Macro 10 - Macroeconomic Objectives Flashcards
List the conflicting macroeconomic objectives
- Economic growth and redistribution
- Economic growth and inflation
- Low unemployment and low inflation
- Strong growth and a balanced budget
- Strong growth and sustainable growth
- Low unemployment and high productivity
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - economic growth and redistribution
>As an economy grows, high-skilled workers become more in demand, while demand for low-skilled workers (especially those who can be replaced by machinery falls).
>This means that inequality may increase as the redistribution of economic growth may benefit high-skilled workers more.
>Solutions:
-increase welfare payments
-use progressive taxes
-increase minimum wage in line with the increase in average wage.
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - economic growth and inflation
>A growing economy can cause large increases in demand resulting in a higher tan desirable level of inflation.
>Trying to keep inflation low through higher interest rates may discourage spending, harming economic growth.
>Solution:
-increase economy’s capacity to decrease the effects of inflation.
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - low unemployment and low inflation
>Low unemployment means the economy is operating near its capacity so a rise in AD (which would increase with low unemployment as consumption will rise as people earn more) will cause an increase in inflation.
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - strong growth and a balanced budget
>Increase in AD as business confidence increase investment and households are better off so they can consume more.
>Inflation increases meaning less competitive and so reduce exports worsening a budget deficit.
>Solution:
-increase interest rates.
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - strong growth and sustainable growth
>As an economy grows it may deplete natural resources at a faster rate so future growth will be affected.
>Increased pollution.
Conflicting macroeconomic objectives - low unemployment and high productivity
>Law of diminishing returns in short-run.
>As more workers are employed after the point of diminishing returns, productivity falls.
>Increased rate of absenteeism.
>Increased AD = increased inflation = decreased real wages = increased OC.
The Phillips Curve
>The Phillips Curve shows the conflict between low unemployment and low inflation.
>As unemployment falls, the economy nears capacity: –so labour becomes more scarce and wages rise, extra cost may be passed onto consumers in the form of higher prices = cost-push inflation.
-decrease in unemployment may also cause households to increase consumption as they feel more confident in long term prospects = demand-pull inflation.
>This inflation could cause further inflation due to the idea of ‘adaptive expectations’.
>However, gov spending decreases as less claim JSA = decrease in AD.
>Monetarists argue that there isn’t a trade-off.
Adaptive Expectations
>i.e. people use the past to predict the future.
>The idea means high inflation can become embedded in an economy, even if the government is trying to reduce it as once inflation rises, people expect it to remain high.