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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
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  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
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  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
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  19. 4-3-emerging-developing-economies
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  20. 4-4-the-financial-sector
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  21. 4-5-role-of-the-state-in-the-macroeconomy
    4 主题
  22. 5-1-the-exam-papers
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  23. 5-2-economics-a-level-skills
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  24. 5-3-structuring-your-responses
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Demand-side Policies

  • Demand-side policies aim to shift aggregate demand (AD) in an economy

  • There are two categories of demand-side policies

    • Fiscal policy and monetary policy

  • Fiscal policy involves the use of government spending and taxation to influence AD

    • The government is responsible for setting fiscal policy

    • The UK Government presents their fiscal policies to the country each year when it delivers the Government budget

  • Monetary policy involves adjusting interest rates and the money supply so as to influence AD

    • The Bank of England (UK central bank) is responsible for setting monetary policy independent of government

    • The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee meets 8 times a year to set policy

Monetary Policy Instruments

  • The two main instruments of monetary policy include

    • Incremental adjustments to the interest rate (usually not more than 0.25%)

    • Quantitative easing which increases the supply of money in the economy

      • The Central Bank creates new money and uses it to buy open-market assets QE explained (opens in a new tab)

  • When a policy decision is made, it creates a ripple effect through the economy and this effect is known as a transmission mechanism

Incremental changes to interest rates 

Flowchart showing the relationship between official rate, market rates, asset prices, exchange rate, demand, inflationary pressure, and inflation.
The transmission mechanisms of changes to the interest rate

Before Explaining a Mechanism From the Diagram Above, Key Terminology Can Be Reviewed Below

Official Rate

Market Rates

Asset Prices

Exchange Rate

Net External Demand

Inflation

Example 1

  • Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → loans are cheaper → consumers borrow more → consumption increases → AD increases → inflation increases

Example 2

  • Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → mortgages are cheaper → property buyers borrow more → demand for houses increases → asset prices increase 

Example 3

  • Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → buyers borrow more → asset prices increase → households with assets feel wealthier → consumption increases → AD increases → inflation increases

Example 4

  • Official rate increases by 0.25% → hot money flows increase → the exchange rate appreciates → exports more expensive and imports cheaper → net exports reduce → AD decreases → inflation decreases

Example 5

  • Official rate increases by 0.25% → market rates increase → existing loan repayments now more expensive to repay → discretionary income falls → consumption decreases → AD decreases → inflation decreases

Quantitative easing transmission mechanism

  • The Bank of England commits to buy £60bn of gilts a month → commercial banks receive cash for their gilts → liquidity in the market increases → commercial banks lower lending rates → consumers and firms borrow more → consumption and investment increase → AD increases → inflation increases

Fiscal Policy Instruments

  • Fiscal Policy involves the use of government spending and taxation to influence aggregate demand in the economy

  • Government spending includes direct expenditure, but not transfer payments

    • Transfer payments are part of fiscal policy, but are not counted as government spending in the AD formula

      • Transfer payments enter the circular flow when the recipients spend them

Fiscal policy impacts

Example 1

  • The Government increases VAT from 20% to 22% → consumers pay more indirect tax and prices rise→ less disposable income available for other purchases → consumption reduces → AD reduces → inflation eases

Example 2

  • The Government decreases corporation tax → firms net profits increase → investment by firms increases → AD increases → inflation increases

Example 3

  • The Government freezes/reduces public sector pay → consumer confidence falls → consumption decreases → AD decreases → inflation decreases

Example 4

  • The Government increases the allowances in the Universal Credit (unemployment benefits) → household income increases → consumption increases → AD increases → inflation increases

Government Budget (Fiscal) Deficit and Surplus

  • The Government Budget (Fiscal policy) is presented each year as a balanced budget, a budget deficit, or a budget surplus

    • A balanced budget means that government revenue = government expenditure

    • A budget deficit means that government revenue < government expenditure

    • A budget surplus means that government revenue > government expenditure

  • A budget deficit has to be financed through public sector borrowing

    • This borrowing gets added to the public debt

Direct and Indirect Taxation

  • The main source of government revenue is taxation

  • Direct taxes are taxes imposed on an individual and/or organisation’s income or profits

    • They are paid directly to the government by the individual or firm 

      • E.g. Income tax, corporation tax, capital gains tax, national insurance contributions, inheritance tax

  • Indirect taxes are imposed on the spending on goods and services

    • The supplier is responsible for sending payment to the government

      • Depending on the PED and PES producers are able to pass on a proportion of the indirect tax to the consumer

      •  The lower a consumer spends the less indirect tax they pay

      • E.g. Value Added Tax (20% VAT rate in the UK in 2022), taxes on demerit goods, excise duties on fuel etc.

Diagrams to Illustrate Demand-side Policies

Expansionary Demand-side policies

  • Demand-side policies that aim to increase aggregate demand are called expansionary policies

  • Expansionary monetary or fiscal policy will shift aggregate demand to the right

Graph showing SRAS and AD curves with shifts from AD1 to AD2, indicating increases in price level from AP1 to AP2 and real GDP from Y1 to Y2.
Classical diagram illustrating expansionary demand-side policies which increase real GDP (Y1 →Y2) and average price levels (AP1 →AP2

Expansionary policies include

  • Reducing taxes; decreasing interest rates; increasing government spending; increasing quantitative easing

Contractionary Demand-side policies

  • Demand-side policies that aim to decrease aggregate demand are called contractionary policies

  • Contractionary monetary or fiscal policy will shift aggregate demand to the left

Economic graph showing shifts in aggregate demand curves, labelled AD1 and AD2, with long-run aggregate supply (LRAS) and price level changes, AP1 to AP2.
Keynesi

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