregate level of income or production in the economy. Investment expenditures are induced because business firms are prone to use profits generated by a growing, expending economy to finance capital investment. If business is good, production is up, and revenue is increasing, then so too are profits. This makes it easy for business firms to finance capital investment.

However, a number of other factors also affect investment expenditures independent of income. For example, a typical business firm like The Wacky Willy Company, makers of Wacky Willy Stuffed Amigos, might decide to increase its investment expenditures by purchasing several brand new sewing machines. This extra spending was NOT the result of a sudden windfall of profit brought on by a growing, prosperous economy.

Rather, this expenditure was undertaken for "other reasons" unrelated to income or production. The specific reason underlying The Wacky Willy Company's increase in spending was to replace a factory full of old sewing machines that were destroyed when a passing thunderstorm sent an electrical power surge through the factory that fried the circuits of old machines.

In addition, the existing machines were extremely old, manufactured in the 1930s, and the interest rate was extremely low, reducing the cost of borrowing the funds used for the investment spending.

What They Do

Determinants
Determinants

Investment expenditures determinants affect the investment line much like any determinants affect a corresponding curve--they cause the curve to shift.

The exhibit to the right presents the investment line, labeled I. Investment expenditures determinants can trigger either an increase or a decrease in investment expenditures.

  • Increase in Investment Expenditures: An increase in investment expenditures is illustrated by an upward shift of the investment line. At each income and production level, the business sector has greater investment expenditures. Click the [Increase] button to illustrate.

  • Decrease in Investment Expenditures: A decrease in investment expenditures is illustrated by a downward shift of the investment line. At each income and production level, the business sector has fewer investment expenditures. Click the [Decrease] button to illustrate.
These shifts of the investment line take center stage in Keynesian economics. They are the source of business-cycle instability. A shift of the investment line causes a corresponding shift of aggregate expenditures line which disrupts equilibrium equality between aggregate expenditures and aggregate production. An upward shift corresponds with a business-cycle expansion. A downward shift then corresponds with a business-cycle contraction.

What They Are

While firms like The Wacky Willy Company are bound to encounter a wide range of specific non-income factors affecting their own investment spending (including passing thunderstorms), determinants affecting overall investment expenditures by the business sector tend to fall into a limited number of categories. Some of the more important determinants are:
  • Interest Rates: Higher interest rates increase the cost of the borrowing used to finance most types of investment expenditures (such as factories, delivery vehicles, and sewing machines). If the cost of borrowing increases, the business sector is less likely to undertake the resulting expenditures on capital goods. As such, investment expenditures decrease and the investment line shifts down. Lower interest rates work in the opposite manner, causing an upward shift of the investment line.

  • Expectations: If business firms are optimistic about future economic prospects and expect an improving economy, then they are more likely to increase investment expenditures in the present, even if current income is unchanged or falling. The result is an increase in investment expenditures and an upward shift of the investment line. Pessimistic expectations of a declining economy are then likely to cause a reduction in investment expenditures and a downward shift of the investment line.

  • Capital Assets: The accumulation of capital assets--factories, buildings, tools, and machinery--is the goal of investment. An increase in the existing stock of business capital goods that results from past investment means that further investment expenditures and purchases are not needed. Why building another factory, when a brand new one was just completed? This causes a decrease in investment expenditures and a downward shift of the investment line. Of course, a reduction in the stock of capital assets, such as what might occur through depreciation, has the opposite effect, investment expenditures increase and the investment line shifts upward.

  • Technology: Technology is the body of knowledge that the economy possesses about production techniques. An advance in technology is embodied in the goods produced or the capital used for production. This invariably triggers the need for a wide range of capital goods for production, distribution, and consumption. This causes an increase in investment expenditures and an upward shift of the investment line, even if current income is constant or declining. A drop off in technology, although less likely, then causes a decrease in investment expenditures and a downward shift of the investment line.

  • Capital Prices: Like any good, the demand for capital is governed by the law of demand. A lower price of capital leads to an increase in the quantity demanded of capital. This is another way of saying that investment expenditures for capital increases and thus the investment line shifts up. An increase in the capital prices then causes a decrease in the quantity demanded, a decline in investment expenditures, and a downward shift of the investment line.

<= INVESTMENT EXPENDITURESINVESTMENT LINE =>


Recommended Citation:

INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES DETERMINANTS, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2024. [Accessed: April 19, 2024].


Check Out These Related Terms...

     | investment line | aggregate expenditures determinants | consumption expenditures determinants | government purchases determinants | net exports determinants | slope, investment line | intercept, investment line | induced investment | autonomous investment | induced expenditures | autonomous expenditures |


Or For A Little Background...

     | investment | investment expenditures | Keynesian economics | macroeconomics | business sector | national income | gross domestic product | determinants | business cycles | circular flow |


And For Further Study...

     | interest rates, aggregate expenditures determinant | financial wealth, aggregate expenditures determinant | physical wealth, aggregate expenditures determinant | consumer confidence, aggregate expenditures determinant | inflationary expectations, aggregate expenditures determinant | federal deficit, aggregate expenditures determinant | exchange rates, aggregate expenditures determinant | technology, aggregate expenditures determinant | Keynesian model | Keynesian equilibrium | injections-leakages model | aggregate demand | aggregate demand determinants | fiscal policy | multiplier |


Search Again?

Back to the WEB*pedia


APLS

ORANGE REBELOON
[What's This?]

Today, you are likely to spend a great deal of time waiting for visits from door-to-door solicitors seeking to buy either a birthday gift for your grandfather or a pleather CD case. Be on the lookout for poorly written technical manuals.
Your Complete Scope

This isn't me! What am I?

In the early 1900s around 300 automobile companies operated in the United States.
"The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there."

-- Leslie Poles Hartley, Writer

EMU
European Monetary Union
A PEDestrian's Guide
Xtra Credit
Tell us what you think about AmosWEB. Like what you see? Have suggestions for improvements? Let us know. Click the User Feedback link.

User Feedback



| AmosWEB | WEB*pedia | GLOSS*arama | ECON*world | CLASS*portal | QUIZ*tastic | PED Guide | Xtra Credit | eTutor | A*PLS |
| About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Statement |

Thanks for visiting AmosWEB
Copyright ©2000-2024 AmosWEB*LLC
Send comments or questions to: WebMaster