MACRO-including the government and international trade Flashcards
What is the impact of taxes on MPC
they lower the marginal propensity to consume
out of national income. Households get only part of each extra pound of national
income to use as disposable income
Does A higher tax rate always reduce aggregate demand and equilibrium output?
Not always, not if they spend a large amount of the tax revenue, as government spending on goods and services raises aggregate demand
and equilibrium output.
An equal initial increase in government spending and taxes raises aggregate
demand and output
balanced budget multiplier
An equal initial increase in government spending and taxes raises aggregate
demand and output
Especially so, if taxes lower the marginal propensity to save, if consumers were going to save some of the money that was taxed away, the government spending this tax revenue is a boost to AD that wouldn’t of happened otherwise
What happens to the following in equilibrium (in a closedd economy) desired saving ,taxes ,
investment government spending
desired saving= planned investment
taxes = gov spending (balanced budget)
What is fiscal stance?
The impact that government spending and tax has on aggregate demand
Automatic stabilizers
A process by which gov expenditure and revenue varies with the economic cycle , helping stabilise the economy without any active intervention from the gov
e.g. in a recession, gov expenditure rises as they’re paying more unemployment benefits, income tax revenues fall as less people are in work, this helps reduce the fall in aggregate demand.
Discretionary (Active) fiscal policy
Discretionary fiscal policy means the government make changes to tax rates and or levels of government spending.
expansionary fiscal policy
This involves the government seeking to increase aggregate demand – through higher government spending and/or lower tax.
Deflationary fiscal policy
This involves the government seeking to lower aggregate demand – through lower government spending and/or higher tax.
Are budget deficits always bad?
No, Deficits are not necessarily bad. Particularly in a recession, a move to cut the
deficit may lead output falling further away from potential output. However, huge deficits can
create a vicious cycle of extra borrowing, extra interest payments and yet more
borrowing
MPZ
marginal propensity to import
The proportion of an additional pound of disposable income that consumers wish to spend on imports (leakage from the economy)
trade surplus,
exports- imports is positive
What is the equilibrium equation for leakages equaling injections?
S+ NetT+Z=I+G+X
What is an exchange rate, the pound/ US dollar exchange rate
Is the price of the currency in terms of another, in this case, how many dollars one pound will buy you
Why can a relative fall in domestic interest rates compared to abroad decrease the exchange rate for this country eg a fall in exchange rate of pound / US dollar
Low interest rates here compared to abroad encourages foreign investors to leave the UK and seek out a higher interest rate abroad.
Causing a fall in demand for the pound making the pound “weaker” (lowering the interest rate)