Possible macroeconomic objectives and conflicts Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main macroeconomic objectives?

A
  • Sustainable and balanced economic growth (% change in real GDP)
  • Environmental protection: growth needs to be sustainable
  • Price stability: control of cost and price inflation (eg via an inflation
    target)
  • High employment rate, low unemployment, reduced inactivity in the
    labour market
  • Sustainable overseas trade balance in goods and services/Balance of Payments current account in equilibrium
  • More equitable final distribution of income and wealth - greater income
    equality
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2
Q

What are examples of trade offs between macroeconomic objectives?

A
  • Faster growth can fuel demand-pull inflation and widen a deficit on the current account; income inequality may rise if the growth is not inclusive
  • Low unemployment can increase real wages and cause cost-push inflation
  • Polices to reduce inflation can slow growth and cause unemployment
  • Reducing government borrowing and the national debt can slow growth and cause living standards to stagnate
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3
Q

What is the Phillips Curve and what does it look like?

A

The Phillips Curve is an economic model that shows the possible inverse nonlinear relationship between the unemployment rate and the rate of inflation

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4
Q

Explain the Phillips Curve at A

A

At A: when unemployment is high, inflationary pressures in an economy tend to be weak; there is lots of spare capacity (negative
output gap) in the economy, so reducing unemployment does not put much upward pressure on wages and prices

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5
Q

Explain the Phillips Curve at B

A

At B: as unemployment falls further, then wage pressures and price
pressures may start to accelerate – the gradient of the curve steepens
If unemployment falls even lower, the risk of a significant increase in
inflation goes up - the output gap is likely to be positive and factor
markets are experiencing shortages

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6
Q

What is stagflation?

A

when both unemployment and inflation are high (a
stagnant economy with inflation)

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7
Q

Explain challenges to the Phillips curve

A

The short run Phillips curve could shift out if expectations of inflation increase, or inwards if expectations of inflation decrease
Some monetarist economists do not believe the inflation-unemployment trade-off exists in the long run (the long-run PC Is vertical), meanwhile Keynes though it was possible to have differing levels of unemployment at the same inflation rate

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