Theme 2 PART 2

studied byStudied by 2 people
5.0(1)
get a hint
hint

GDP

1 / 131

Tags & Description

Studying Progress

0%
New cards
132
Still learning
0
Almost done
0
Mastered
0
132 Terms
1
New cards

GDP

value of all goods and services produced in one year.

New cards
2
New cards

Year-on-year Growth

the percentage change between one year and the previous year.

New cards
3
New cards

Recession

Two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.

New cards
4
New cards

Gross National Product

The total value of all output produced by an economy in a given year.

New cards
5
New cards

Gross National Income

The total income earned by nationals of a country.

New cards
6
New cards

Nominal

not adjusted for inflation

New cards
7
New cards

Real

adjusted for inflation

New cards
8
New cards

Limitations of GDP

doesn't show- environmental degradation, non market transactions, wealth/income distribution, population size, PPP.

New cards
9
New cards

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)

measure the total amount of goods and services that a single unit of a country’s currency can buy in another country

New cards
10
New cards

Purchasing power

value of a currency expressed in terms of the number of goods or services that one unit of money can buy.

New cards
11
New cards

Price level

measures the average price of a "basket of goods".

New cards
12
New cards

Inflation

an increase in prices/ fall in the value of money.

New cards
13
New cards

Index

used to compare values across years. Base year = 100

New cards
14
New cards

Real

adjusted for inflation.

New cards
15
New cards

Nominal

not adjusted for inflation.

New cards
16
New cards

PPP

compares prices across countries to look at the true cost of living.

New cards
17
New cards

GNH

an index which is used to measure the collective happiness and well-being of a population (in Bhutan).

New cards
18
New cards

Limitations of CPI

-not all household consume all the basket of goods eg single person households, four-children households, non-car owners, students, pensioners, rich, poor, -quality of the product changes over time (e.g telephones) -Basket of goods changes - but not fast enough. -Data handling/ collection issues/ arithmetic vs geometric method. -can't compare internationally

New cards
19
New cards

How is inflation measured?

Consumer Price Index (CPI)

New cards
20
New cards

How is CPI calculated?

Weights are set against a basket of 650+ goods, 'living costs and food survey' collects data from 7,000 households. CPI is the calculated relative to a base year.

New cards
21
New cards

Alternatives for CPI

RPI (includes housing costs)

New cards
22
New cards

Disinflation

Fall in price level, inflation >0.

New cards
23
New cards

Deflation

Fall in price level below 0.

New cards
24
New cards

Hyperinflation

period of very high rates of inflation, leading to a loss of confidence in an economy's currency.

New cards
25
New cards

Problems with (Hyper)Inflation

-Erodes the value of money, savings & wages. -Uncertainty leads to lower consumer and business confidence. -Less internationally competitive so leads to fewer exports. -Menu costs: the cost of changing price listings.

New cards
26
New cards

Problems with Deflation

-Discourages consumer spending: downwards spiral. -Debt values increase in real terms. Borrowers worse off.

New cards
27
New cards

Causes of inflation

demand pull and cost push

New cards
28
New cards

demand-pull inflation

increases in the price level (inflation) resulting from increased pressure on existing FOP, increasing price of resources and COP, therefore increasing PL.

New cards
29
New cards

Factors that can cause demand pull inflation

  • decrease in interest rates (cheaper to borrow, increased I+C) -lower income/ cooperation tax (more disposable income/prices) -increase GS -weak exchange rate (exports cheap, imports dear, increases export revenue). -wealth effect

New cards
30
New cards

cost-push inflation

When prices rise due to an increase in the cost of production.

New cards
31
New cards

Causes of Cost-pull inflation

-increased raw material prices -increased wages -increased indirect taxes -currency depreciation

New cards
32
New cards

chain for why rising properties price causes inflation

rising property prices, wealth effect, more consumer confidence + more spending, demand pull inflation

New cards
33
New cards

chain for why increased global oil prices causes inflation

higher COP, passed onto consumers, cost pull inflation

New cards
34
New cards

Working age population

all those between the ages of 16-64 years.

New cards
35
New cards

Labour force

all those able and willing to work.

New cards
36
New cards

Employment

the proportion of the working-age population that is working.

New cards
37
New cards

Unemployment

the proportion of the working-age population that is actively seeking work but not working.

New cards
38
New cards

Underemployment

Employed but seeking more hours.

