Wage-push inflation

wage-price-spiral

Definition Wage-push inflation is the increase in general price level resulting from higher wages in an economy. Explanation of wage-push inflation If firms increase nominal wages by 5%, they experience higher costs of production. This is likely to cause firms to pass the cost increases onto consumers in the form of higher prices. Firms increase …

Read more

Different types of inflation

different-types-of-inflation

Inflation means a sustained increase in the general price level. The main two types of inflation are Demand-pull inflation – this occurs when the economy grows quickly and starts to ‘overheat’ – Aggregate demand (AD) will be increasing faster than aggregate supply (LRAS). Cost-push inflation – this occurs when there is a rise in the …

Read more

Environmental impact of economic growth

kuznets-environment

Economic growth means an increase in real output (real GDP). Therefore, with increased output and consumption we are likely to see costs imposed on the environment. The environmental impact of economic growth includes the increased consumption of non-renewable resources, higher levels of pollution, global warming and the potential loss of environmental habitats. However, not all …

Read more

Policies for Economic Growth

policies-for-economic-growth

Government policies to increase economic growth are focused on trying to increase aggregate demand (demand side policies) or increase aggregate supply/productivity (supply side policies) Demand side policies include: Fiscal policy (cutting taxes/increasing government spending) Monetary policy (cutting interest rates) Supply side policies include: Privatisation, deregulation, tax cuts, free trade agreements (free market supply side policies) …

Read more

Speculation – Stabilising and destabilising

Speculation occurs when individuals make decisions about buying or selling depending on expectations of future price changes. For example, if prices are rising speculators may take this as a sign that prices will continue to rise, and therefore, they buy more. This speculation causes prices to continue to rise. An example is house prices, where …

Read more

Sustainable growth

uk-economic-growth-annual

Sustainable economic growth implies that the growth rate can be maintained over the long term. Sustainable growth involves both Environmentally sustainable growth – e.g. not exploiting scarce resources. Sustainable growth in terms of low inflation and a balanced economy. Sustainable economic growth The long-run trend rate of economic growth is the rate of economic growth …

Read more

Why is value of Yuan so important?

devaluation-in-yuan

Summary – impact of devaluation in Yuan If the Yuan falls in value, Chinese exports will become cheaper compared to other countries (e.g. US, India, EU) A falling Yuan will increase demand for Chinese goods contributing to higher growth in China. However, a fall in the Yuan will make US and Indian goods relatively more …

Read more

Economic effects of a pandemic

projected-impact-of-pandemic-on-eu

The Coronavirus has already led to disruption in manufacturing output, foreign travel and consumer demand. If the virus spreads and becomes a pandemic, what will be the likely economic effects? In short, a global pandemic will have a serious supply-side impact – especially on foreign travel, manufacturing and investment. The uncertainty and decline in travel …

Read more

Item added to cart.
0 items - £0.00