Lec 3 - Economic Growth Flashcards

1
Q

Economic growth definition

A

A sustained expansion of production possibilities measured as the increase in real GDP over a given period; an outward movement of the production possibility frontier.

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2
Q

Real wage rate definition

A

The quantity of goods and services that an hour of labour earns.

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3
Q

GDP purpose

A

GDP measures the value of production, which also equals total expenditure on final goods and total income.
The equality of income and output shows the direct link between productivity and living standards.

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4
Q

Consumption expenditure definition

A

The total payment for consumer goods and services, by households.

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5
Q

Government expenditure definition

A

The expenditure of a government on goods and services from firms.

Governments finance their expenditure with taxes and pay financial transfers to households, such as unemployment benefits, and pay subsidies to firms.
These financial transfers are not part of the circular flow of expenditure and income.

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6
Q

Investment definition

A

The purchase of new plant, equipment and buildings and the additions to inventories.

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7
Q

Net exports definition

A

The value of exports minus the value of imports.

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8
Q

Positive net exports definition

A

The net flow of goods and services is from UK firms to the rest of the world.

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9
Q

Negative net exports definition

A

The net flow of goods and services is from the rest of the world to UK firms.

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10
Q

Circular flow purpose

What does circular flow demonstrate?

A

The circular flow demonstrates how GDP can be measured in two ways:
• Aggregate expenditure: total expenditure on final goods and services, equals the value of output of final goods and services, which is GDP.
GDP = C + I + G + (X – M)
• Aggregate income: the total amount paid for the use of factors of production (wages, interest, rent and profit); firms pay out all their receipts from the sale of final goods, so income equals expenditure.

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11
Q

Calculating growth rates

A

The economic growth rate is the annual percentage change of real GDP per capita, this provides information on standards of living.
The economic growth rate tells us how rapidly the total economy is expanding.
Real GDP per capita grows only if real GDP grows faster than the population grows.

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12
Q

Reasons for real GDP growth

A
  • The return of the economy to full employment in an expansion phase of the business cycle - not economic growth
  • Increase in potential GDP: economic growth occurs when real GDP increases; a one-shot increase in real GDP or a recovery from recession is not economic growth; economic growth is the sustained, year-on-year increase in potential GDP.
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13
Q

Output gap definition

A

Real GDP minus potential GDP.

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14
Q

Output gap and unemployment

A

When the output gap is negative, the unemployment rate exceeds the natural unemployment rate.

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15
Q

Potential GDP growth rate

What does it measure?

A

The growth rate of potential GDP measures the pace of expansion of production possibilities.
It is smoother than the business cycle fluctuations in the growth rate of real GDP.

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16
Q

Rule of 70 definition

A

The calculation for the number of years it takes for the level of a variable to double; approximately 70 divided by the annual percentage growth rate of the variable.

17
Q

Determining potential GDP

What are the two components of the model?

A

To determine potential GDP, a model with two components is used:
• Aggregate production function
• Aggregate labour market

18
Q

Aggregate production function

A

Tells us how real GDP changes as the quantity of labour changes when all other influences on production remain the same.
An increase in labour increases real GDP.
There is a production possibility frontier between the quantity of leisure time and the quantity of labour time. For each additional hour of leisure forgone, real GDP increases by successively smaller amounts.

19
Q

Aggregate labour market

A

The real wage rate influences the quantity of labour demanded; firms care about how much output must be sold to earn the pounds they pay.
At a real wage rate above £24 an hour, there is a surplus of labour and the real wage rate falls.
Demand for labour shows quantity of labour demanded and real wage rate; supply of labour shows quantity of labour supplied and real wage rate.
The labour market is in equilibrium at real wage rate – quantity of labour demanded equals quantity of labour supplied: real wage rate of £24/hour and 50 billion hours employed.
At equilibrium, economy is at full employment (despite structural and/or frictional unemployment).

20
Q

Forces that increase real GDP

What are the four main ones?

A
  • Growth in labour productivity
  • Average hours per worker
  • The employment rate
  • The working-age population
21
Q

Growth in labour productivity

What are the two main preconditions for labour productivity growth?

A
  • Incentive system created by firms, markets, property rights and money (monetary exchange)
  • Capability growth: physical capital growth; human capital growth; technological growth.
22
Q

Influences on economic growth

What are the six main influences?

A
  • Region: far from equator
  • Politics: rule of law; civil liberties
  • Economic system: capitalist
  • Market distortions: none
  • Investment: human capital; physical capital
  • International trade: open to trade
23
Q

Theories of economic growth

What are the three main theories?

A
  • Classical growth theory
  • Neoclassical growth theory
  • New growth theory
24
Q

Classical growth theory

A

The view that the growth of real GDP per person is temporary and that when it rises above the subsistence level a population explosion eventually brings it back to the substinence level.

25
Q

Neoclassical growth theory

A

The view that real GDP per person grows because technological change induces saving and investment that make physical capital grow.
Diminshing returns end growth if technological change stops.

26
Q

New growth theory

A

The view that real GDP per person grows because of the choice people make in the pursuit of profit and that growth will persist indefinitely.
The pace at which new discoveries are made and technology advances depends on how many people are looking for a new technology and how intensively they are looking.
Discoveries are a public capital good; knowledge is capital that is not subject to diminishing returns.
Labour productivity grows indefinitely as people discover new technologies that yield a higher real interest rate. The growth rate depends only on people’s incentives and ability to innovate.