Circular Flow of Income
Equilibrium and multiplier
GDP and measurement
Components and effects
100

Identify the 5 sectors of the circular flow of income model

households, firms, financial sector, government sector, overseas sector

100

Write the macroeconomic equilibrium identity for the full circular flow using S, T, M, I, G, X

S + T + M = I + G + X

100

State the expenditure approach formula for GDP and define each term briefly

GDP = C + I + G + (X - M);C = consumption, I = investment, G = government purchases, X = exports, M = imports

100

— List the four main spending categories (C, I, G, X-M) and give one example of each.

C = consumption (groceries), I = investment (new machinery), G = government purchases (school construction), X-M = net exports (iron ore exports minus imports)

200

Define the circular flow of income in two sentences

Circular flow: a model of flows of resources, goods & services, income and expenditure between households, firms, financial sector, government and overseas. (Accept equivalent concise definitions.)

200

— Explain in one sentence what macroeconomic disequilibrium means for national income

Disequilibrium: when total injections ≠ total leakages, causing a tendency for income to rise or fall until equilibrium restored.

200

Explain why only final goods are counted in GDP. Use the wheat–flour–bread example in one concise paragraph

Only final goods counted to avoid double counting; intermediate sales are inputs whose value is included in the final product's price (wheat → flour → bread: count $30 final sale only

200

Explain how a rise in interest rates typically affects consumption and investment (two brief points).

Higher interest rates → consumption ↓ (higher loan costs, incentive to save); investment ↓ (higher cost of capital).

300

List the leakages and injections in the 5 sector circular flow of income

leakages - savings, taxation, imports

injections - investment, government spending, exports

300

If withdrawals exceed injections, what will happen to  income and why? Give a two-sentence answer

If withdrawals > injections then demand for goods and services falls → firms cut production → national income decreases until injections rise or withdrawals fall

300

Identify and explain two types of government expenditures that are included in GDP and one common government payment that is excluded, with reasons

— Included: current expenditures (e.g., teacher salaries), capital expenditures (e.g., new road). Excluded: transfer payments (e.g., unemployment benefits) because they are not payments for current output.

300

— Classify these transactions as C, I, G, X or M: (a) A student buys a new laptop; (b) A firm buys a new machine; (c) Government pays an unemployment benefit; (d) A tourist from Japan pays for an Australian tour

— (a) C; (b) I; (c) Not included in GDP (transfer payment); (d) X.

400

Describe what happens to the circular flow when government spending increases but taxes remain the same. Explain the immediate flows that change.

Government spending ↑ (injection) increases demand; firms respond by producing more, increasing income; if taxes unchanged, net injections rise so income expands until new equilibrium

400

Show how an initial investment increase of $200 and the proportion of income saved is 0.2, can lead to a final change in equilibrium income of $1000. Show the multiplier calculation

$200 / 0.2 = $1000

400

Given: Consumption = $1,200b, Investment = $300b, Government purchases = $400b, Exports = $250b, Imports = $150b. Calculate GDP using the expenditure approach and show your working

GDP = 1200 + 300 + 400 + (250 − 150) = 2000\text{ (billion)}.

400

The slides state consumption is about 55% of GDP. Explain why consumption tends to be more stable over time than investment (two short reasons).

— Consumption is essential goods-heavy and tied to stable income; investment is volatile due to expectations and interest-rate sensitivity.

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