Chapter 2 Flashcards

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1
Q

Two types of factors affecting economic growth

A

Demand side and supply side factors

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2
Q

What are economic systems

A

The means by which countries determine how they will use resources

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3
Q

Types of economic systems

A

State controlled, market, mixed economy

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4
Q

What are state economies also called and pros/cons

A

Planned economies as resource use planned in advance instead of responding to market forces. Perceived advantage of low inequality and unemployment but often leads to lack of individual choice

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5
Q

What are market economies and how do they work

A

Forces of supply and demand determine how resources are allocated. Supply demand determine prices and attract/repel producers from market

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6
Q

What are mixed economies and how do they work

A

Combines a market economy with some element of state control. Government provides welfare and key areas such as education to cushion vulnerable from market failiures

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7
Q

What is meant by an open economy

A

Relates to a countries economic relationship with outside countries. Open economies have few barriers to trade and fx

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8
Q

What is protectionism and who promotes free trade

A

Protectionism is when a country prevents others from trading freely to protect its domestic market. The WTO (world trade organisation) oversees this

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9
Q

What is fiscal policy

A

Involves making adjustments using government spending and taxation

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10
Q

What is monetary policy

A

Adjustments to interest rate or money supply

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11
Q

What is macroeconomic policy

A

Policy by government to influence performance or behaviour of the economy

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12
Q

Four stages of economic cycle

A

Peak (max gdp), contraction (declining gdp), trough (min gdp) and expansion (growing gdp)

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13
Q

What are 3 types of government budget

A

Balanced (income=expenses), deficit (expenses exceed income) and surplus

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14
Q

What is PSBR

A

Public sector borrowing requirement for when government has budget deficit

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15
Q

How does fiscal policy effect business

A

Affects demand so need to take this into consideration when planning future outputs. Increased taxation may increase costs

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16
Q

Impacts of high interest rates

A

Saving encouraged, less disposable income, deter borrowing, lose confidence in economy, demands for higher wages, imports cheaper, lower demand

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17
Q

What is role of central banks

A

Control level of economic activity through monetary and fiscal policy

18
Q

What are responsibilities of central banks

A

Banker to government, manage national debt, regulation, lender in last resort, set interest rate, control money supply, hold reserves, depositors protection scheme

19
Q

Role of Bank of England

A

Monetary and financial stability

20
Q

What does monetary policy committee do?

A

Makes interest rate decisions and ensure inflation is kept within government limits by setting the base rate

21
Q

What is quantitive easing?

A

When very low interest banks base rate to reduce cost of borrowing and inject cash into economy to stimulate demand

22
Q

What is the FPC and what do they do?

A

Financial policy committee who monitor stability/resilience of UK economy and tackles these risks. Guides PRA

23
Q

What is the PRA

A

Prudential Regulation Authority is responsible for supervision of banks and key firms

24
Q

What is the DMO

A

Debt management office oversees national debt

25
Q

What is FSCS

A

Financial services compensation scheme provides depositors protection

26
Q

Negative impacts of high inflation

A

Real value of salaries eroded, increased prices, fixed income suffers (pensioners), exports less competitive, real value of future investments hard to asses

27
Q

Positive impacts of high inflation

A

Real value of debt falls (national debt and borrowers) rising house prices cause feel good factor increasing spending

28
Q

What is the CPI, CPIH and RPI

A

Consumer price index, CPI including housing costs, retail price index

29
Q

What is GDP and what is it measuring

A

Measures countries output and economic activity on an expenditure basis

30
Q

What is balance of payments

A

Summary of all transactions between UK and rest of world. Imports greater than exports is deficit. Exports over imports is surplus.

31
Q

What is public sector net debt

A

Government debt

32
Q

What is PSNCR

A

Public sector net cash requirement is the budget deficit

33
Q

What is impact of increasing PSNCR

A

Excessive government spending have potential to increase rate of inflation

34
Q

What is the impact of high unemployment

A

Caused by low demand and negatively impacts government finances. Increased social security payments and less tax income

35
Q

What are the two FX rate systems

A

Fixed rate means exchange rate is pegged to a particular currency. Floating rate means exchange rate is determined by supply and demand

36
Q

What are the 3 exchange rate regimes

A

Target zone (rate managed within a band), Crawling peg (upper and lower bands gradually widening), Managed Float (floating rate with occasional intervention)

37
Q

What is Capital account

A

Calculation of total value of goods in and out of country. Trade balance of visible and invisible balances

38
Q

What is the capital account

A

Records international capital transactions related to investment in business and stocks

39
Q

What is trade balance

A

Visible balance is balance between imports and exports on goods. Invisible is balance between imported and exported services. Can be in surplus or deficit

40
Q

When are balance of payments balanced?

A

Current account = capital account +/- balancing item +/- change in central bank fx reserves.

41
Q

Impact of exchange rate on exports

A

Value of currency rising causes exports to be less competitive. Value falling makes exports more competitive as exports are cheaper in foreign markets