Top CO2 polluters and highest per capita

co2-emissions-per-capita

The biggest absolute emissions of CO2 come from China and the United States. Source: World Bank CO2 emissions (kt) In recent years, China has accelerated past the United States and is the biggest polluter in absolute terms, (which is unsurprising given China’s population and fast economic growth. India is also catching up.) Biggest CO2 Polluters …

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Monetary Base Definition

monetary-base-2000-2022-web

Readers’ Question: What is the difference between the Monetary base and the money supply? The monetary base is part of the overall money supply. The monetary base refers to that part of the money supply which is highly liquid (i.e. easy to use). The monetary base includes Notes and coins Commercial bank deposits with the …

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Beggar my neighbour – cutting corporation tax

‘Beggar my neighbour’ is a term used to describe an economic policy, where you seek to gain an economic advantage by making other countries lose out. Cutting corporation tax is an effort to take away investment from countries with higher corporation tax. It creates an incentive for countries to keep cutting to see who has …

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Seigniorage – definition and explanation

Seigniorage is the profit created by issuing currency, where the face value is higher than the intrinsic value. (production costs) Seigniorage income can also relate to the interest a Central Bank charges from lending commercial banks money. Seigniorage explained Early forms of money had a face value equal to the production costs – e.g. gold …

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Demand-pull inflation

UK cpi-inflation-89-19

Demand-pull inflation is a period of inflation which arises from rapid growth in aggregate demand. It occurs when economic growth is too fast. If aggregate demand (AD) rises faster than productive capacity (LRAS), then firms will respond by putting up prices, creating inflation. Inflation – a sustained increase in the price level. Demand-pull inflation – …

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Historical Unemployment Rates

uk-historical-unemployment-1881-2021

UK unemployment rates since 1881. This shows the fluctuations in unemployment over the past 100 years in the UK. Measuring unemployment is not a precise science. This data mostly relies on administrative statistics on the number claiming some kind of unemployment insurance. The government is changing how unemployment is measured. You can view the pdf …

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Increasing the Money Supply

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Readers Question: I’d like to ask you about routine ways (apart from so called “printing new money”) by which the total volume of money in the economy grows. The money supply measures the stock of money in the economy. A narrow definition of money (M0) includes the stock of notes/coins and operational deposits at Bank …

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