9. The Measurement Of Macroeconomic Performance Flashcards
Policy objective
A target or goal that a government wishes to achieve or ‘hit’
Main policy objectives for a mixed economy (such as the Uk)
. Achieve economic growth and improve living standards and levels of economic welfare
. Create and maintain full employment or low unemployment
. Limit or control inflation, or to achieve some measure of price stability
. Attain a satisfactory balance of payments, usually defined as the avoidance of an external deficit which might create an exchange rate crisis
Short-run economic growth
Growth of real output resulting from using idle resources, including labour, thereby taking up slack in the economy
Long-run economic growth
An increase in the economy’s potential level of real output, and an outward movement of the economy’s production possibility frontier
Gross domestic product (GDP)
The sum of all goods and services, or level of output, produced in the economy over a period of time
Real GDP
A measure of all the goods and services produced in an economy, adjusted for price changes or inflation. The adjustment transforms changes in nominal GDP, which is measured in money terms, into a measure that reflects changes in the total output of the economy.
Nominal GDP
GDP measured at the current market prices, without removing the effects of inflation
Recession
A recession is defined as 6 months or more of negative economic growth or declining real national output
Full employment according to Beveridge’s definition
According to Beveridge’s definition, full employment means 3% or less of the labour force unemployed.
Full employment according to the free-market definition
According to the free-market definition, it is the level of employment occurring at the market-clearing real-wage rate, where the number of workers whom employers wish to hire equals the number of workers wanting to work.
Downsides to the free market definition of full employment
. Assumes that there is absolutely no unemployment, there will always be some unemployment because the economy is constantly changing, with some jobs disappearing while new jobs are created.
Ways of measuring unemployment in the Uk
. The claimant count (recently dropped)
. The labour force survey (LFS)
Economically inactive
Someone who is not working and has not looked for a job for 4 weeks and longer
Unemployed
Not working, available for work and have either looked for work in the past four weeks or are waiting to start a new job they have already obtained
Inflation
A persistent or continuing rise in the average price level- when most prices rise by some degree across the whole economy