3.3 Supply Side Policy Flashcards

1
Q

What are supply-side policies

A
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2
Q

What happens when deregulating or privatising the public sector

A
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3
Q

What are subsidies

A
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4
Q

What is meant by competition policy

A
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5
Q

What are benefits of infrastructure development

A
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6
Q

What are research and development incentives

A
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7
Q

How can the government impact education and training

A
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8
Q

What are the impacts on reforming tax and benefits, or reducing marginal tax rates

A
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9
Q

What are the impacts of improving labour market flexibility

A
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10
Q

Strengths of supply-side policies

A

The only policy which can deal with structural unemployment because labour market can be directly improved with education and training

Can help increase productivity with increased spending on education and training which results in a more competitive country

Help make the economy attractive to investors

Economy could be made more competitive through deregulation and privatisation which puts average costs lower for firms

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11
Q

Weaknesses of supply-side policies

A

Not as good as demand-side policies at dealing with cyclical unemployment since they can’t reduce NOG and shift AD right

Significant time lags

Reducing the rate of tax could lead to a more unequal distribution of wealth

Education and training may be highly costly to implement

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