Consumption Flashcards

1
Q

Consumer confidence

A

Expectations about the future including interest rates, incomes and jobs.

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2
Q

Consumer durables

A

Products such as washing machines or computer screens that are not used up immediately when consumed and which provide a flow of services over time.

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3
Q

Consumer spending

A

Household spending on goods and services. In the UK, household consumption is the largest element of aggregate demand (GDP), accounting for 67% of the total in 2019.

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4
Q

Disposable income

A

Gross income less income tax and national insurance contributions plus welfare benefits.

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5
Q

Household income

A

The financial resources available to households to spend or save.

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6
Q

Household income, Original income

A

Income from jobs, private pensions, interest from savings

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7
Q

Household income, Gross income

A

original income + cash benefits

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8
Q

Household income, Disposable income

A

gross income minus direct taxes

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9
Q

Household income, Post-tax income

A

disposable income minus indirect taxes

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10
Q

Household wealth

A

The monetary value of assets – including property, shares, savings, pension fund assets.

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11
Q

Income

A

Income is a flow of money to factors of production such as wages and salaries paid to people in work, interest from savings and rental income from owning land/assets.

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12
Q

Interest rate

A

An interest rate is the cost or price of borrowing, or the gain from lending, normally expressed as an annual percentage amount.

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13
Q

Negative equity

A

When the value of an asset falls below the debt left to pay on that asset. Term is most commonly used in connection with property prices after a slump in house prices.

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14
Q

Pension fund

A

Fund that pools employees’ pension benefits and holds them so that they can be paid at retirement. The money is invested in stocks, bonds and other assets to boost returns and ensure that there are sufficient funds to be paid out.

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15
Q

Personal allowance

A

The amount of income you can earn before you start paying income tax. It is £12,500 in 2019.

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16
Q

Precautionary saving

A

Saving because of fears of a loss of real income or rising unemployment.

17
Q

Savings ratio

A

The percentage of household disposable income that is saved rather than spent.

18
Q

Unsecured credit

A

Credit not secured by another asset – i.e. money borrowed on credit cards.

19
Q

Wealth

A

Wealth is a stock concept. Wealth can be held in different ways including savings held in commercial bank deposits, ownership of shares issued by stock-market listed companies and equity stakes in private businesses and ownership of property / real estate.

20
Q

Wealth effect

A

The supposed link between changes in wealth and household spending.