Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Costs of Economic Growth
- Negative Externalities
- EVALUATION
- Innovation means they
can be ommitted
- Micro Example
- We all have catalytic
converters in our cars
- Government Regulations
- There are
also positive
externalities
- Acid Rain in the UK in 1980s affected
forests in Germany, Sweden and Norway
- Noise and
Visual Pollution
- Pollution is trans-boundary
so it affects the whole world
- Countries like China who
prioritise growth over the
environment have a
permanent layer of smog
over them
- Air pollution increases due to more
transport of materials as production
increases and also due to great trade.
- International tensions when the USA did not
sign the Kyoto Agreement because their
pollution affects the whole world
- Inflation
- As AD shift outwards, the result is a rise
in GDP to a certain extent, after which
any shifts are mainly inflationary
- Price level rises
- Interest rates rise to encourage
saving and stop people from
spending so much and decrease
the demand-pull inflation
- There is more hot money in the UK.
Hot money is the money which
investors move from account to
account (usually in several different
countries) trying to get the highest
short-term interest rates possible
- House prices and rents rise
due to increase demand from
migrants and limited supply
- Monthly repayments on
loans and mortgages rise
- Cost of borrowing rises and
reward for saving rises
- Evaluate Mark Carney's
policies
- His policy is to keep interest rates at 0.5% until
unemployment falls below 7% (as long as inflation
remained under control). There are 3 knockouts,
any of which will cause the deal with unemployment
levels not to hold. When one of these has been
achieved, the interest rate will not definitely go up,
instead it will be reconsidered by the MPC.
- The first knockout is if the MPC judges that CPI
inflation in 18-24 months will be above 2.5%.
- More than 0.5% above the
inflation target
- The second is if medium-term
inflation expectations “no longer
remain sufficiently well anchored”.
- I think this means that the forecasts for 5-10
years need to still be "valid" in a sense of
likelihood and be relatively accurate.
- The third is if the bank’s financial-policy
committee judges that keeping interests
rates at 0.5% will have serious effects on
financial stability and there is nothing
else the bank can do about it.
- There is more confidence in the
£ so there is higher demand for
it. The £ gets stronger.
- Higher UK price level means
foreign goods become more
competitive so we import more
- Countries are more confident to
trade with us due to our economic
growth so they export more to us
- EXCHANGE RATE
- As we import more, consumer
choice increases and living
standards also increase
- Our exports become less
competitive in the global
market so we export less
- This affects our balance of
payments and puts us into a
current account deficit
- Due to economic growth we have a current
account deficit. This means that some
countries have to have a current account
surplus. This causes international tensions.
- The Bank of England might want to print more
currency to satisfy demand. This is inflationary
as the currency decreases in worth.
- Over-heating economy
- the economy overheats if AD is increased
when the economy is already at its full
productive potential, resulting in increasing
inflation with little or no increase in output
- If the Bank prints more money, production will still be the same, just people will
have more money, so demand will rise and producers will raise their prices, hence
printing money is inflationary because there is an increase in the supply of money
but it is not supported by GDP growth. People have more money, but if everything is
more expensive they are no better off. The greater the extent to which this is done,
the worse the situation becomes. E.g. in Germany there was hyperinflation because
people kept getting more money, producers kept raising prices and eventually the
currency became worthless. Once consumers realize what is happening, they expect
inflation. This causes them to buy more now to avoid paying a higher price later.
This boosts demand, causing inflation to spiral out of control. The only winners in
hyperinflation are those who borrowed before the hyperinflation. They find that higher
prices makes their debt worth less by comparison, until it is virtually wiped out.
- INFLATION
- Monetary Inflation
- Upward pressure on prices
causes demand-pull inflation
- Macroeconomic Goals
- Control Inflation and
Interest Rates
- Stable prices - low inflation
(current target 2%)
- Sustainable Economic Growth
- Measured by Real GDP
- MEASURES OF GDP
- Reduced Environmental impact of Growth
- ECONOMIC GROWTH
- AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY
- Aggregate Demand
- Consumption
- CONSUMPTION AND SAVING
- Low Unemployment
- Aiming for full employment
- Ensure high standards of living and equality
- Rising living standards and
a fall in relative poverty
- Cutting child and pensioner poverty
- Sound government finances
- Sustainable position of
Balance of Payments
- BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
- Balance between government
borrowing and spending, also
control over the national debt
- Improvement in productivity
- More competitive in global trade
- Pressures of globalization and
increasing competition within the
European Single Market has made
this a key government objective
- Commodity and raw
material prices rise
- Countries purchase more land
- E.g. China's industrialization - demand for
oil shifted outwards and since resources such
as oil are finite, the prices rose worldwide
- Development in quaternary industries - more
innovation, more research and development
- Higher Inequality
- Wider gap between the rich and the
poor causes tensions in society
- Rich get richer and the poor get
poorer - increasing poverty
- Evaluation: Certain amount of
regulation through taxes
- Evaluation: Measured in quintiles - comparing
the poorest 20% to the richest 20%
- Uneven distribution of the benefits of economic growth
- Most of the benefits go to London
- Existence of regional zones means that there
are peripheral zones which are marginalised
- Known as Growth holes in LEDCs
- Causes internal migration
- Overpopulation in certain
areas and pressure on
services as demand increases
- Government spending
increases
- Public Services improve
- Welfare state increases.