New cards
39
New cards

Two measures of unemployment

ILO LFS + Claimant counter

New cards
40
New cards

Pros/cons of JSA

+Easy, cheap and quick to collect -excludes people that are actively seeking work but don't claim -fraud could lead to overestimation -not internationally comparable

New cards
41
New cards

Pros/cons of ILO LFS

+more accurate +based on international standards -more costly to compile -only need to work one hour a week to count as employed

New cards
42
New cards

Types of Unemployment

-Seasonal unemployment -Frictional unemployment -Geographical unemployment -Structural unemployment -Real wage (classical) unemployment -Cyclical (demand-deficient) unemployment

New cards
43
New cards

Seasonal Unemployment

unemployment caused by seasonal changes in the demand for certain kinds of labour

eg: •Tourism •Construction •Post Office/ delivery workers •Farming

New cards
44
New cards

Frictional Unemployment

A mismatch in information - the time involved in finding a new job.

•Search costs (internet!) •Hiring/ firing policies & laws •Worker dissatisfaction •Interview process

New cards
45
New cards

Geographical Unemployment

A mismatch between the location of a worker and a job.

Vacancies in London (Jan 2020): 700,000 Unemployed in Scotland (Jan 2020): 105,000

New cards
46
New cards

Structural Unemployment

unemployment that occurs when workers' skills do not match the jobs that are available

New cards
47
New cards

Real wage (Classical) Unemployment

unemployment that results from wages being higher than the market-clearing level causes: minimum wages, trade unions

New cards
48
New cards

Cyclical Unemployment

unemployment that rises during economic downturns and falls when the economy improves

New cards
49
New cards

How does unemployment impact workers?

-loss of income -fall in living standards -social/ psychological cost -loss of skills -less attractive to future employers

however, this forces workers to become more productive.

New cards
50
New cards

How does unemployment impact businesses?

  • Fall in the demand for goods & services.

  • Fall in demand further back along the supply chain.

  • Decrease in profits.

  • Redundancy/ downsize costs.

  • Larger surplus labour pool

  • Less pressure to increase wages

  • Reduced risk of industrial strike action

New cards
51
New cards

How does unemployment impact the government?

-Increase in welfare spending (income support, tax credits)

  • Fall in tax revenue •Income •Corporation (profits) •VAT (sales)

  • Increase in government borrowing

New cards
52
New cards

How does unemployment impact the economy?

-Loss in GDP

-Under utilisation of factor inputs (productively inefficient)

New cards
53
New cards

What is the BOP made up of?

-Current account (X-M), Investment income, transfers -Capital account -Financial account

New cards
54
New cards

What are the 4 macroeconmic goals?

Low and stable inflation, low unemploymet, BOP, stable economic growth

New cards
55
New cards

What is the Current account made up of?

-trade in goods -trade in services -investment income (eg remmitances) -transfers (eg EU payment fees, paying foriegn aid to developing countries)

New cards
56
New cards

What is the capital account made up of?

-debt forgiveness -inheritance taxes

New cards
57
New cards

What is the finacial account made up of?

  • portfolio investments e.g. bonds, shares and derivatives. -FDI

New cards
58
New cards

What may worsen a current account deficit?

-strong domestic growth (incomes increase, M increases) -recession overseas (overseas incomes decrease) -strong ER (SPICED) -High inflation

New cards
59
New cards

AD equation

AD = C + I + G + (X-M)

New cards
60
New cards

Circular flow of income

a model of the economy which shows the flows of goods, services, factors of production and their payments.

New cards
61
New cards

National Income

Total value of money earned within an economy = GDP.

New cards
62
New cards

Withdrawal/ Leakage

Taxes, Savings, Imports

New cards
63
New cards

Injections

GS, X, Investment

New cards
64
New cards

Consumption makes up about _____ of overall GDP.

65% (2/3)

New cards
65
New cards

Factors affecting consumption

-consumer confidenct -interest rates -wealth effects -animal spirits -employment rates

New cards
66
New cards

animal spirits

psychological factors that lead to changes in the mood of consumers or businesses, thereby affecting consumption, investment, and GDP

New cards
67
New cards

Factors affecting investment

-rate econ growth (increased GDP, more capital needed to meet demand) -confidence levels (confidence in tomorrow, more likely to invest today) -intrest rates (low Intrest rates, cheaper to borrow) -access to credit (easier to get a loan to invest) -risk (low risk, more likely to invest) -animal spirits

New cards
68
New cards

Fiscal budget surplus

TR>GS

New cards
69
New cards

Fiscal budget defecit

TR<GS

New cards
70
New cards

Factors causing a change in (X-M)

-increase in ER (spiced, X decreases) -changes in real income (M increases) -overseas recession (overseas income decrease, X decreases) -protectionism (e.g tarrifs, quotas reduce X.)

