Criticism of Keynesian Economics

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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 …

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Inflation Targeting Pros and Cons

Inflation targeting means Central Banks are responsible for using monetary policy to keep inflation close to the agreed target (usually around 2%). Since the mid-1990s, inflation targeting has become widely adopted by developed economies, such as UK, US, and the Eurozone. Inflation targets were introduced to help reduce inflation expectations and help avoid the periods …

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Should full employment be the primary macroeconomic objective?

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The main macroeconomic objectives of the government will include: low inflation, increasing the sustainable rate of economic growth full employment and balance of payments equilibrium. Full employment involves zero or very low unemployment. In practice, there will always be some frictional unemployment as people are looking for new jobs or leaving school. Economists suggest an …

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Productive Capacity

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Readers Question: Identify and explain clearly the determinants of a nation’s productive capacity. How does the concept of productive capacity differ from a nation’s actual GDP? A production possibility frontier shows potential output. Here an investment in capital goods enables the PPF curve to shift to the right. Factors that affect productive capacity A nation’s …

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WJEC A-level economics revision guide

WJEC-A-Level-Economics-Revision-Guide
  • Specific WJEC A-level economics revision guide (units 1,2,3,4) – just £8.95
  • Updated for the new WJEC economics syllabus. Last updated June 2022.
  • E-book (comes in pdf format shortly after purchase.)
  • Also suitable for Eduqas. Eduqas is part of WJEC and it is the same syllabus.
  • Trademark simplicity and clarity of presentation.
  • Significantly expanded on previous version, with not just required knowledge, but also examples of evaluation for each topic.
  • For schools – See: Network License – A-level WJEC Economics (£105.00) (allowing unlimited use)

Costs of economic growth

Economic growth means an increase in real GDP – an increase real incomes. This is usually considered beneficial, but there are also potential costs of economic growth such as: Inflation Boom and bust economic cycles Current account deficit Environmental costs – pollution, loss of non-renewable resources Congestion Potential of widening inequality. The costs of economic …

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Model economics data response

This revision guide offers a selection of data response questions and model answers.

It is designed to help for:

  • Edexcel Unit 4 – The Global Economy
  • AQA Unit 4 – National and International Economics
  • OCR  – The Global Economy

If you want to distribute unlimited copies in your school, you can buy a Network license – £45.00

(e-book) sent within a couple of hours after purchase.

Low economic growth and unemployment

Readers Question: Why is it that when there is low economic growth, unemployment rises? A low rate of economic growth can cause higher unemployment. Though it is not always the case. During 2010-13 the UK experienced a slow rate of economic growth, but unexpectedly unemployment fell. If there is negative economic growth (recession) we would …

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