4.13.2 - Supply-side Policies Flashcards

1
Q

What are supply-side policies? (SSPs)

A

Government economic policies which aim to make markets more competitive and efficient, and shift the LRAS curve to the right.

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2
Q

What is supply-side economics?

A

A branch of free-market economics arguing that government policy should be used to improve the competitiveness and efficiency of markets.

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3
Q

Why did supply-side economics evolve?

A

There was a concern during the Keynesian era about the microeconomic effects of demand-side Keynesian fiscal policy.

The central idea of supply-side economics is that a tax cut should be used to create incentives, by altering relative prices of leisure and labour, saving and investment etc. and not to stimulate AD in a Keynesian manner.

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4
Q

What are supply-side improvements?

A

Reforms undertaken by the private sector to increase productivity so as to reduce costs and to become more efficient and competitive.

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5
Q

Where do supply-side improvements tend to come from?

A
  • Investment
  • Innovation

Often without prompting from the government.

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6
Q

What are interventionist supply-side policies?

A

The government intervening in a market to distort it.

Tends to include government funding of R&D.

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7
Q

What are the main interventionist supply-side policies supported by free-market economists?

A

Government provision of external economies that benefit private-sector firms.

i.e. gov. provision of education, training or investment in infrastructure projects.

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8
Q

What are market based SSPs?

A

The policies that free up markets, promote competition and greater efficiency, and reduce the economic role of the state.

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9
Q

What is privatisation?

A

The shifting ownership of state-owned assets to the private sector.

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10
Q

What is marketisation?

A

Shifting the provision of goods or services from the non-market sector to the market sector.

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11
Q

What is deregulation?

A

Removing previously imposed regulations.

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12
Q

What are the main market-based SSPs?

A
  • Tax cuts to provide incentives to work, save and invest
  • Cuts in welfare benefits
  • Privatisation
  • Deregulation
  • Marketisation
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13
Q

Why do supply-side economists think their method will improve the UK?

A
  • Better incentives for businesses and workers. (tax cuts, welfare cuts)
  • Reductions in unemployment and inflation in long-term (due to the underlying rate of growth improving)
  • More price competitive goods
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14
Q

What prerequisites do supply-side economists need to ensure their methods will work?

A

Substantial and sustainable increases in labour productivity.

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15
Q

What do supply-side economists think about the Laffer Curve?

A

Agree.

The increase in the tax burden in the Keynesian era raised the avg. tax rate above or beyond the maximum tax revenue, which actually reduced the government’s total tax revenue.

Depending on where the total tax maximising rate of tax is, supply-side economists argue we should reduce taxes to increase total tax revenues.

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16
Q

Why do some supply-side economists argue for reduced tax rates according to the Laffer curve?

A
  • Increases total tax revenues (hmm..)
  • Improved economic incentives to produce
  • A decline in tax avoidance and evasion as there is less incentive to engage in such acts
17
Q

How do supply-side economists believe that economic policy objectives can be met?

A

By ensuring the aim of all policy sets markets free and promotes entrepreneurship should create the conditions in which other objectives naturally result.

18
Q

How can supply-side policies reduce the natural rate of unemployment?

A

By improving the supply-side of the economy, it becomes more attractive for firms to employ more labour so AD increases. If income taxes are cut, it becomes more attractive for individuals to supply more labour so AS increases. Both of these:
* Increase the economy’s natural level of employment
* Reduce the long-run Phillips curve so natural levels of unemployment fall
* Increases the LRAS so increases the economy’s output

19
Q

What do most free-market economists think about managing AD?

A

Monetary policy should be used to manage AD, but only to support supply-side reforms.

The essentials of AD are to make sure there is just enough demand to absorb the extra output produced by the supply-side and maintain public confidence.

20
Q

Why do UK governments now tend to make fiscal policy consistent with, or subordinate to, the needs of monetary policy?

A

Budget deficits and governmental borrowing have negative implications.

In the short-run, the gov. can sell treasury bills which expand the money supply and may be inflationary.
In the long-run, the gov. needs to increase interest rates to convince institutions to finance a growing budget deficit which discourages investment in capital goods by private-sector firms. (Financial crowding-out)

21
Q

How do supply-side economists think supply-side policies will alleviate inflationary pressures?

A

Cost-push inflation
* Reduction in business CoP
* Reduction in monopoly profits through increased price competitiveness

Demand-pull inflation
* Productive capacity grows in line with AD

22
Q

How do supply-side economists think supply-side policies will increase global competitiveness?

A
  • There will be increased competitiveness in markets, so firms will remove all x-inefficiency reducing costs.
  • Increased competition will cause firms to re-invest profits to produce high-quality goods.

Reductions in price alongside increasing quality of the goods will cause the country to demand more of their own goods, and cause overseas to demand more of the goods from the UK. Improves the BoP.

23
Q

What is expansionary fiscal contractionism?

aka expansionary austerity

A

The view that cutting public sector spending will free resources for the private sector to use.

A major reduction in governmental spending can expand private-sector spending, resulting in overall economic expansion.

24
Q

What do supply-side economists believe about the ‘trickle-down effect’?

A

Some believe that the rich will respond to tax cuts by spending more which will trickle down to the poor.

However,
the rich have a lower propensity to consume and spend, so the effects may not be as intended.

25
Q

What do supply-side economists tend to assume about the supply curve of labour?

A

As wages increase, people supply more labour.

26
Q

How do supply-side economists behave due to the supply curve of labour being upward sloping?

A

Reduce income tax, as that essentially acts as an increase in wage rates as incentives improve for people to work.

27
Q

What happens if the supply curve of labour isn’t upward sloping?

A

As you continue to cut income taxes, people will eventually supply less labour as labour is a inferior good and leisure time is a normal good (for most people).

In this way, income tax reductions have the opposite effect.

28
Q

Examples of industrial microeconomic supply-side policies?

A
  • Privatisation
  • Marketisation
  • Deregulation
  • Subsidisation of R&D spending
  • Internal markets (in areas where the state is a major producer of a service, the services will have to ‘earn’ their money according to how many people they attract)
29
Q

Examples of labour market microeconomic supply-side policies?

A
  • Lower rates of income tax
  • Reducing state welfare benefits relative to average earnings
  • Changing unemployment law to reduce the power of TU
  • Repealing legislation which limits employers’ freedom to employ
  • More flexible pension arrangements
  • Improving the training of labour
30
Q

Examples of financial and capital market microeconomic supply-side policies?

A
  • Deregulating financial markets (within reason)
  • Encouraging saving
  • Promoting entrepreneurship
  • Reducing public spending and public-sector borrowing
31
Q

What are the main ways that free-market economists look to promote market conditions through supply-side policies?

A

Tax Reform
Reduce income tax
Reduce corporation tax

Competition Policy
Increase privatisation
Reduce regulation
Reduce import quotas / tariffs

Labour Market Reform
Reduce the NMW
Reduce Trade Union power
Reduce benefits / welfare

32
Q

What are the main way that interventionist economists look to promote market conditions through supply-side policies?

A
  • Gov. spending on education and training
  • Industrial and regional policy
  • Spending on infrastructure
  • Subsidising spending on R&D