Why is cost of living in UK so expensive?

house-price-earnings-ratio-uk-regions-1996-2021

Readers Question: Why is the cost of living in the UK so expensive? The cost of living depends on: The price of basic necessities – food, fuel, heating, transport, housing/rent, entertainment. The effective cost of living also depends on real wages. It is expensive to live in Nordic countries, but real wages tend to be …

Read more

Output Gap Definition

The output gap is a measure of the difference between actual output (Y) and potential output (Yf). A positive output gap means growth is above the trend rate and is inflationary. A negative output gap means an economic downturn with unemployment and spare capacity The output gap = Y- Yf Diagram for Output Gap The …

Read more

Biflation – definition and explanation

us-inflation-cpi-cpi-food-energy-2000-2021

Biflation is a term used to describe a period where some prices are rising and some prices are falling. It can appear we have both inflation and deflation at the same time. CPI = Headline inflation rate CPI less food and energy  = underlying or core inflation. In the above example, the headline rate is …

Read more

Impact of Wage Inflation

wages-inflation-with-arrows

Summary: Wage inflation is an increase in nominal wages, meaning workers receive higher pay. Wage inflation tends to cause price inflation and higher growth. The impact of wage inflation depends on whether it is a real increase (higher than inflation) or just nominal increase (same wage increase as inflation). The effect also depends on labour …

Read more

Causes of unemployment

A look at the main causes of unemployment – including demand deficient, structural, frictional and real wage unemployment. Main causes of unemployment 1. Frictional unemployment This is unemployment caused by the time people take to move between jobs, e.g. graduates or people changing jobs. There will always be some frictional unemployment in an economy because …

Read more

Reasons for falling wages

average-mean-wages-uk-77-21-lines

Since the financial crisis, we have seen an unprecedented stagnation/decline in real wages. This decline has been most noticeable for low-income workers, with growing levels of inequality. The decline/stagnation in real wages is a global phenomenon – though some countries have been more affected than others. Reasons suggested for falling/stagnant wages since 2008 include: Recession …

Read more

Examples of Game Theory in Economics

Game study is the study of strategic interaction where one player’s decision depends on what the other player does. What the opponent does also depends upon what he thinks the first player will do. Dominant strategy – when one choice gives better result than other Nash equilibrium – where each player has nothing to gain …

Read more

Item added to cart.
0 items - £0.00