New cards
71
New cards

Short run

At least one FOP is fixed

New cards
72
New cards

What causes a shift in SRAS?

changes in COP eg oil prices

New cards
73
New cards

What causes a shift in LRAS

changes in FOP (Capital, Enterprise, Land, Labour).

New cards
74
New cards

What is the difference between the kenysian vs classical LRAS?

Kenyesian model believes that in the long run an equilibrium can exist whilst an economy still has spare capacity.

New cards
75
New cards

Shifts in LRAS are caused by

changes in the quality/ quantity of FOP. eg productivity, education, migration.

New cards
76
New cards

Firms provide households with...

Wages, rent, profits

New cards
77
New cards

Households provide firms with...

consumer expenditure

New cards
78
New cards

Increase in minimum wage shifts out...

AD and AS AD- increased wages= increase disposable income, AD increases due to increase C, demand pull-inflation. AS increases due to increased COP,AS increases causing cost push inflation.

New cards
79
New cards

Appreciation of currency causes...

Increase in AS, decrease in AD.

AS cost of importing raw materials cheaper, SRAS increases. Cost push inflation. AD imports become cheaper, exports dearer.

New cards
80
New cards

Increase in quality of education...

Eduation increases productivity, increase productive capacity, LRAS increases. Education increases productivity, higher wages and spending AD increases.

New cards
81
New cards

MPC

change in C/change in Y

New cards
82
New cards

MPS

change in savings/ change in income

New cards
83
New cards

MPM

change in imports/ change in income

New cards
84
New cards

MPT

change in tax/ change in income

New cards
85
New cards

MPW

MPS+MPM+MPT or 1-MPC

New cards
86
New cards

Multipler equation

1/MPW or 1/1-MPC

New cards
87
New cards

Postive multiplier effect

Initial injection, AD increases causing a more than proportionate effect, further increasing output. eg investment in infrastructure, increases AD, workers in the are consume, further shifting out AD.

New cards
88
New cards

Negative multipler effect

Initial withdrawl, AD decreases, Real output decrease, demand pull deflation.

New cards
89
New cards

Output Gap

a measure of the difference between actual output (Y) and potential output (Yf)

New cards
90
New cards

Negative Output Gap

Producing below trend. Spare capacity and unemployment present.

New cards
91
New cards

Positive Output Gap

Producing above trend. Growth is unsustainable and inflationary.

New cards
92
New cards

Negative output gap diagram

AD> LRAS yfe

New cards
93
New cards

postive output gap diagram

New cards
94
New cards

Postive output gap reasoning

economic growth rate is greater than trend growth, occur during a boom. eg due to overtime.

eval- can cause inflation, may exhaust FOP + unsustainable in LR

New cards
95
New cards

Eval of output gap

hard to measure due to unkown quantity of: unemployed workers, worker,captial productivity, spare capacity?

New cards
96
New cards

business cycle

Fluctuations in economic activity, such as employment and production

New cards
97
New cards

Monetary Policy

Involves using interest rates and other monetary tools to stabilise the economy.

New cards
98
New cards

MPC

The Monetary Policy Committee is a panel of experts who are responsible for setting Bank of England monetary policy.

New cards
99
New cards

Qualitative easing

creating new money electronically to buy assets (government/ corporate bonds).

New cards
100
New cards

Hot money

capital that investors regularly move between economies to profit from the highest rate of return.

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 16 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 57 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 1 person
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 3 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 2 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 16 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 3 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 18 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard50 terms
studied byStudied by 31 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard38 terms
studied byStudied by 14 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard60 terms
studied byStudied by 81 people
Updated ... ago
4.0 Stars(5)
flashcards Flashcard82 terms
studied byStudied by 30 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard40 terms
studied byStudied by 2 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard54 terms
studied byStudied by 126 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard39 terms
studied byStudied by 16 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard73 terms
studied byStudied by 17 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)