Yr 12 Feb To April ish Flashcards
What is aggregate demand (AD)?
The total demand & expenditure on all goods and services in an economy at any given price level or given period in time.
What can AD be used to measure?
GDP
What are the components of AD? + the equation
- Consumption: The action of using up a resource
- Investment: The action or process of investing money for profit, usually on capital goods
- Govt Spending: The spending by the public sector on goods and services, like education, defence etc.
- Net trade: Total exports minus total imports
AD = C + I + G + (X-M)
How do the following effect govt spending;
1) Approach of general election
2) A fall in tax revenue
3) A rise in crime levels
4) A fall in population
5) An increase in air pollution
1) Govt will spend more - govt failure
2) At first it will decrease then increase as benefit
3) It will increase - currently the govt has pledged an extra £100m
4) Spend more as less tax is coming or decrease as less is going out
5) Increase as more people getting sick & govt is investing in renewable energy. Decrease due to tariffs on fuel
How does price affect the AD curve?
A change in the average price level causes a movement along the demand curve. Wine usually costs £10 so Mr Sodhi buys 1 bottle, but today it costs £9 so Mr Sodhi can by 2 bottles.
How does a non-price thing affect the AD curve?
A non-price change in any of the components will cause a shift. Wine usually costs £10 so Mr Sodhi buys 1 bottle, but today Mr Sodhi’s income has increased so he can now buy more wine - 2 bottles.
What is investment?
Investment is spending money on capital goods such as as new factories & other buildings, machinery, vehicles.
What is net investment?
Spending by businesses on additions to capital stock, which expands the economy’s productive capacity. At NEEs - E.g. Purchase additional machinery
What is replacement investment?
It does not add to capital stock but replaces parts of the capital stock that have worn out + need renewing.
What is gross investment?
Total spending by businesses on investment goods, includes both net and replacement.
How does the rate of economic growth affect investment?
- It should lead to more investment as businesses expand productive capacity.
- This allows businesses to produce more output to profit from higher growth
How does business expectations & confidence affect investment?
- Business confidence improves if business feel more optimistic about future sales + profits. Can be influenced by the rate of growth
- If confidence rises, businesses will invest more, as they are anticipating higher sales + profits.
How does Keynes and ‘animal spirits’ affect investment?
- Keynes believed investment was determined partly by ‘animal spirits’
- This is a reference to the fact that animal spirits often move collectively. For example, one manager will make a decision as to whether to spend money on investments, and a herd instinct will emerge as other managers follow this decisions.
- It will rise or fall depending on these collective spirits
How does demand for exports affect investment?
- If businesses can export more, they may need to expand their productive capacity
- A rise in the demand for exports may increase the amount of investment spending
How does interest rates affect investment?
- Higher interest rates mean a higher cost of borrowing (so they will have to pay back more)
- This reduces the profitability of investment, leading to a decrease in investment spending + vice versa
- Though if interest rates rise, investments in backs increase, as people are saving more than spending.