Automatic Stabilisers

us-economic-growth-automatic-stabilisers

Automatic stabilisers refer to how fiscal instruments will influence the rate of growth and help counter swings in the economic cycle. Automatic stabilisers will influence the size of government borrowing. Example of automatic stabilisers High Growth – In a period of high economic growth, automatic stabilisers will help to reduce the growth rate. With higher …

Read more

Balance of Trade

Definition trade balance: The balance of trade measures the net exports of goods and services (NX). It is the value of exports – the value of imports. It forms the major component of the current account, although it ignores international investment flows and current transfers. The balance of trade refers to both trade in goods (visibles) …

Read more

Bank of England

The Bank of England is responsible for managing UK monetary policy and maintaining the supply of money in the economy. The Bank of England is independent of the government. Although, the government can appoint members and set the inflation target. However, the Bank has a key role to play in the management of the economy …

Read more

Economic Booms

Definition of an economic boom A boom is a period of rapid economic expansion resulting in higher GDP, lower unemployment, a higher inflation rate and rising asset prices. Booms usually suggest the economy is overheating creating a positive output gap and inflationary pressures. A boom suggests the economy is growing at a faster rate than …

Read more

Supply side shock

SRAS-shift-left

An adverse supply-side shock is an event that causes an unexpected increase in costs or disruption to production. This will cause the short-run aggregate supply curve to shift to the left, leading to higher inflation and lower output. Diagram showing supply-side shock SRAS shifting to the left causes a higher price level and lower real …

Read more

Budget Surplus

budget-deficit

Definition A budget surplus occurs when tax revenue is greater than government spending. With a budget surplus, the government can use the surplus revenue to pay off public sector debt. Budget surpluses are quite rare in modern economies because of the temptation for politicians to spend more money and cut taxes. The UK experienced a …

Read more

Criticism of Keynesian Economics

phillips-curve-breakdown

Keynesian economics developed in the 1930s offering a response to the unique challenges of the Great Depression. Keynesian economics involves: Government intervention to stabilise the economic cycle e.g. expansionary fiscal policy – cutting tax and increasing spending. The argument is that governments can speed up economic recovery. Criticisms of Keynesian Economics Borrowing causes higher interest …

Read more

Flexible Wages Definition

real-wage-solved-by-rising-demand

Wages are said to be flexible when they respond to changes in supply and demand and lead to the market clearing wage being set. It implies that the wage will be set by the Marginal Revenue Product of labour and marginal cost of labour. Any change in supply and demand for labour will lead to …

Read more

Item added to cart.
0 items - £0.00