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Economics_A-level_Edexcel

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  1. 1-1-nature-of-economics
    6 主题
  2. 1-2-how-markets-work
    10 主题
  3. 1-3-market-failure
    4 主题
  4. 1-4-government-intervention
    2 主题
  5. 2-1-measures-of-economic-performance
    4 主题
  6. 2-2-aggregate-demand-ad
    5 主题
  7. 2-3-aggregate-supply-as
    3 主题
  8. 2-4-national-income
    4 主题
  9. 2-5-economic-growth
    4 主题
  10. 2-6-macroeconomic-objectives-policies
    4 主题
  11. 3-1-business-growth
    3 主题
  12. 3-2-business-objectives
    1 主题
  13. 3-3-revenues-costs-and-profits
    4 主题
  14. 3-4-market-structures
    7 主题
  15. 3-5-labour-market
    3 主题
  16. 3-6-government-intervention
    2 主题
  17. 4-1-international-economics
    9 主题
  18. 4-2-poverty-inequality
    2 主题
  19. 4-3-emerging-developing-economies
    3 主题
  20. 4-4-the-financial-sector
    3 主题
  21. 4-5-role-of-the-state-in-the-macroeconomy
    4 主题
  22. 5-1-the-exam-papers
    3 主题
  23. 5-2-economics-a-level-skills
    1 主题
  24. 5-3-structuring-your-responses
    9 主题
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Causes of Economic Growth

  • Economic growth can occur in the short-run or long-run and each is explained differently

Short-run economic growth

  • Changes to any of the components of aggregate demand (AD) will cause short-run economic growth to occur

    • This is illustrated on an AD/AS diagram by a rightward shift in AD

    • It can also be illustrated by using the production possibilities frontier model by moving from a point inside the curve to a point closer to the curve

1. Short-run economic growth on AD/AS diagram

Economic graph showing aggregate demand shifts. LRAS is vertical, SRAS is upward sloping, and AD shifts right, affecting price level and GDP.
A diagram illustrating short-run economic growth through a shift of aggregate demand from AD→AD1

Diagram analysis

  • An increase in consumption, investment, government spending or net exports has caused a shift in AD from AD→AD1

  • The current real output has increased from Y1→Y2, which represents an increase in real GDP

    • An increase in real GDP = economic growth

  • This short-run growth has led to an increase in average prices from AP1→AP2

2. Short-run economic growth on Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)

Graph depicting an AD curve and two LRAS lines, with price levels AP1 and AP2, showing shifts in long-run aggregate supply and rise in GDP.
A diagram illustrating long-run economic growth through an increase in the long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) of the economy 

Diagram analysis

  • An increase in production has caused a shift in production combinations from X→Y

  • The current real output has increased, moving closer to the maximum possible output of the economy

    •  This represents an increase in real GDP

    • An increase in real GDP = economic growth

Long-run or potential economic growth

  • Long-run economic growth is caused by any improvements to the quality or quantity of the factors of production

    • These factors include all of the determinants of long-run aggregate supply

2-5-1---long-run-economic-growth
A diagram illustrating long-run economic growth through an increase in the long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) of the economy 

Diagram analysis

  • A change to the quantity/quality of the factors of production has increased potential output of the economy from YFE→YFE1

    • E.g. More rigorous competition policy creates a higher number of firms in each industry, leading to greater aggregate supply in the economy

      • This shifts the long-run aggregate supply curve to the right LRAS1→LRAS2, resulting in economic growth

  • The final impact on price levels depends on the shape of the long-run aggregate supply curve (Keynesian or Classical)

Actual & Potential Growth

  • Actual economic growth occurs when there is an increase in the real value of goods and services produced in an economy over a given period of time

    • This is measured by the percentage change in real GDP, which accounts for inflation and reflects changes in both the quantity and value of output

  • Potential growth is the increase in the productive potential of an economy as demonstrated by a shift outward of the production possibilities frontier (PPF) or the long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) curve

  • At any given point in time, the actual economic growth may be less than the potential growth available to the economy

International Trade & Export-led Economic Growth

  • International trade is an important source of income for many countries

  • Export-led economic growth refers to growth that occurs as a result of an increase in the sale of goods/services to foreign countries

    • Net exports (X-M) is a component of aggregate demand (AD)

    • For many developing countries, the exports represent a high percentage of the annual AD and gross domestic product (GDP)

      • When the value of the exports rise, the real GDP rises significantly – and vice versa

  • E.g. China experienced significant export-led economic growth from 1988 to the global financial crisis of 2008

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