Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)
The marginal propensity to consume (MPC) is the fraction of an additional unit of income that a household spends on consumption rather than saving. It is a fundamental concept in Keynesian economics used to analyze how changes in income affect consumer spending and, by extension, aggregate demand.
Definition and formula
MPC = ΔC / ΔY
Explore More Resources
- ΔC = change in consumption
- ΔY = change in income
Example: If a $500 bonus leads you to spend $400 and save $100, MPC = $400 / $500 = 0.8.
MPC ranges from 0 to 1 in simple models. An MPC of 0 means all additional income is saved; an MPC of 1 means all additional income is spent.
Explore More Resources
Relationship to saving
The marginal propensity to save (MPS) complements MPC:
MPC + MPS = 1
Explore More Resources
Using the example above, MPS = $100 / $500 = 0.2.
MPC and the multiplier effect
MPC determines the size of the Keynesian multiplier, which measures how initial increases in spending (for example, government stimulus or investment) propagate through the economy. A higher MPC means more of any income increase is spent immediately, producing larger subsequent rounds of consumption and a larger overall increase in aggregate demand.
Explore More Resources
Roughly, the simple spending multiplier is 1 / (1 − MPC). For instance, if MPC = 0.8, the multiplier ≈ 5.
Variation by income level
MPC is not constant across households or income groups:
Explore More Resources
- Lower-income households typically have higher MPCs because a larger share of additional income goes toward immediate needs.
- Higher-income households tend to have lower MPCs because basic consumption needs are already met and they are more likely to save additional income.
This variation matters for policy design: transfers or tax cuts targeted at lower-income groups usually stimulate consumption more per dollar than equivalent transfers to higher-income households.
Policy and practical implications
- Fiscal stimulus: Policymakers use estimates of MPC to predict the demand-side impact of tax cuts, direct payments, or public spending. Targeting recipients with higher MPCs increases short-term demand effects.
- Business planning: Firms and forecasters use MPC-related insights to anticipate consumer spending changes when incomes change (e.g., during wage growth or one-time bonuses).
- Personal finance: Knowing your own MPC can clarify how likely you are to convert extra income into spending versus savings, which can inform budgeting and saving strategies.
Key takeaways
- MPC measures the share of additional income that is spent rather than saved (MPC = ΔC / ΔY).
- MPC + MPS = 1.
- A higher MPC produces a larger multiplier and a stronger short-term boost to aggregate demand from fiscal stimulus.
- MPC varies by income: lower-income households tend to have higher MPCs.
- Understanding MPC helps both policymakers design effective stimulus and individuals make informed financial choices.