Maximum prices – definition, diagrams and examples

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Definition – A maximum price occurs when a government sets a legal limit on the price of a good or service – with the aim of reducing prices below the market equilibrium price. For example, the government may set a maximum price of bread of £1 – or a maximum price of a weekly rent …

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Edexcel (A) Economics A-level revision guide

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Causes of secular stagnation

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Secular stagnation is a term coined to describe a prolonged period of lower economic growth. Economists, such as Larry Summers have written on secular stagnation arguing the world has entered a period of substantially lower economic growth. He points to factors, such as ineffective monetary policy and weak demand for explaining the lower rates of …

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UK Budget Deficit

uk-net-borrowing-93-22-marks

The budget deficit is the annual amount the government has to borrow to meet the shortfall between current receipts (tax) and government spending. Net borrowing for the UK 2021/11 is £151.8bn or 14.8% of GDP [OBR – J511] National debt or public sector net debt –  is the total amount the government owes – accumulated …

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Economic effects of a budget deficit

A budget deficit is the annual shortfall between government spending and tax revenue. The deficit is the annual amount the government need to borrow. The deficit is primarily funded by selling government bonds (gilts) to the private sector. Summary of effects of a budget deficit Rise in national debt Higher debt interest payments Increase in …

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OCR A level economics revision guide

  • Specific OCR A-level economics revision guide – just £8.95
  • Updated for the new OCR economics syllabus. Last updated 27 June 2022.
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UK wage growth

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Wage growth is a key factor in determining living standards, aggregate demand and inflation. If wages increase faster than inflation, then households will be able to afford more goods and services. Real wage growth = nominal wage growth – inflation. In the post-war period, apart from short-lived recessions, real wage growth has been positive, growing …

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Who are the winners and losers from inflation?

winners-losers-inflation

Inflation is a continuous rise in the price level. Inflation means the value of money will fall and purchase relatively fewer goods than previously. In summary: Inflation will hurt those who keep cash savings and workers with fixed wages. Inflation will benefit those with large debts who, with rising prices, find it easier to pay …

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