Imagine a big pizza 🍕 that everyone in the economy shares.
The circular flow shows how that pizza moves between households and firms, just like a game of passing a ball around a circle.
Each round of the game changes the amount of pizza (income) everyone gets.
AD is the total amount of goods and services that households, firms, the government, and foreigners want to buy at a given price level.
Think of it as the total “pizza demand” in our game.
When AD goes up, firms need more pizza to satisfy the higher demand.
They hire more workers, pay more wages, and the extra income circulates back to households, who then spend more.
This creates a chain reaction that amplifies the initial change in AD.
The multiplier tells us how much total national income (Y) will change when AD changes.
It depends on the Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC), the fraction of extra income that households spend.
The formula is:
\$\Delta Y = \frac{1}{1 - MPC} \times \Delta AD\$
| Variable | Symbol | Example Value |
|---|---|---|
| Marginal Propensity to Consume | \$MPC\$ | 0.8 |
| Change in AD | \$\Delta AD\$ | \$100\$ million |
| Multiplier | \$k\$ | 5 |
| Change in National Income | \$\Delta Y\$ | \$500\$ million |
🎉 Remember: The higher the MPC, the bigger the multiplier, and the more powerful the ripple effect of an AD change in the circular flow!
Keep practicing with different MPC values to see how the outcome changes.