Economic performance Flashcards
(107 cards)
5 indicators of Macroeconomic performance
- Growth
- Inflation
- Unemployment
- BOP
- Productivity
What is doughnut economics?
- The idea that constant growth of economies is not ideal for humanity, leaving shortfalls and overshoots as a result
Examples of ‘Shortfalls’ in UK economy
- 8 Million homes said to be energy inefficient
- Many long term sick, disabled etc- effects income and work, costs huge amounts in UC
- 12% don’t get full secondary education
Examples of ‘overshoots’ in UK economy
- Pollution- 427 Megatons of CO2e produced in 2021
- UK contributes roughly 1% of global emissions
What causes Short run growth
- Increase in AD
- Increase in SRAS
What causes Long run growth
- Increase in productive capacity- increase in LRAS, leading to potential growth
- Change in quantity/quality of FOP
Specific determinants of Long run growth
- Investment in Capital
- Innovation- products and processes
- Migration
- Birth rate changes
- Productivity changes
- Export-led growth
Evaluation of growth
- Balance of short run and long run policies needed, as both demand side and supply side are important- increasing only demand side leads to inflation, and increasing only supply side leads to spare capacity
- Enhancement of supply side of economy has significant time lags
What is potential (trend) output
- Economy working at full capacity over the long term- all FOP working efficiently
- Pressure of FOP makes this unsustainable in long run
What is an output gap
- Difference between the trend rate and actual rate of economic growth
How can output gaps be shown
- LRAS curves
- Economic cycle diagram
When do positive output gaps occur
- During periods of high growth- associated with inflationary pressure and low unemployment
- current account deficit worsens as demand for imports increases
When do negative output gaps occur
- During periods of low or negative growth- associated with deflationary pressure and high unemployment
- Current account deficit improves as there is less demand for imports
What does a BOOM look like?
- High rate of growth
- High demand
- Low unemployment
- Inflationary pressure
- Skills shortages
- High confidence- investment
- High capital investment
What is a recession
- When real GDP falls for 2 quarters (6mo) consecutively
What does a recession look like
- Demand falling
- Inflation falling (usually demand pull)
- Unemployment rising
- Firms going bust
- Low confidence
- Less investment by firms
What is a slump
- Sustained low or negative growth
- Low demand and inflation
- High unemployment
- Low confidence
- High business failure
What is a recovery
- Growth beginning to rise- looks similar to a boom, just in earlier stages
what caused the financial crisis in 2007/08
- US banks made big increase in sub-prime mortgage loans in years leading up to it, which were very risk but there was lots of ‘irrational exuberance’ that house prices would continue to rise
- US mortgage companies sold these ‘risky mortgage bundles’ to banks around the world
- As US interest rates rose, homeowners in US began to default their risky mortgages
- US banks lost money, and banks around the world saw a big fall in liquidity and value of their assets
What are asset price bubbles
- Price of an asset is predicted to rise, so it is traded more
- D>S, so prices rise beyond intrinsic value
What usually happens to Asset price bubbles
- Bubble ‘bursts’ when price steeply and suddenly falls to original level, causing panic selling
- This results in loss in confidence, and potentially economic decline
What does Keynes mean by ‘animal spirits’
- Instincts and emotions of human behaviour drive confidence in an economy
- If firms expect a high rate of return, they will invest more
What is herding
- Reacting to behaviour of other economic agents, rather than the market
- ‘If everyone else is doing it, so should I’
- Causes instability in the market
What is the inventory cycle
- How changes in inventory levels held by businesses may leads to exaggerated increases or decreases in output