4.2.2 Flashcards

1
Q

National income

A

The income of an economy earned by all workers and businesses over a period of time

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2
Q

How is national income measured

A

GNI, GDP

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3
Q

Uses of national income

A
  • measures how successful the economy is
  • shows how well off population is
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4
Q

Difference between nominal and real GDP

A
  • Nominal GDP is the actual value of all goods and services produced in an economy in a year (not adjustment to inflation)
  • Real GDP is the value of all goods and services produces in an economy in a year (adjusted for inflation)
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5
Q

RNI as an indicator of economic performance

A
  • If RNI is rising, then economic performance of country is improving.
  • likely that the standard of living is also improving
  • Whereas if RNI falls during recession, standard of living will fall
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6
Q

Circular flow of income

A

Shows national income and flow of money, resources and goods in an economy

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7
Q

Simple model of the circular flow of income

A

Shows money flows in a ‘closed economy’, between households and firms

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8
Q

Explain the simple circular flow of income

A

-Households sell their factors of production to firms and in return they get paid facto incomes ( firms hiring workers for labour and them getting wages in return which is a factor income)
- Households then spends their income on firms and gets goods and services in return

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9
Q

What is deduced from the circular flow of income

A

income = expenditure = output
- this is because the income received goes towards expenditure (spending) on the output (goods & services) produced by firms

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10
Q

Leakages/ Withdrawals

A
  • Savings: money isn’t spent on economy
  • Imports : money spent on other economy
  • Taxes: money isn’t spent on firms
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11
Q

Injections

A
  • Govt spending
  • Exports : money coming in from foreign consumers
  • Investment: banks lending to firms to invest in economy
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12
Q

Equilibrium in the circular flow of income

A

When there is no pressure on national income to rise or fall.
When injections = withdrawals, so national income is constant

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13
Q

Aggregate demand

A

total planned spending in economy over a period of time

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14
Q

Consumption

A

almost 70% of overall AD

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15
Q

Factors that affect consumption

A
  • interest rates
  • consumer confidence
  • taxation
  • wealth
  • unemployment
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16
Q

Investment

A

addition to the capital stock in an economy

17
Q

Main determinants of investment

A
  • interest rates
  • business confidence
  • tax
  • technology
  • accelerator theory
18
Q

The Accelerator theory

A

Increases in income will lead t and even larger increase in the level of investment

19
Q

Factors affecting exports and imports

A
  • exchange rate
  • Uk growth
  • inflation
20
Q

The multiplier

A

How a change in AD leads to a proportionately larger change in overall national income.
Extra spending created income for other ppl and so on, however it decreases at some point bcuz less is ‘passed on’ as extra income is taxed, saved or spent on imports

21
Q

Negative multiplier

A

A fall in AD leading to a proportionately larger fall in overall a national income. Sometimes referred to as ‘reverse’ multiplier

22
Q

Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)

A

The proportion of additional income that is spent and passed on around the circular flow of income.
The size of the MPC determines the size of the multiplier.

23
Q

What does a high or low MPC mean

A

A higher MPC means more of any additional income received is ‘passed on’ around the economy. A higher MPC means a larger multiplier.

24
Q

Why does the SRAS slope upwards

A

increasing output in the short run would make costs increase so therefore price level would go up

25
In SRAS, what happens when price level goes up
there will be an extension in supply, real GDP will increase
26
In SRAS, what happens when price level goes down
there will be a contraction in supply, real GDP will decrease
27
what are the two types of LRAS curves
- Keynesian LRAS - Neoclassical LRAS
28
Explain the Keynesian
- output is slowly increasing but reaches a long run limit - At the start there is SPARE CAPACITY, so there are loads of resources available and it’s super easy to increase output - As we start using more output, we run out of resources and workers are alr in jobs - When we get to the straight line, the economy is at FULL EMPLOYMENT, and has no resources left and cannot increase output
29
What is spare capacity
When the economy is producing below it’s productive potential
30
What is fulll employment
When economy is producing at its maximum potential
31
What do neo-classical economist believe about employment
That in the long run, WE ARE ALWAYS AT FULL EMPLOYMENT as in the long run they have enough time to use their resources
32
What changes to shift SRAS and LRAS
- Cost changes : shifts SRAS - Quantity/productivity changes : shifts LRAS
33
What causes shifts in SRAS
- Commodity prices (oil,gas,coal,steel,wheat) -
34
When theres a decrease in supply, where does it shift
SRAS shifts to the left, which clues and increase in price
35
Determinants of LRAS
- productivity - factor mobility - technology -economic incentives and attitudes (taxes&benefits)
36
Wealth effect
As price level increases, the purchasing power of individual incomes increase reducing the marginal propensity to consume and thus reducing consumption
37
Economic shocks
Sudden, unexpected events that affect the macroeconomy, especially the growth rate
38
Demand side shocks
unexpected changes in level of AD. Affects national income, U/P, inflation.
39