Thursday
Mostly summarized from Gregory Mankiw’s Principles of Economics, 5th Ed. PART 9 The Real Economy in the Long Run Chapter 26 of 36 Saving, Investment, and the Financial System Section 16 of 25 … Figure 1 – The Market for Loanable Funds The interest rate in the economy adjusts to balance supply and demand for loanable funds. The supply of loanable funds comes from national saving including private saving and public saving. Private savings is the amount of income households have left after consumption spending and taxes. Public saving is the amount of tax revenue the government has left spending (which is unusual, see Figure 1A). The demand for loanable funds comes from firms and households that want to borrow for investment purposes. In Figure 1 the equilibrium interest rate is 5 percent. $1,200 billion of loanable funds are supplied and demanded. … The economy's market for loanable funds like other markets is governed by supply and demand. The supply of loanable funds primarily co...