Supply-side Policies Flashcards

1
Q

Competition policy

A

Government policy directed at encouraging competition in the private sector: e.g. the investigation of takeovers or restrictive practices, regulation of monopoly power.

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2
Q

Competitive market

A

Where no single firm has a dominant position and where the consumer has plenty of choice when buying goods or services. There are few barriers to the entry of new firms.

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3
Q

Ease of entry

A

The ease with which a business can enter a market in search of a profit. When barriers to entry are low, a market can grow, increasing competition between firms and creating new jobs.

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4
Q

Geographical immobility

A

Barriers to people moving from one area to another to find work.

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5
Q

Immobility of labour

A

Barriers to the movement of people between areas and between jobs.

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6
Q

Incentives

A

Incentives can be used to make goods and services markets, as well as labour markets, work more efficiently and therefore creating greater productive capacity.

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7
Q

Infrastructure

A

The transport links, communications networks, sewage systems, energy plants and other facilities essential for the efficient functioning of a country and its economy.

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8
Q

Occupational immobility

A

Workers having the wrong skills for available job vacancies. This can be overcome by giving labour transferable skills.

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9
Q

Poverty trap

A

The poverty trap affects people on low incomes. It creates a disincentive to look for work or work longer hours because of the effects of the tax and benefits system.

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10
Q

Productive potential

A

Productive capacity of the economy – boosted by high quality capital investment.

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11
Q

Productivity

A

How much output is produced for a given input (such as an hour of work).

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12
Q

Pro-market supply-side policies

A

These policies focus on reducing the size of the state and extending the role of market forces in allocating scarce resources. For example: Cutting government spending (including welfare) and borrowing, lower business taxes to stimulate capital investment spending, reducing income tax rates to improve work incentives.

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13
Q

Relative poverty

A

Relative poverty measures the extent to which a household’s financial resources falls below an average income threshold for the economy.

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14
Q

Spare capacity

A

When a business is not making full use of its available capacity – there are spare factors of production including land, labour and capital. When an economy has plenty of spare capacity, short run aggregate supply is elastic, and the output gap is negative.

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15
Q

State driven supply-side policy

A

When a government believes that active intervention in markets can help achieve increased productive capacity and competitiveness. Examples include: State investment in public services and critical infrastructure, a commitment to a minimum wage and/or living wage to improve work incentives & productivity in the labour market, higher taxes on the wealthy to fund public and merit goods.

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16
Q

Stimulus

A

Monetary policy and/or fiscal policy aimed at encouraging higher growth and/or inflation. This can include interest rate cuts, quantitative easing (QE), direct and indirect tax cuts and government spending increases such as higher infrastructure investment.

17
Q

Sustainable growth

A

Growth that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainable growth can continue without damage to the environment, or the exhaustion of nonrenewable resources.