Do trade deficits cause unemployment?

A trade deficit occurs when the value of imports of goods and services is greater than the value of exports. For example, in 2016 the US exports totalled US$ 1,450,457 million. Imports totalled US$ 2,248,209 million. (WITS) Source: Trade balance at St Louis Fed. Since 1990, the US has run a persistent trade deficit. The …

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Trades Unions

Trade unions provide an organisation for workers to have joint representation with their employers. Trade unions have several functions: Represent workers with regard to pay and working conditions. Bargain for higher wages with the possibility of going on strike to target higher wages. Co-ordinate with firms to implement new working practises and negotiations with workers …

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Causes of Boom and Bust Cycles

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Boom and bust economic cycles involve: Rapid economic growth and inflation (a boom), followed by: A period of economic contraction / recession (falling GDP, rising unemployment) Causes of boom and bust cycles 1. Loose Monetary Policy If monetary policy is too loose, it means real interest rates are too low given the state of the …

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Neoliberalism – examples and criticisms

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Neoliberalism is a term commonly used to describe free-market economics. Neoliberalism involves policies associated with free trade, privatisation, price deregulation, a reduced size of government and flexible labour markets. Recently, neoliberalism has been associated with the policies of austerity and attempts to reduce budget deficits – usually by cutting government spending on social programmes. Neo-liberalism …

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Creative destruction

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Definition of creative destruction This refers to the process of how capitalism leads to a constantly changing structure of the economy. Old industries and firms, which are no longer profitable, close down enabling the resources (capital and labour) to move into more productive processes. Creative destruction means that the company closures and job losses are good …

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How The Bank of England set interest rates

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Q. How does the Bank of England decide and set interest rates? The Bank of England set the repo rate. This is sometimes known as the ‘base rate’. It is the interest rate at which commercial banks (like Lloyds and Natwest) borrow from the Bank of England. The Bank of England can control liquidity and …

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Herding behaviour

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Herding behaviour refers to how individual decisions are influenced by group behaviour. It stems from the observation that if a herd of animals starts moving in one direction, all the animals want to follow the herd. Why herding behaviour occurs Following the crowd. In economics, we can see a similar behaviour. For example, if individuals …

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The Biggest Lie in British Politics?

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Johann Hari wrote a piece on ‘The biggest lie in UK Politics’ Let’s start with a fact that should be on billboards across the land. As a proportion of GDP, Britain’s national debt has been higher than it is now for 200 of the past 250 years. Read that sentence again. Check it on any …

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