This may cause higher
dependency on benefits
- Better Infrastructure - higher
standard of living for everyone
- MULTIPLIER EFFECT
- Shortages of labour
- Encourages Immigration
- Domestic unemployment might rise
- UNEMPLOYMENT
- There are 4 types of unemployment
- Seasonal
- When one has a job where it is
common to only work during certain
seasons. It occurs because the
demand for some workers varies
widely over the course of the year.
It is viewed as less problematic
than structural unemployment
because the demand for seasonal
skills is only temporary.
- Cyclical
- This unemployment is associated with downturns occurring in the economy. During
recessions, demand for goods and services falls so some companies cut production and
fire workers rather than by reducing wages and prices. There is a larger supply of labour
than there is demand - unemployment. As an economy recovers from a recession,
cyclical unemployment tends to naturally disappear. As a result, economists usually focus
on addressing the root causes of the economic downturns themselves rather than how to
correct cyclical unemployment.
- Demand-deficient unemployment
- caused by short-run
fluctuations in aggregate
demand
- rises rapidly during recessions
- Structural
- When changes occur in market economies
(business activity) and demand changes for
different skills resulting in a mismatch between
the skills of workers and the jobs available.
Some industries have a surplus of labour
supply while others face a shortage. This
might occur during industrialization or
deindustrialization. Structural unemployment is
thought to be a pretty significant problem,
mainly because structural unemployment tends
to be largely of the long-term variety and
retraining workers is not a cheap or easy task.
- Technological unemployment -
when physical capital replaces
human capital
- E.g. Mining - there was a
decline in mining due to
deindustrialisation. Jobs were
lost in primary and secondary
sectors, and jobs were created
in the tertiary sector but
redundant miners didn't have
the right skills to take those jobs
- Long term
unemployment
may result from
structural or
technological
unemployment
- This tends to be
concentrated in areas
traditionally associated
with a particular industry
causing geographical
unemployment
- Frictional
- When workers are between jobs, either
because they have quit their old job or
because they have been fired. Some may
have find new jobs before they leave their old
ones, others may not have found other work
yet. These workers have to look for a suitable
job, which can take a while. During this time,
the individual is considered to be unemployed.
Frictional unemployment is only short term
because workers will easily find another job in
the same field, particularly since technology
makes the job search process more efficient.
- It can also occur when students
move into the work force for the first
time, when an individual moves to a
new city and needs to find work, and
when women re-enter the work force
after having children. (Maternity leave
doesn't count as unemployment!)
- Costs of Unemployment
- To Local
Communities
- To the Unemployed
- Loss of income.
- The worker receives
benefits to offset this
- Extra leisure time which
they have at their disposal.
- The stigma (disgrace) of
being unemployed
- Many feel degraded by the process
of applying for benefits and not being
able to support their family
- high stress levels, martial
breakdown, suicide, physical
illness, mental instability and
higher death rates
- For the short term unemployed, the costs are
relatively low. The social and psychological
costs are limited and few are seriously affected
financially because loss of earnings is low. The
large redundancy payments mean some may
have benefited from losing their job.
- Long term unemployed – the
longer the person is
unemployed the less likely it is
that they will find a job.
- Being unemployed reduces the human
capital of workers. They lose skills and
are not being trained in the latest
developments of their occupation.
- Employers use length of time out of work as a
crude way of sifting through applicants. To an
employer, unemployment is may mean the applicant
is deskilled, thus creating a fear that the worker is
incapable or working, is disruptive or has
personality problems. It shows that other
employers have turned this applicant down for
previous jobs, and thus the rational behaviour is to
save time and not consider the applicant for the
job. The long term unemployed are in a catch-22
situation. They can’t get a job unless they have
recent employment experience, but they can’t get
recent employment experience until they get a job.
- To the economy
- To the taxpayer
- Underemployment
- Voluntary/Involuntary
- Some choose not to work at the
current wage rate - everyone above
the equilibrium point on the supply
curve is voluntarily unemployed
- LABOUR MARKET
- Definitions
- The unemployed - those who are willing and able to work,
without a job but who are seeking work. The unemployment
rate - the number of people out of work at a point in time.
Unemployment will fall if the number of workers gaining jobs
is greater than the number of people losing jobs.
Unemployment will rise if there the number of people
seeking jobs rises but the number of jobs stays the same.
- Measuring Unemployment
- Claimant Count (CC)
- Counts the number of people
claiming unemployment
benefits. To be eligible for these
benefits in the UK, a person has
to be actively seeking work
- International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Labour Force Survey (LFS)
- Surveys 60,000 households
- Produces a higher figure
- Usually given as a figure or a percentage of the
workforce. A % is more useful when comparing
unemployment in different countries where
populations and workforce size may vary and
also over time where the population and its
structure may have changed
- Take unskilled jobs that British
people do not want to do therefore
unemployment might not be affected
- Contribute to taxes and GDP,
they often contribute more than
they cost us in benefits as many
come here willing to work
because of the possibility to
earn more money, few come to
exploit our welfare state
- Brain drain effect for the migrants'
home country - economic
slowdown; might affect trade with
us, however they have a positive
balance of payments due to
remittances sent home
- negatively affects our balance
of payments - our "imports" rise
- Stay at home people
return to work
- Higher costs for firms as they
need to train more people