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Chapter 26 Interest, Present Value, Rent, and Profit<br />

This chapter examines four topics related to factor markets; interest, present value, economic<br />

rent, and economic profit.<br />

Interest – the payment for the use of loanable funds.<br />

Interest is the payment received by savers for making loanable funds available. Interest is the<br />

payment made by borrowers to use loanable funds. The interest rate is determined by the supply<br />

of and the demand for loanable funds.<br />

The Loanable Funds Market<br />

The supply of loanable funds comes from households that save (do not consume) part of their<br />

income. Household saving is motivated by the desire to accumulate wealth for retirement or for<br />

major future expenditures (e.g. a down payment on a house, college education, etc.). Household<br />

saving is also motivated by the desire to earn interest on savings. The interest earned will allow<br />

for greater consumption in the future.<br />

Example 1: Sanjiv Saver puts $10,000 in savings in Year 1. Sanjiv earns a 4% real interest rate<br />

on the savings for twenty years. Sanjiv’s savings will now have 119% more buying power. Sanjiv<br />

can use this increased buying power to help finance his retirement, for a major purchase (e.g.<br />

down payment on a house), or for other consumption.<br />

The quantity of household saving will be directly related to the interest rate. As the interest rate<br />

increases, the quantity of household saving will increase. Thus, the savings supply curve (or<br />

loanable funds supply curve) will be upward sloping, as illustrated in Example 2 below:<br />

Example 2:<br />

Interest<br />

Rate<br />

Quantity of Loanable Funds<br />

The private demand for loanable funds comes from:<br />

1. Consumers, who have a positive rate of time preference. A positive rate of time preference<br />

means consumers prefer earlier consumption to later consumption. This positive rate of time<br />

preference causes people to be willing to borrow (and pay interest) in order to consume now<br />

rather than later. Current consumption, financed by borrowing, is more expensive than future<br />

consumption, financed by accumulated savings.<br />

FOR REVIEW ONLY - NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION<br />

S<br />

26 - 1 Interest, Present Value, Rent, and Profit

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