ECON-002 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Demand Curve, Real Interest Rate, Psy

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Income and substitution effects both influence response of private saving to real interest rate. For target savers: when r goes up, ps/y* goes down > income effect. For opportunistic savers: when r goes up ps/y* goes up > substitution effect. C/y* is negatively related to r (downward sloping, inverse relationship) because increase in private savings comes from decrease in consumption (and vice versa) If private savings increases, c/y* moves to the left > and vice versa. If we thought the tax cut was permanent, but turns out to be temporary, the graph shifts left. If we thought the tax cut was temporary but it turns out to be permanent, graph shifts right. Step 1: if r rises, exchange rate (euros per dollar) rises. Step 2: if exchange rate rises, x falls. As a result of the above 2 steps, x/y* has an inverse relationship with r (downward sloping)

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