Macroeconomic theory in the context of "Saving"

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⭐ Core Definition: Macroeconomic theory

Macroeconomics is a branch of economics that deals with the performance, structure, behavior, and decision-making of an economy as a whole. This includes regional, national, and global economies. Macroeconomists study aggregate measures of the economy, such as output or gross domestic product (GDP), national income, unemployment, inflation, consumption, saving, investment, or trade. Macroeconomics is primarily focused on questions which help to understand aggregate variables in relation to long run economic growth.

Macroeconomics and microeconomics are the two most general fields in economics. Given macroeconomists focus on large-scale phenomena, or aggregate variables, they differ significantly from microeconomists who study the principle-agent problem at a smaller level of analysis - either firms or consumers. This divide is institutionalized in the field of economics given difference in both methods and outcomes of interest.

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Macroeconomic theory in the context of Modern Monetary Theory

Modern Monetary Theory or Modern Money Theory (MMT) is a macroeconomic theory that describes the nature of money within a fiat, floating exchange rate system. MMT synthesizes ideas from the state theory of money of Georg Friedrich Knapp (also known as chartalism) and the credit theory of money of Alfred Mitchell-Innes, the functional finance proposals of Abba Lerner, Hyman Minsky's views on the banking system and Wynne Godley's sectoral balances approach. Economists Warren Mosler, L. Randall Wray, Stephanie Kelton, Bill Mitchell and Pavlina R. Tcherneva are largely responsible for reviving the idea of chartalism as an explanation of money creation.

MMT frames government spending and taxation differently to most orthodox frameworks, and instead relies on functionalist readings of historical events and evidence, such as the use of Tally sticks, or the creation of The Bank of England. MMT states that the government is the monopoly issuer of its currency and therefore must spend currency into existence before any tax revenue can be collected. The government spends currency into existence and taxpayers use that currency to pay their obligations to the state. This means that taxes cannot fund public spending in a nominal monetary flow sense, as the government cannot collect money back in taxes until after it is has been issued into the economy. In this kind of monetary system, the government is never constrained in its ability to pay, rather the limits are the real resources available for purchase in the state's currency.

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Macroeconomic theory in the context of Liquidity preference

In macroeconomic theory, liquidity preference is the demand for money, considered as liquidity. The concept was first developed by John Maynard Keynes in his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) to explain the determination of the interest rate by the supply and demand for money.The liquidity preference theory by Keynes was a refinement of Silvio Gesell's theory that interest is caused by the store of value function of money.

The demand for money as an asset was theorized to depend on the interest foregone by not holding bonds (here, the term "bonds" can be understood to also represent stocks and other less liquid assets in general, as well as government bonds). Interest rates, he argues, cannot be a reward for saving as such because, if a person hoards his savings in cash, keeping it under his mattress say, he will receive no interest, although he has nevertheless refrained from consuming all his current income. Instead of a reward for saving, interest, in the Keynesian analysis, is a reward for parting with liquidity. According to Keynes, money is the most liquid asset. Liquidity is a potentially valuable attribute of an asset, in circumstances requiring cash money to meet obligations or contingencies. The more quickly an asset can be converted into cash money at or near the present value of its expected long-term cash flow, the more liquid it is said to be.

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